Internet Archive Pirates 2005 -

In 2005, physical media was dying, but digital storefronts (Steam was only two years old and hated by gamers) were not yet trustworthy. The result was a massive gray market for "abandonware"—software whose copyright holder had gone out of business, been absorbed, or simply stopped supporting the product.

Enter the Internet Archive.

But the scars—and the trophies—of 2005 remain. internet archive pirates 2005

This is the story of how a legitimate educational archive became the digital world’s most robust smuggling route for abandonware, ROMs, and lost media—and why 2005 was the peak of this peculiar revolution. To understand the piracy of 2005, you have to forget the streaming comforts of today. Broadband was spreading but not ubiquitous. Netflix was a DVD-by-mail service. YouTube had just launched in February 2005, but it was a graveyard of low-resolution cat videos, not a source for entertainment. In 2005, physical media was dying, but digital

They were wrong about the law. But they were right about the culture. This article is a historical analysis of user behavior and copyright norms in 2005. The Internet Archive now operates in full compliance with copyright law, and users should respect the intellectual property of rights holders. But the scars—and the trophies—of 2005 remain

And if you look hard enough today, deep in the un-indexed corners of archive.org , you can still find a .rar file from 2005, uploaded by "Anonymous," timestamped November 12th, with a readme that says: "Preserve this. They won't."