A
second Doomsday vault has opened in Norway to preserve the world's
heritage and cultural data. The vault will use analogue archiving
techniques, which go a step back from digital back-ups, to protect its
data from cyberattacks.
Located
about 620 miles from the North Pole in Svalbard, Norway, the vault --
formally named World Arctic Archive -- is built on an abandoned coal
mine close to the Global Seed Vault. The organisation is encouraging
nations world over to submit data particularly significant to their
culture to this vault.

"Like
what the Global Seed Vault is for plants, the Arctic World Archive will
be for the world's digital heritage and valuable data, " said Piql, the
Norwegian company managing the vault.
The
Global Seed Vault was opened in 2008 as a master backup to other seed
banks around the world. Nearly 1.5 million distinct seed samples of
agricultural crops are estimated to be storied in the vault.
How will the data vault work?
The
data will be stored on multi-layered photosensitive analogue film,
which the company claims will last between 500 and 1,000 years. The
reels will be stored deep inside the abandoned mine frozen in
permafrost, to keep its temperature constant below 0 degrees Celsius.
Countries
will need to upload images or audio-visual content to Piql's servers,
which will then be transferred to this special film designed to
withstand wear and tear. Storing the data in a hard-bound manner away
from regular access means it is protected from cyberattacks and other
kinds of tampering.
The
data be searchable online. If any catastrophic event were to take
place, the hard-bound data will be delivered digitally or in a physical
format as per the nation's choice.
There
is no restriction on the type of data that a government wants to
secure. The deposit could range from meteorological observations to
manufacturing plans to classical literature.
The
vault that opened last week has already got two submissions from Mexico
and Brazil. While Brazil has submitted historical documents like the
Brazilian Constitution, Mexico submitted important documents and
cultural data that dates all the way back to the Inca period.
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