Google+ Public Posts to be Preserved by the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine

Google+ will be shut down in a matter of weeks, but its archive of public posts may live on indefinitely.Internet Archive recently announced plans to save public Google+ content at the Wayback Machine. In fact, the archiving has already begun.There are a few things Google+ users can do to assist the Internet Archive with this effort.For the most part, users don’t have to do anything. If you want your public Google+ content preserved, then chances are it will be.However, Internet Archive advises users not to delete their Google+ content or profile. If it’s deleted it cannot be saved. Internet Archive notes there are a few limitations to this project, which are as follows:Only public content that is presently available on Google+ is being included.Private posts and any previously deleted content will not be saved. Full post comments may not be archived. Google+ allows up to 500 comments per post, but only presents a subset of these as static HTML.Image and video content may not be preserved at full resolution. This will apply mostly to high-def image and video content.

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