Scans of Televi-Kun or Terebi Magazine from the 1970s and 80s.
So go ahead. Type in your old username. Type in your rival’s. Type in something absurd. You won’t find the rulers of the world. You’ll find the people who wanted to be—and failed. And in that failure, preserved forever on a server in San Francisco, lies the truest history of the internet.
Data hoarders and archivists argue that copyright terms are too long and too restrictive. They point to the fact that 90% of video games released before 2010 are commercially unavailable. If a game isn't being sold, downloading an archived copy does not result in a "lost sale." To the hoarders, preserving the code is more important than protecting a copyright that isn't being actively utilized.
The Megaloman Archive utilizes the and the Community Video section of the Internet Archive. This provides: Permanent URLs : Ensuring links don't break over time.