I'm interested in how Lara Baladi speaks about the instability of the internet, in context of its vast documentation possibilities, and its intrinsically ephemeral nature. I have thought a lot about the ephemeral nature of the internet. One example of this is how websites stop getting updated over time, links break, new conventions are formed, and generally, old media becomes less accessible. Another example is how our access to information on the internet is governed by regulatory entities, whether they are private, like google, or any ISP, or public, like the FCC. Baladi talks about all this and more in her essay, specifically in context of protest movements in Egypt. She references the Vox Populi: Tahrir Archives as an example of a project trying to preserve the original meaning and accessibility of web content across time. It looks a lot like how archivist work looks with physical ephemera. In general, I think we need to think of internet media more like this, as something that needs to be preserved in light of its ephemeral nature.