Categories: Web

Online activist saves 172 doomed BBC websites for $3.99

The BBC confirmed last month that it would proceed with a 25% online operations budget reduction, with the loss of 360 jobs as a result. As part of these budget curtailments, a decision to reportedly delete and not archive 172 BBC run websites has stirred one anonymous online citizen in particular into action.

The iconic BBC Television Centre in London

The anonymous activist purchased a ‘low end’ server for the nominal fee of $3.99 and used it to crawl, archive, and make freely available the BBC websites’ contents in under 24 hours. By doing so he/she hopes to portray the BBC’s potential deletion policy as gratuitous, and a “charade to appease the detractors to a strong BBC”.

In a written statement on this website, the activist states:

“The purpose of this project is to show how the entire 172 public facing websites that are earmarked for deletion have been copied, archived, distributed and republished online – independently – for the price of a cup of Starbucks coffee (around $3.99).”

The project effectively illustrates that the cost saving measures introduced by the BBC are minimal. He/she goes on to iterate their political stance regarding the issue:

“The purpose of this project is to expose the ‘cost savings’ of this proposed exercise as nothing more than a charade to appease the detractors to a strong BBC, and to curry favour with the current government. BBC’s current senior management has demonstrated a lack of leadership and a lack of courage in pushing back on these demands.”

The entire 1.8GB of content from the 172 doomed BBC websites is available to download and distribute using this torrent.

Image courtesy of Mike_fleming on Flickr.

Albizu Garcia

Albizu Garcia is the Co-Founder and CEO of Gain -- a marketing technology company that automates the social media and content publishing workflow for agencies and social media managers, their clients and anyone working in teams.

View Comments

Recent Posts

DARPA ‘Generative Optogenetics (GO)’ seeks to program biology using light, could aid in ‘extended human spaceflight’

Apart from 'extended human spaceflight' for what other purposes could DARPA GO serve? perspective DARPA…

12 hours ago

Competing in the post-gatekeeper era: How the DMA is rewiring platforms, security, and market access

The Digital Markets Act (DMA) has joined the General Data Protection Regulation (GDPR) as one…

3 days ago

Horasis India Meeting to Spotlight India’s Global Ascent At Singapore Summit This Month

Amid several years of shifting global dynamics, it’s become increasingly clear that we are entering…

5 days ago

AI scams targeting businesses are surging: Here are the top 3 threats your team is likely to face in 2026 (Brains Byte Back Podcast)

Imagine a company interviewing a candidate for a senior IT role. The résumé checks out,…

5 days ago

AI Won’t Scale in Advertising Until Trust Does: How to Identify AI Tools That Deliver Quality Security and Expertise

At the start of the year, data suggested that only about a third of agencies,…

5 days ago

What It Means When Algorithms Say “I”: Toward a Theory of Digital Subjectivity

Picture an AI assistant you have worked with for the past five years. It knows…

5 days ago