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  • This is what's known as the Svalbard Stroll.

  • It's a brisk, hands-in-pockets type of affair

  • because you're at the end of the Earth

  • and it's really, freaking cold.

  • So this is the first time you've ever seen this place?

  • I've never been here before.

  • No, I never even thought I would ever be in Svalbard.

  • My arctic companion is Nat Friedman,

  • CEO of the software platform GitHub.

  • He usually lives in San Francisco,

  • but he's traveled to the ends of the Earth

  • to do something peculiar.

  • So, we're here in Svalbard, at 78 degrees north latitude,

  • at the site of the future GitHub Arctic Code Vault.

  • He's depositing 6,000 of the most popular

  • open-source projects in an archive inside this mountain.

  • Open the vault!

  • Nat's goal here is one,

  • to protect the world's software from the apocalypse,

  • and two, preserve our modern way of life.

  • The man is ambitious.

  • How much of this is an existential risk type thing?

  • Most of the time when you build a product

  • you build it hoping that lots of people use it all the time,

  • and this is probably a case where we're building a product,

  • kind of hoping that it never gets used,

  • in a way.

  • Fingers crossed Nat

  • fingers crossed.

  • For those of you who haven't wintered in Svalbard,

  • it's located way up here.

  • A frigid, barren wasteland, void of trees

  • or any meaningful vegetation.

  • The last spot humans can tolerate

  • before the Arctic proves too much.

  • Getting here requires much planning and deep resolve

  • to face Mother Nature at her worst.

  • Or, you know, a private jet.

  • And the courage gained by downing bubbly by the gallon,

  • and embracing your inner playboy.

  • Hello, Svalbard.

  • Coal mining used to be the main game in Svalbard

  • but since that's not cool anymore,

  • people here have had to find some other uses

  • for all their permafrost,

  • which brings us back to our coal mine, and our code cave.

  • Is this is what you expected the entrance

  • to your seed vault to look like?

  • It legitimately looks like the entrance to a mine.

  • So, I believe,

  • we are going deep inside a mountain.

  • This is a old coal mine.

  • Nat and I were joined by some proper mine men,

  • who taught us the ways of the mine.

  • And here you have some instrument?

  • Oh, okay.

  • Oh, to check the methane.

  • And who were also helpful

  • in firming up the concept of existential risk.

  • And when you product coal,

  • there will come a little bit of gas.

  • You don't feel it, you die.

  • But you have apoxia.

  • You die.

  • Yeah, that sounds dangerous.

  • With the safety brief down,

  • it's time to get on to the real business

  • of protecting the world's code.

  • This is how it works,

  • the data is stored on a reel of film,

  • coated with iron-oxide powder.

  • The information can still be read by a computer,

  • or if need be, by a human with a magnifying glass.

  • How long will this last?

  • We are confident for 1,000

  • and we're aiming now to do research project

  • to document 2,000 years.

  • 2,000 years?

  • You think this could last up to 2,000 years?

  • We collected the film,

  • which is spooled inside these white plastic cases,

  • and headed into the darkness.

  • I mean, usually I have the hard hats,

  • and I feel like it's for show.

  • Yeah, this is not for show.

  • As we venture further into the abyss,

  • let me catch you up on who Nat is.

  • Nat's company GitHub is the main place people go

  • to write open source code.

  • Tens of millions of people hop on GitHub

  • and create the applications that make the world tick.

  • Which is why Nat wants to protect it

  • from terrorist hackers, electromagnetic pulses,

  • and other unforeseen disasters.

  • Where are we going?

  • And where we were going,

  • was not good.

  • Okay.

  • Let's get the hell out.

  • But like all intrepid explorers,

  • we would not let something like a lack of oxygen stop us.

  • And thank god for that, because I now present to you

  • the most futuristic, ultra secure,

  • sci-fi inspired code vault you will ever see.

  • Okay, it's basically a tool shed, but it's still cool.

  • Wow. Into the data vault.

  • I mean, this is reel one, of the GitHub Arctic Code Vault

  • and we're gonna put it here, in Svalbard, under the ice,

  • for the next 2,000 years.

  • Here we go.

  • Thank you.

  • Like, I think, 20 years ago,

  • if you'd told someone that

  • 20 years in the future, in the year 2020,

  • all of human civilization will depend on and run on

  • open source code, written for free,

  • and put into almost every product in the world,

  • I think people would say, like, that's crazy,

  • like, that's never gonna happen.

  • You know software's written

  • by big professional companies, and yet, here we are.

  • Yeah, and so how much of this

  • is just making sure we can restore our way of life?

  • I'm overall pretty optimistic about civilization,

  • like, I think we can bet that, you know,

  • humans will be thriving for a long time on planet Earth.

  • And so, another way to think about this,

  • is it's just like a time capsule.

  • Like there's this amazing moment in history where

  • the whole world is starting to run on software,

  • and that software is made out of open source

  • and open source is sort of in everything.

  • 20 years ago,

  • open source software was seen as a fringe idea.

  • The big companies kept their codes secret.

  • Only weird hippie types shared code

  • and gave it away for free.

  • Fast forward to 2019, and about 40 million people

  • and 2 million companies and organizations use GitHub.

  • That's why Microsoft paid a stunning $7.5 billion

  • to acquire the company last year.

  • I'll just leave it like this.

  • Safe in

  • the knowledge that open-source code

  • will be secure, it was time for me to explore Svalbard.

  • Nat and I returned to our nerd pursuits.

  • This time we were checking out

  • the northernmost GitHub users

  • who work at an observatory

  • dedicated to researching the Northern Lights.

  • It was lunchtime, and we needed to get there quick,

  • before it got dark.

  • 1:20 p.m. sun is setting.

  • It never really rose, actually, we didn't see it all day.

  • Here in this observatory

  • perched on a snowy mountain,

  • work some seriously hardy scientists.

  • So, during the daytime, for three and a half months,

  • over the winter, it is completely dark.

  • And so, we can make 24 hour observations of the Aurora.

  • And why would somebody want to study the Aurora?

  • The Aurora is important for understanding

  • the whole process of the connection between

  • the sun and the Earth's magnetic field,

  • and then the ultimate impact on the atmosphere.

  • So, this is what we call space weather.

  • This arctic island

  • is full of surprises.

  • I have to do a photo, man, this is crazy.

  • There are a lot of white mountains,

  • some more white mountains, and these white mountains,

  • which host one of the world's

  • biggest satellite ground stations.

  • Our modern infrastructure relies

  • on the messages sent from here.

  • But if you need a break from nerding out,

  • the real action takes place in the town of Longyearbyen.

  • Which is clearly named after a very lonely coal miner,

  • who'd had enough.

  • As dumb luck would have it,

  • I was in town during the island's blues festival.

  • An annual event that brings in serious musicians

  • and serves as one last drunken hooray

  • before months of darkness set in.

  • I mean,

  • it's not so much the alcohol, as it is the cold, that's...

  • So I got drunk, and hoorahed.

  • Then I got a truly horrible hangover.

  • Had a rough night at the Blues Festival.

  • Today I will feel better by going dog sledding.

  • You got the gun, for the, uh, polar bear situation?

  • Polar protection, yeah, we have dogs with us, so,

  • they're better protection probably than a gun.

  • Okay, okay.

  • It's not quite the private jet but,

  • it's my preferred way of getting around Svalbard.

  • As the trip neared it's end,

  • we went to Svalbard's bizarrely amazing

  • fine dining establishment to celebrate.

  • Fried cod skin filled with the Norwegian king crab.

  • Things were going fine for a while.

  • Fancy food, fancy booze,

  • and the theme of our journey got very real.

  • Holy shit. Wow, that's so crazy.

  • It turns out,

  • that about 4,000 miles away in Sonoma California,

  • Nat's house had been destroyed by the fires

  • raging through the state.

  • It's super apropos to what we're doing right now, right?

  • So wait,

  • so somebody posted that on Twitter?

  • He had the gross modern experience

  • of seeing the remains of his house end up on social media.

  • Oh my gosh that's super devastating.

  • So there we were,

  • with parts of California burning,

  • and Silicon Valley going through rolling blackouts.

  • The epicenter of technology feeling very fragile,

  • amid signs that the world is not quite right.

  • In that moment, the idea of a remote code cave

  • made all too much sense.

This is what's known as the Svalbard Stroll.

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B1 中級

萬一發生災難,請在這裡打開。 (In Case of Apocalypse, Open Here)

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    林宜悉 發佈於 2021 年 01 月 14 日
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