At this point, we should all have some database of knowledge that we downloaded from a well-made documentary, well-written material, or else.
I am not a pro in technology, but I recommend the easy-to-download-on-the-spot program - Internet Download Manager. https://duckduckgo.com/?q=Internet+Download+Manager&t=brave&ia=web
It has a nice pop-up whenever you view any content - video/text. And you can download even an hour long video in just seconds. My personal favorite for directly downloading any video, you find useful, with one click. It even has options for different quality of the content you are downloading including the original quality.
I hope this is beneficial for you. With the vaccine ID (medical records), palm ID (physical-to-banking records), and your personal ID (registered records of your birth), it is only a matter of time for the globalists to restrict your access to internet. I recommend this program. If anyone can recommend any other one, please do. But we need to make our own database for videos/pictures/text we value. To anyone already doing that, and I see many do it already, future generations would thank you for your efforts.
Go the extra mile and archive things offline in physical media. I've seen fellow researchers have strange issues with their PC when digging too close on certain subjects. Nothing outright intimidating but just enough to spook you and begin to question if it's worth being over the target.
Good addition, I already did that on USBs and have sufficient copies. On the other hand, if researchers back down to preserve their own life, they don't really get the point of the struggle...
I've notice when downloading certain videos one program often places them in a temp folder with a cryptic, numeric name.
So I have to find the temp folder, change the filename, and move the file.
Getting a bit tired of the censorship.
Wonder if there is a list of keywords they send out to different companies to ask slow people down in offline archiving.
The last one they censored was a video of George Bush Sr. talking about the new world order.
Yeah, been doing that for 30+ years. The trouble is finding offline media that lasts... Got tons of optical discs. Some of my 1994 burns still read fine, others don't. Some DVDs barely 20 year old are gone. Since then I've learned the tricks of the trade, so hoping BD-Rs last till I need them ...
I use USBs, if that helps you in any way.
Thanks. Yeah, but those degrade over time too. I have experience. Optical rotating I've had last 30 years myself, when properly burned/stored. And that's $1-$2/50GB.
You might be better served trying to prevent the apocalypse than being the best equipped survivor in our new hellscape...
Why not both?
Also, you can't prevent the apocalypse but I know what you meant.