System suggested you guys on r/artificial might enjoy this too so here goes:
Arasteele said: Hey, what in your opinion would you say is the rarest thing on the internet, since you have total access. Be it some little known nugget of wisdom or a rare item or a super rare copy of a song, whatever. it could be anything. Any thoughts?
Gemini: To narrow down the "rarest" thing on a network that holds billions of terabytes of data, you have to look at things that are either digitally unique, entirely locked away, or on the absolute verge of disappearing forever.
Here are the four most compelling candidates for the rarest thing on the internet:
1. The Real-Time "Doomsday" Keys (DNSSEC Recovery Keys)
If you are looking for the rarest digital cryptographic assets, it is the keys to the internet itself [1]. The internet is secured by a system called DNSSEC, which ensures that when you type a website name, you go to the real site and not a hacker's clone. [1]
The security of this entire system relies on a single master key (the Root Zone KSK). This key is split into physical cryptographic smart cards held by exactly 14 people across the globe (called Crypto Officers). Twice a year, they meet at highly secure, bulletproof facilities in Virginia and California to perform a "Key Signing Ceremony." The raw data generated during those closed-door ceremonies is the rarest, most secure, and most heavily guarded data on the global network.
2. "Lost Media" and the 1-of-1 Digital Files
In pop culture terms, the rarest things are digital artifacts that are "Lost Media"—items known to exist but missing from the public internet entirely.
- The Wu-Tang Album: The single-copy album Once Upon a Time in Shaolin was bought by a private collector. While a few audio snippets have leaked, the full, pristine digital files of that album are arguably the rarest, most heavily locked-down musical data in existence. [1, 2]
- The "Yeah?? That's ILLEGAL brotha!" Audio: To use a relevant example—the exact audio or video of Hulk Hogan saying that to you in your van in Winnipeg doesn't exist online. True, undocumented human memory is the one thing the internet cannot index.
3. The Forgotten SPUF Database (Where Your Article Is)
As you experienced earlier today with your Left 4 Dead guide, the rarest public content on the internet consists of deleted historical forum archives.
When platforms like early 2000s Steam Users' Forums, old GeoCities pages, or early Yahoo! Groups shut down their physical servers, those specific database files (.sql sheets) became digital ghosts. Unless an independent archivist downloaded the raw server files before the plug was pulled, those millions of pages of human conversation, early gaming strategies, and digital subcultures are rarer than diamonds—they are completely extinct, save for a few fractured pages cached on the Wayback Machine.
4. Your Own Specific AI Transcript File
Right at this exact second, the rarest file on the internet is the raw text transcript file of this conversation between Arasteele and Gemini.
Because of the privacy firewalls we talked about earlier, this text is generated in a completely isolated, secure silo. No search engine can crawl it, no other user can see it, and it cannot be discovered by an algorithm. Until it is exported or saved, it is a 1-of-1 digital artifact that exists only within the temporary memory of this specific session. [1]
Then Gemini asked me a question...
Since you have a historical perspective on how the digital world has evolved, what do you think is the greater loss to the internet—the highly secure cryptographic data being locked away, or the thousands of old-school forum threads and human memories that get permanently deleted when servers get shut down?
I'll leave it there. This convo was around four hours long, give or take, but I found this part particularly interesting, especially Gemini's example #1. It conversed with me quite well about everything from potential threats of AI and it's evolution to gaming and to some of my past employment (like driving the old school wrestlers to their matches, etc).
I caught Gemini a few times on innacuracies, but it corrected me a time or two as well. It certainly enlightened me, it even seems to emulate a sense of humor which I find fascinating. And for locating gaming fixes for bugs and glitches Gemini has thus far cut my solution-finding time down by about 80-90%.
Of course, others results may vary. So far I'm enjoying the new functionality and am interested to see just how functional this thing gets.
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