Coupled with a little local content storage server, this could be as simple as a five-line userscript: AJAX the whole HTML document and any "relevant" embedded content (video, audio, images...) to the server with the current URI as storage key. Retrieval and serving by local server (rewriting embeds on the fly), and offering as part of a distributed content store, is a later exercise, but a quick Streisand hack should be easy enough. ...that's all assuming you don't just POST current URI to a little app that just wget-spiders the whole thing. :) On 28 June 2015 03:36:35 GMT+01:00, coderman wrote: On 6/27/15, Zenaan Harkness wrote: ... So if I've read something I personally considered worthy of the price of my human attention, it exists somewhere on my local storage. this is good practice; although it would be better to have two way flow of collaboration - open design, etc. while pragmatism fills your local cache, open content fills workflows, production. I call this pre-emptive since I always consistently download the content before ever reading, listening or viewing (/"consuming" - sounds like a base description, belittling we humans). i remember Zooko musing about this years ago, needing a browser extension that kept a complete archive of all pages / content viewed during a session. i don't recall him finding it, and i can't seem to locate the blog post. i will try again later... best regards, -- Sent from my Android device with K-9 Mail. Please excuse my brevity.