Jason Scott
Jason Scott Sadofsky (born September 13, 1970) is an American archivist, technology historian, filmmaker, and digital preservation advocate, renowned for his efforts to document and preserve early internet and computing culture through projects like the website textfiles.com and documentaries such as BBS: The Documentary.[1][2] Born in New York State and raised in the region, Scott developed an early interest in computing, acquiring his first modem—a 300-baud acoustic coupler—and computer, a Commodore PET, during his youth, and becoming a sysop for a local bulletin board system (BBS) called The Works BBS in Westchester County.[3] He earned a film degree from Emerson College in 1992, after which he worked in various roles, including as a temp worker, in the video game industry at companies like Psygnosis and Focus Studios, and as a UNIX system administrator.[1][3] In 1998, Scott founded textfiles.com, a comprehensive online archive hosting over a terabyte of materials from the BBS era, including text files, software, and artifacts of pre-web digital communication that he had collected since the 1980s.[1] This project evolved into a cornerstone of digital history preservation, reflecting his passion for safeguarding ephemera from the dawn of personal computing and online communities.[1] Scott's filmmaking career gained prominence with BBS: The Documentary (2005), a 5.5-hour, three-DVD series featuring over 200 interviews and 250 hours of footage, which chronicles the social and technical impact of BBSes through the 1980s and 1990s; the project required three years of production and 25,000 miles of travel.[3] He followed this with Get Lamp (2010), a documentary exploring text adventure games and interactive fiction, and directed other works like DEFCON: The Documentary (2013).[1][2] Since 2011, Scott has served as an archivist at the Internet Archive, where he oversees large-scale digitization efforts, including the ingestion of software collections, metadata management, and emulation projects that have made over 250,000 software items playable in web browsers.[4] His contributions there include curating the Manuals Plus Collection, comprising tens of thousands of digitized technical manuals, and processing unique audio archives like the Bob Lardine Tapes, a set of 57 celebrity interviews from the 1960s to 1980s.[4] Scott also hosts the podcast Jason Scott Talks His Way Out of It, launched in 2017, which has produced over 300 episodes on topics ranging from retrocomputing to archival challenges, initially funded through Patreon to address personal financial difficulties.[4] Through these endeavors, he remains a vocal advocate for digital preservation, emphasizing the urgency of saving cultural artifacts in an era of rapid technological obsolescence.[4]Early life and education
Early years
Jason Scott Sadofsky was born on September 13, 1970, in New York to parents who initially got along but later divorced. He spent much of his childhood in Putnam and Westchester Counties in New York, along with time in towns near Boston, Massachusetts, though specific family influences on his developing interests in technology or media are not detailed in available accounts.[1] Sadofsky attended Horace Greeley High School in Chappaqua, New York, where he graduated in 1988. He co-founded the humor magazine Esnesnon—a name derived from "nonsense" spelled backwards—with friends John and Alex. The magazine, with its first issue produced in 1987, showcased his early creative writing and satirical bent.[5][6][7] From a young age, Sadofsky exhibited interests in computers, writing, and performance that foreshadowed his later pursuits. He acquired his first computer, a Commodore PET, and a 300-baud acoustic coupler modem during his youth, and served as the sysop for a local BBS called The Works BBS in Westchester County. He began collecting textfiles from dial-up bulletin board systems (BBSes) in his youth, immersing himself in early digital communities and textual creativity. These experiences, combined with his high school endeavors in humorous writing and pseudonymous contributions, nurtured a foundation in media experimentation and performative expression.[1][3]Academic background
Jason Scott attended Emerson College in Boston, Massachusetts, graduating in 1992 with a Bachelor of Arts in Mass Communications, concentrating in film.[1] His coursework emphasized media production, including film techniques, visual storytelling, and broadcasting fundamentals, which provided him with essential skills in creative and technical aspects of media creation. During his time at Emerson, Scott engaged in practical media activities, particularly through the college's radio station, WERS 88.9 FM. He participated in programming, including extended shifts and live music events, gaining hands-on experience in audio production and on-air broadcasting.[8] Scott's early filmmaking projects at Emerson included animating the visuals for Conspiracy Rock, a satirical song and video debuted in 1992 as part of a live show by the student comedy troupe This Is Pathetic. This student production demonstrated his emerging proficiency in animation and multimedia integration, marking an initial foray into collaborative media work.[3]Professional career
Digital archiving and preservation
Jason Scott established textfiles.com in the late 1990s as a comprehensive digital archive dedicated to preserving text files from the bulletin board system (BBS) era and early internet communications, collecting thousands of documents that capture the cultural and technical artifacts of pre-web online communities from the 1980s and 1990s.[9] This repository serves as a foundational resource for researchers studying early digital history, hosting files such as ANSI art, phreak/hack literature, and software documentation that might otherwise have been lost to hardware degradation or neglect.[10] By curating and making these materials publicly accessible, Scott emphasized the importance of maintaining raw, unfiltered records of user-generated content in an era before centralized web platforms dominated information sharing. In January 2009, Scott founded Archive Team, a decentralized volunteer collective aimed at rescuing endangered online data through crowdsourced scraping and mirroring efforts, with its inaugural project focused on archiving GeoCities—a pioneering web hosting service announced for shutdown by Yahoo.[11] The team successfully downloaded and preserved approximately 900 GB of user-created webpages, files, and multimedia from GeoCities before its July 2009 closure, releasing the collection as a public torrent to ensure long-term accessibility.[12] Over the years, Archive Team expanded to target other at-risk platforms, including Friendster and Yahoo Video, employing tools like custom scripts and distributed networks to capture terabytes of content, thereby countering the ephemerality of corporate-hosted digital spaces.[13] Scott joined the Internet Archive in 2011 as a free-range archivist and software curator, where he has directed the acquisition, emulation, and metadata management of vast software collections, enabling playable access to historical computing artifacts via browser-based emulators.[14] In this capacity, he spearheaded the emulation of over 250,000 software items by 2023, including titles for platforms like the Apple II, Commodore 64, and early PCs, facilitating research and public engagement with vintage digital media.[15] A notable contribution came in April 2019, when Scott uploaded the complete source code for Infocom's interactive fiction games—written in ZIL and ZAP languages—to GitHub repositories under the historicalsource organization, preserving the underlying code for classics like Zork I and Deadline that had long been inaccessible due to proprietary restrictions.[16] His work at the Internet Archive has also extended to audio preservation, including collaborations on digitizing sound effects libraries and supporting initiatives to archive podcasts, such as early 2000s efforts to collect and upload thousands of episodes to prevent loss from discontinued hosting services.[17] [18] Scott has actively advocated for digital preservation through speaking engagements at major conferences, beginning with his debut at DEF CON in 1999 and continuing with regular presentations on archival techniques and challenges.[19] At DEF CON 19 in 2011, he delivered a keynote on Archive Team's "distributed preservation of service attack" methodology, detailing strategies for rapid data rescue operations.[20] These talks, spanning events like Personal Digital Archiving and Digital Preservation conferences, have influenced community-driven efforts by sharing practical tools for emulation, metadata standards, and ethical data scraping up to 2025.[21] Through these contributions, Scott's archival work intersects with his broader explorations of technology history in documentary formats, underscoring the urgency of preserving interactive and narrative digital experiences.Documentary filmmaking
Jason Scott's entry into documentary filmmaking centered on preserving the oral histories of early digital technologies through in-depth interviews and archival material. His debut project, BBS: The Documentary, an eight-episode miniseries released in 2005, examines the rise and fall of bulletin board systems (BBSes) over 25 years, from their origins in the late 1970s to their decline with the advent of the World Wide Web.[22] Begun in 2001, the film totals over five hours and incorporates over 200 interviews with participants, including system operators, users, and software developers, to capture the personal and technical stories behind this pre-internet communication phenomenon.[23] Scott handled writing, directing, and editing, drawing on his personal collection of BBS artifacts to authenticate the narrative.[24] Building on this foundation, Scott's second major work, GET LAMP, released in 2010, delves into the history of interactive fiction and text adventure games, a genre pioneered in the 1970s with titles like Colossal Cave Adventure and popularized by companies such as Infocom.[25] Filmed from 2006 to 2009, the 77-minute documentary features over 80 interviews with game designers, programmers, players, and academics, exploring the creative and technical challenges of narrative-driven computing without graphics.[26] Production was aided by a 2009 Kickstarter campaign titled "The Jason Scott Sabbatical," which raised funds to provide Scott dedicated time for editing and post-production.[27] Like BBS: The Documentary, GET LAMP was distributed via the Internet Archive, ensuring open access to its content and supplementary materials such as raw interview footage. Scott's filmmaking approach consistently prioritizes extensive fieldwork, including travel for on-location interviews and integration of vintage software demonstrations to evoke the era's user experience. In 2013, he expanded this style with DEFCON: The Documentary, a 110-minute film marking the 20th anniversary of the DEF CON hacking conference, which includes interviews with attendees, organizers, and security experts alongside live event footage captured by multiple camera crews.[28] This project, commissioned by conference organizers, highlights the intersection of technology, culture, and cybersecurity, further tying into Scott's archival efforts by archiving raw video assets for public preservation.[29] His documentaries, informed by his broader digital preservation work, emphasize storytelling that documents ephemeral aspects of computing history through firsthand accounts rather than scripted reenactments.[4]Online media and public engagement
In 2007, Jason Scott co-founded Blockparty, a North American demoparty that paired with existing events like Notacon to build community around computer-generated art, demos, and retrocomputing culture.[30] This initiative served as an early experiment in fostering online-inspired gatherings, emphasizing creative sharing and networking among enthusiasts.[31] Scott expanded his public presence in 2017 with the launch of his podcast Jason Scott Talks His Way Out of It, a series blending technology history, retrocomputing tales, documentary insights, and personal anecdotes to engage listeners on digital culture's evolution.[32] The podcast, hosted on platforms like Libsyn, has produced over 300 episodes by 2025, maintaining a conversational style that draws from Scott's decades of experience in archiving and storytelling.[33] A hallmark of Scott's online engagement is the Twitter account @sockington, which he created in late 2007 to post humorous updates from the perspective of his grey-and-white domestic shorthair cat, Sockington.[34] Scott managed the account, often collaborating with his then-wife to craft tweets mimicking feline observations, leading to viral phenomena like the "Socks Army" of pet-follower accounts.[35] By 2018, @sockington had amassed approximately 1.4 million followers, establishing it as one of the earliest and most influential nonhuman social media personalities and influencing the rise of pet-centric internet culture.[36] Sockington died on July 18, 2022, after 18 years, prompting widespread tributes that underscored its lasting impact on online communities.[37] Through his blog ASCII by Jason Scott, Scott sustains public discourse on computing history and events, posting reflections such as his experience attending the INIT HELLO Apple II convention near Baltimore in July 2025, where he documented sessions and emphasized the value of vintage tech gatherings.[38] This platform complements his broader online persona as @textfiles across social media, where he promotes archival projects, shares trivia, and interacts with followers to advance awareness of digital preservation.Acting and performances
Jason Scott has ventured into acting primarily through collaborations in independent cinema, often intersecting with themes from technology and satire in the indie and tech-adjacent scenes. His performances are characterized by a deadpan, authoritative delivery informed by his background in digital history, lending authenticity to roles that critique or explore modern societal issues. These appearances are typically in low-budget, experimental films rather than mainstream productions. Scott's acting debut came in the 2009 mockumentary video game film Soviet Unterzoegersdorf: Sector 2, directed by Johannes Grenzfurthner, where he portrayed the eccentric character Oberzögersdorf White Trash. In this satirical project produced by the Austrian art collective monochrom, Scott's role contributed to the film's absurd parody of Soviet bureaucracy and retro-futurism, blending live-action with interactive elements and featuring cameos from tech figures like Cory Doctorow.[39] He reprised his collaboration with Grenzfurthner in the 2018 essayistic feature Glossary of Broken Dreams, playing Billy Bob Turingengine, a fictionalized tech enthusiast. Scott's performance in this ideotaining revue—mixing lectures, sketches, and animations to dissect concepts like privacy and resistance—added a layer of wry commentary on digital culture, enhancing the film's blend of humor and political critique.[40] In 2021, Scott appeared as Sadofsky, M.D., in the experimental sci-fi horror Masking Threshold, again directed by Grenzfurthner, where his brief but pivotal role as a doctor amplified the film's themes of auditory paranoia and technological alienation through a clinical, detached demeanor. Most recently, in the 2024 farcical comedy Je Suis Auto, directed by Juliana Neuhuber and written by Grenzfurthner, Scott embodied Moses Moranis, a supporting character in a narrative involving a self-driving taxi and a mafioso. His distinctive, rapid-fire delivery style—rooted in his experience as a public speaker on tech history—bolstered the film's satirical tone, poking fun at artificial intelligence, labor politics, and corporate absurdity in the tech industry.Personal life
Family and relationships
Jason Scott Sadofsky, known professionally as Jason Scott, is divorced.[41] His parents divorced when he was very young, an experience that instilled in him a profound awareness of impermanence and influenced his commitment to digital preservation.[42] As of 2017, Scott was engaged, having suffered a heart attack earlier that year while vacationing with his fiancée in Australia.[42] As of 2017, Scott had no children.[42] Extended family has played a supportive role in his life; in 2011, he resided with his brother's family in Hopewell Junction, New York.[41]Residence and later activities
Scott has resided in Hopewell Junction, New York, since at least the early 2010s, maintaining a modest home in the upstate region that serves as his primary base.[43][42] Outside his professional pursuits, Scott is an avid cat enthusiast, having co-owned several pets including the late Sockington and ongoing companion Pennycat, with whom he shares daily life. His involvement in animal welfare extends to promoting adoption and rescue efforts, leveraging personal experiences to encourage public engagement in supporting stray animals.[44] In July 2022, Sockington passed away at age 18 following a health decline, prompting Scott to reflect publicly on the devoted care he provided throughout the cat's life, describing it as a "dumb little life" filled with affection.[45][37] Post-2022, Scott has focused on personal organization, including consolidating possessions and planning for future transitions to minimize complications for loved ones.[46]Major works
Filmography
Jason Scott's filmography encompasses his work as a director, producer, and actor, primarily in documentaries exploring digital culture and technology history, alongside select acting roles in independent films. His directorial efforts often highlight niche aspects of computing and gaming, connecting to his broader archival interests in preserving digital heritage.Directed Documentaries
| Year | Title | Runtime | Key Crew | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2005 | BBS: The Documentary | 298 minutes (8 episodes) | Director, Writer, Editor: Jason Scott Sadofsky; Producer: Nicole Sparks | An eight-part miniseries chronicling the history of Bulletin Board Systems (BBS), filmed as a one-man operation by Scott over 25,000 miles of travel.[47][3] |
| 2010 | GET LAMP | 78 minutes | Director, Editor: Jason Scott Sadofsky; Interviews with over 50 contributors including game designers and historians | A feature documentary on interactive fiction and text adventures, including bonus material like a 50-minute segment on Infocom; released on DVD with 4,000 custom coins.[48][49][25] |
| 2013 | DEFCON: The Documentary | 110 minutes | Director, Editor: Jason Scott Sadofsky; Producer: Rachel Lovinger; Composer: Zoë Blade; Cinematography: Eddie Codel, Alex Buie, Drew Wallner, and three others | A feature film on the DEF CON hacking conference, shot over 2012 with a crew of six, covering its 20-year history.[50][51] |
Acting Credits
- Soviet Unterzoegersdorf: Sector 2 (2009): Guest appearance as himself in this Austrian mockumentary alternate history film directed by Johannes Grenzfurthner, focusing on a fictional communist enclave.[2][52]
- Glossary of Broken Dreams (2018): Role as Billy Bob Turingengine in this Austrian experimental film by Johannes Grenzfurthner, an "ideotaining cinematic revue" on language and failed utopias featuring multiple performers.[53]
- Je Suis Auto (2024): Role as Moses Moranis, a gangster character (for which Scott shaved his head), in this Austrian science fiction comedy directed by Juliana Neuhuber and produced by monochrom, exploring ontological themes through a mafioso's journey.[54][55]
Archival projects and publications
Jason Scott founded textfiles.com in 1998 as a comprehensive digital archive dedicated to preserving materials from the bulletin board system (BBS) era of the 1980s and 1990s.[14] The site hosts over 100,000 text files, including phreak and hacker documents, ANSI art, literature, software documentation, and ephemeral online creations that defined early digital culture.[56] Its scope encompasses user-generated content from pre-web internet communities, making rare artifacts freely accessible to researchers and enthusiasts worldwide through a searchable web interface, with many files mirrored at the Internet Archive for long-term preservation.[9] As a leader of Archive Team, a volunteer collective he co-founded in 2009, Scott has spearheaded numerous web preservation efforts to rescue at-risk digital content before platform shutdowns.[4] Key projects include the GeoCities rescue in 2009, where the team downloaded approximately 1 terabyte of user-generated websites—over 38 million pages—from Yahoo's GeoCities service prior to its closure, ensuring this slice of early web history remains publicly available via the Internet Archive.[57] In the 2020s, Archive Team under Scott's guidance contributed to podcast archiving initiatives, building on earlier efforts like the 2005–2006 Podsucker project that captured thousands of early RSS feeds; these ongoing activities have expanded the Internet Archive's podcast collection to millions of episodes, focusing on metadata enhancement and bulk ingestion to safeguard audio ephemera.[18] Scott's publications and curatorial work emphasize technology history through essays, blog posts, and archival collections rather than traditional books. His weblog, ASCII by Jason Scott, features in-depth articles on digital preservation, retrocomputing, and internet culture, such as explorations of BBS software evolution and the challenges of emulating historical systems.[9] As Software Curator at the Internet Archive since 2011, he has overseen the growth of the organization's software library into the world's largest online repository of vintage programs, encompassing over 1.3 million items including BBS software, Apple II applications, and business tools, with dedicated collections like "The Business Case" highlighting commercial software from the 1980s–2000s.[58] These efforts prioritize emulation and metadata to enable playable access, drawing from community donations and targeted acquisitions.[59] Scott launched the podcast Jason Scott Talks His Way Out of It in September 2017 as a platform for personal reflections on his archival work, initially motivated by crowdfunding a sabbatical.[32] By November 2025, the series has produced over 330 episodes, each 20–30 minutes long, covering themes such as retrocomputing adventures, documentary production insights, the ethics of digital hoarding, and historical tech anecdotes like the rise of CD-ROMs and internet shutdowns.[33] Episodes often blend storytelling with practical archiving advice, fostering public engagement with preservation issues through platforms like Apple Podcasts and the Internet Archive.[60]Key Archival Projects
| Project | Year | Description | Impact |
|---|---|---|---|
| textfiles.com | 1998–present | BBS-era text file repository | Preserved 100,000+ digital artifacts from pre-web era, accessible globally.[56] |
| GeoCities Rescue (Archive Team) | 2009 | Mass download of GeoCities content | Saved over 38 million web pages, now hosted at Internet Archive for research.[57] |
| Podsucker / Podcast Archiving | 2005–2020s | Bulk capture of RSS podcast feeds | Expanded Internet Archive's audio collection to millions of episodes, aiding media history studies.[18] |
| Internet Archive Software Collections | 2011–present | Curated vintage software library | World's largest repository with over 1.3 million items (as of 2025), emphasizing emulation for usability.[58][61] |