A history lesson in history its self-
a more realistic way is to use data disks made of brass or ceramics to a new proprietary standard with an emphasis on longevity & durability not compactness or ease of use.
so plastics would be avoided or anything that would decay or undergo decomposition over time.
so for example this new data standard would use data disks made from pottery ceramics. that in theory can last thousands of years.
putting data into a ceramic coating on a ceramic or pottery disc.
the size circumference & thickness of any ceramic data disk would be a compromise between saving space & maintaining durability when handled with care.
so saving total data integrity. one aspect of this is the disc playback device. that must be reconstructed from engineering plans also in ceramic tablet not paper.
as this is disc playback device would not be expected to survive the passage of time.
regrettably most of recent history going back the last 30 years could disappear with a catastrophic event. destroying the worlds data centers.
even simple economics can destroy digital history. so for example saving space at a data center for new data. replacing old hard disk drives.
at the end of the day when all is said and done IMO. text & images fired on ceramic tablets that can be visible to the naked eye.
& also stored in an underground cave will be expected to survive the passage of time.
I love electronics but do not expect it as we know it today, to survive the end of today's modern civilization.
so for example in the last 30 years I have seen the loss of knowledge & skills that was once commonplace . the decay of common knowledge if you like.
we as a civilization are building a digital pyramid but we no longer comprehend how the foundation was laid. we built this code on top of old code.
with ever increasing in coding complexity like a spiral curve towards the centre. life gets too complicated going beyond human comprehension.
at this point any catastrophic event can snuff out this pyramid of digital knowledge we call the internet. the Alexandria of our time.
then no one understands how to fix it or decrypt it. large parts of the internet may become bricked when a software engineering greybeard dies
particularly if the internet AI can nolonger repair its self.
and so preserving digital knowledge beyond one's life time is a challenge.