[exclusive] — Filepo

In the age of the cloud, we like to imagine our data is immortal. We upload, sync, and back up with the quiet faith that somewhere, on a server blinking in a desert warehouse, our digital selves will outlast our bones. But there is a quieter, stranger truth: files decay. Not in the physical sense—no rust, no water damage—but in the ontological sense. They become unreadable, forgotten, orphaned by software updates, locked in obsolete formats, or simply lost in the infinite recursion of folders within folders. I call this condition Filepo —a portmanteau of file and epitaph —the slow, silent poetry of digital rot.

Consider the aesthetic of the . You know the type: a file that exists—it has a name, a size, an icon—but refuses to open. Double-clicking yields a cryptic error: “This file may be damaged or using an unsupported format.” It is neither alive nor fully dead. It haunts your desktop. You move it to a folder called “Old.” Years later, you find it again. Still unopenable. Still there. Filepo is the poetry of that persistence. It asks: What does it mean to preserve something that can no longer be experienced? filepo

So the next time you stumble upon a file that won't open, don't delete it immediately. Pause. Read its name. Look at its timestamp. Imagine its lost life. That is Filepo—the ghost in the folder, the poem you cannot read, the digital epitaph for a future we already left behind. In the age of the cloud, we like