As an institutional practice, archival practices often tend to serve the colonized, surveillance and discipline society of the Modern world. In the last ten years, with the [upswing in] digital technology and social movement detection, recording and accumulating images has become a civil activity. Thus, archiving videos and other types of visual images brings about non-institutional practices as well contemporary discussions surrounding image production, open source, collectivity and forensics. Beside interviews with video activists; this book compiles several writers' articles on their practices and discussions of archives from several angles, including forensics, decolonization and commons.