I like to save important messages and bulletins, especially from my cell provider, banks, etc..
I use Puppy and Seamonkey 2.0 routinely for my web browsing, and so save such pages with the browser.
A while back, when trying to view my online account balance page at Virgin Mobile while offline, I noticed that the page would not load. Instead Seamonkey tried to go online to a site called (going by memory here, as I can't test it while online) "Google statistics" or something similar. In any case, I couldn't view the "saved" page offline.
I find this very disturbing, as Virgin often makes serious mistakes in its billing, and having a record of the account page before the changes is essential to correcting them.
More recently, I've discovered that saving certain pages on Facebook is impossible (with Opera as well as Seamonkey), and there is no warning.
For instance, a new group was started recently called : Help Find the Girl....
http://www.facebook.com/otropogo#!/page ... 647?ref=ts
At last count yesterday, 60,000 people "liked" the group (a prerquisite to posting on it).
I myself started a discussion topic because comments were coming in so rapidly, that any proper discussion was impossible on the group's Wall page - posts were scrolling off the page within two or three hours, before any discussion could get underway.
My topic "What's the humane way of drowning puppies", at last count had garnered 85 posts (including several of my own), which took up three pages.
Since I don't like to have my posts taken out of context, or misquoted, I routinely save such topics to hard drive, and did so with Seamonkey, without encountering any problem warnings. However, when viewing the saves offline, it turned out that my three saved pages were all the same. Only the first page of the discussion was saved, although I used the "save page function" on each of the three pages separately.
Just now, I went back to get the URL for this post, and found that all of Wall posts, and all of the discussion topic and their posts, have been removed! And I have no proof of who said what in two thirds of the discussion in which I participated.
Think this is paranoid? I disagree. It is, BTW, one of the chief reason for my use of a pseudonym online - in most forums, there is simply no way, no matter how hard you work at it, to ensure the integrity of the material attributed to you. As some of you know, this has been a problem here also. But at least here one can know or learn who has done the dirty. On Facebook, the censorship and manipulation of text is all done anonymously, and there little if any hope of getting to the bottom of it, much less correcting it.