Well that's your problem. I disagree. Deal with it.
I disagree with your disagreement and also offer no basis for discussion but just this curt and unhelpful post.

Well that's your problem. I disagree. Deal with it.

They won't
The difference between now and a million years ahead is that we are in a technological revolution and everything is digitised and will remain so forever more. Back then all they had to go by were ancient texts written by man and many things had yet to be discovered or common principles established and accepted.
All intelligent life on (or from) Earth will know what Humans used to be like in history.
Not sure I completely go with that view either. Just because we can digitise information on pretty much anything there is no guarantee that information will be deemed important enough to keep. I suspect if we looked back from say 2000 years into the future, all we would see, would be the broad strokes and significant achievements, much as we see when we look back. Plus some information may not even be accessible. Who here knows all the information and subtleties to build a CPU from scratch? We look back and say "but they couldn't record the information because they only had parchments and ink." There is no saying that someone looking back form a couple of thousand years from now may say the same? There is already talk of quantum and DNA based storage and computing. If technology continues to evolve at the rate it has over the past 100 years of so, much of the technology may be beyond our ability to understand in today's terms.
Who will decide whether the information is important to be kept? The Pope? The richest people?
It happened in the past, The Great Library of Alexandria was destroyed by the Roman empire, Julius Caesar and Pope Theophilus of Alexandria.
Only God knows how many papyrus scrolls and containing what precious information there had been.
But, today, the clouds have so many hard drives which contain our data, that I think only a catastrophe of global scale can destroy them all.
Also, we have very large cities which is also very difficult to be wiped out.
Our digitised information will survive, I think.
I think I read a while back that NASA were struggling to find programmers who still had a working knowledge of FORTRAN.