wayback machine

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  • The Internet Archive's Wayforward Machine

    The Internet Archive's 'Wayforward Machine' paints a grim future for the web

    by 
    Kris Holt
    Kris Holt
    10.07.2021

    The nonprofit is marking its 25th anniversary by advocating for internet freedom.

  • Educational e-learning class and e-book digital technology concept with pc computer notebook open in blur school library or classroom background among old stacks of book, textbook archive collection

    Internet Archive adds fact checks to explain web page takedowns

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    11.01.2020

    The Internet Archive now adds fact checks and context to explain why cached pages were taken down.

  • A view of the Engadget homepage from 2004, as seen on a phone.

    The Wayback Machine and Cloudflare team up to keep websites online

    by 
    Ann Smajstrla
    Ann Smajstrla
    09.18.2020

    The Wayback Machine, a project of Internet Archive, allows you to view web pages as they appeared on certain past dates.

  • Getty Images

    Search for classic GIFs in the Internet Archive's new collection

    by 
    Andrew Tarantola
    Andrew Tarantola
    10.27.2016

    To celebrate its 20th anniversary, the Internet Archive has created a special treat for its visitors: an utterly enormous number of GIFs culled from the original social network, GeoCities. Fittingly, the new collection is dubbed the Geocities Animated Gif Search Engine or GifCities for short. It features a whopping 4,500,000 animated GIFs from the classic internet era of the mid '90s. Even though Yahoo shut down the service in 2009, each of these GIFs links back to its originating page via the Wayback Machine -- just as with the National Archive's collection.

  • Wayback Machine web archive survives destructive fire but needs help to recover

    by 
    Sharif Sakr
    Sharif Sakr
    11.07.2013

    If you're one of the many people who've relied on the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine recently, for example when government websites were taken offline during the shut down, then the non-profit organization is now calling for your help in return. A fire broke out at its main scanning center in San Francisco yesterday, causing an estimated $600,000-worth of damage. No one was hurt and no digital data was lost, since the Wayback Machine uses multiple server centers around the world. However, it sounds like the fire destroyed some books and other materials that were in the process of being scanned. The Internet Archive is calling for assistance in two forms: cash donations and fresh scanning projects from anyone who has physical collections they want to preserve, because the group has a second scanning center and needs to keep its employees busy. Follow the source link to find out more.