Even the Wayback Machine is getting into fact-checking now. In a blog post on its website, the Internet Archive announced it was rolling out fact-checking annotations on certain webpages archives by ...
Several major news organizations, including The New York Times, The Guardian, and USA Today’s parent company, are blocking the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine from crawling their sites. Publishers ...
As major news outlets cut off the Wayback Machine, journalists and advocacy groups are rallying to protect the Internet ...
More companies are opting not to archive their sites ...
The "Wayback Machine," custodian of digital memory, is fighting for its survival. An increasing number of media outlets are refusing to allow the Web Archive to archive their content.
Over 241 news sites are blocking the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine to prevent AI companies from using archived content for training.
"There's no question that the general locking-down of more and more of the public web is impacting society's ability to understand what's going on in our world." ...
The Internet Archive is a Californian non-profit whose ambitious goal is to create a digital library of “all knowledge.” It is today almost synonymous with its best-known project, the Wayback Machine.
The web is decentralized and fluid by design, but all that chaos and ephemerality can make it difficult to keep a site up and online without interruption. That's what has made the Internet Archive's ...
Add Yahoo as a preferred source to see more of our stories on Google. The internet is ephemeral, with the average life of a web page – before it's changed or deleted – about 100 days. And so, the ...