Thousands of informational government webpages have been taken down so far in the second Trump administration, including on ...
A litany of federal websites vanished only to reappear later with little to no information about any changes made.
The database contains more than 916 billion web pages, according to the site’s homepage. The Internet Archive, in collaboration with partners such as the Environmental Data & Governance ...
Wayback Machine, is conducting the End of Term Web Archive project, which preserves all U.S. government websites every four years when a presidential term expires. On February 6, 2025, the ...
Amid takedowns of various government sites and databases, several organizations are working to preserve vital climate, health, and scientific data before it’s gone for good. Stephanie Arnett ...
authors are permitted to self-archive the accepted manuscript on their own personal website and/or in their funder or institutional repositories, for public release six months after publication.
Extended interview with Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine at the Internet Archive. He is also part of the End of Term Archive for federal websites.
authors are permitted to self-archive the accepted manuscript on their own personal website and/or in their funder or institutional repositories, for public release six months after publication.