The Internet Archive is back... kind of
The fragility of the internet’s de-facto record of truth was on display last week as the Internet Archive was knocked offline due to a DDOS attack on October 10, according to Brewster Kahle, the nonprofit’s digital librarian and founder.
As of today, the service is back online, but in a limited read-only state. The attack also resulted in a data breach of 31 million user accounts, which included usernames, emails, and hashed passwords.
Journalists and researchers worldwide rely on the site to capture and archive web pages, and the Wayback Machine, the archive’s web interface, for searching and browsing 916 billion web pages back through history.
Journalists and researchers worldwide rely on the site to capture and archive web pages, and the Wayback Machine, the archive’s web interface, for searching and browsing 916 billion web pages back through history.