Internet Archive
Aus AkiWiki
Wiki (Diskussion | Beiträge) (s.a. Ab heute werden die Google-Suchergebnisse direkt mit dem Internet Archive verlinkt, um den Links in Ihren Ergebnissen einen historischen Kontext zu verleihen (via rbfirehose.com und 9to5goog) |
Wiki (Diskussion | Beiträge) (==Celebrate 1 Trillion Web Pages Archived== The Internet Archive invites libraries to celebrate a once-in-a-generation milestone: one trillion web pages archived in the Wayback Machine. Written by Ch) |
||
| Zeile 1: | Zeile 1: | ||
[[Kategorie:DZ]] | [[Kategorie:DZ]] | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | ==Celebrate 1 Trillion Web Pages Archived== | ||
| + | |||
| + | The Internet Archive invites libraries to celebrate a once-in-a-generation milestone: one trillion web pages archived in the Wayback Machine. Written by Chris Freeland, the post launches a resource guide with background points, impact stories, event ideas, visuals, and ready-to-use social templates. It suggests programming such as “then/now” displays using Wayback captures and public talks on web preservation. The message situates libraries as essential partners in safeguarding digital memory and engaging communities, encouraging institutions everywhere to mark the milestone and link local collections to the global story of preserving the web. | ||
| + | |||
| + | 211025 via mail issn | ||
| + | |||
| + | ... | ||
| Zeile 30: | Zeile 39: | ||
261220 via site | 261220 via site | ||
| + | |||
| + | ... | ||
| + | |||
| + | |||
| + | “The new administration has also abruptly deactivated reproductiverights.gov. Again, this is a Biden administration initiative taken after the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization in June 2022 essentially overturned Roe v. Wade. The site offered legal, plain language resources on rights to emergency care, contraceptives, and abortion. Today, this site is simply gone. Load it in your browser and you get a black screen, as if the domain never existed. The Internet Archive is the only place you can see it.” | ||
| + | |||
| + | 240125 via digithek ch | ||
| Zeile 55: | Zeile 71: | ||
Has this ever happened before? Not that I know of, but maybe there’s a book in the National Emergency Library that will contradict me. It reminds me a little, though, of the Council on Books in Wartime, a collection of libraries, booksellers, and publishers, founded in 1942. William Warder Norton, of W. W. Norton & Company, was chair of the council, which issued a statement declaring that “books are useful, necessary, and indispensable.” F.D.R. agreed, writing to Norton, “a war of ideas can no more be won without books than a naval war can be won without ships.” The council picked over a thousand volumes, from Virginia Woolf’s “The Years” to Raymond Chandler’s “The Big Sleep,” and sold the books, around six cents a copy, to the U.S. military, as Armed Services Editions, books for soldiers and sailors and Army nurses and anyone else in uniform. As Yoni Appelbaum wrote in The Atlantic a few years ago, the council effectively gave away more than a hundred and twenty million books—their very best titles—and created a nation of readers. Emily Graff, who was, a long time ago, a student of mine but who is now an editor at Simon & Schuster, once went to the council’s archives at Princeton to read the letters written to the council by servicemen and women. One ship captain wrote, “We live on books.” (My emphasis) | Has this ever happened before? Not that I know of, but maybe there’s a book in the National Emergency Library that will contradict me. It reminds me a little, though, of the Council on Books in Wartime, a collection of libraries, booksellers, and publishers, founded in 1942. William Warder Norton, of W. W. Norton & Company, was chair of the council, which issued a statement declaring that “books are useful, necessary, and indispensable.” F.D.R. agreed, writing to Norton, “a war of ideas can no more be won without books than a naval war can be won without ships.” The council picked over a thousand volumes, from Virginia Woolf’s “The Years” to Raymond Chandler’s “The Big Sleep,” and sold the books, around six cents a copy, to the U.S. military, as Armed Services Editions, books for soldiers and sailors and Army nurses and anyone else in uniform. As Yoni Appelbaum wrote in The Atlantic a few years ago, the council effectively gave away more than a hundred and twenty million books—their very best titles—and created a nation of readers. Emily Graff, who was, a long time ago, a student of mine but who is now an editor at Simon & Schuster, once went to the council’s archives at Princeton to read the letters written to the council by servicemen and women. One ship captain wrote, “We live on books.” (My emphasis) | ||
| - | + | --> | |
==re:launch in 2017== | ==re:launch in 2017== | ||
| Zeile 76: | Zeile 92: | ||
| - | + | ||
Aktuelle Version vom 26. Oktober 2025, 15:26 Uhr
Inhaltsverzeichnis |
Celebrate 1 Trillion Web Pages Archived
The Internet Archive invites libraries to celebrate a once-in-a-generation milestone: one trillion web pages archived in the Wayback Machine. Written by Chris Freeland, the post launches a resource guide with background points, impact stories, event ideas, visuals, and ready-to-use social templates. It suggests programming such as “then/now” displays using Wayback captures and public talks on web preservation. The message situates libraries as essential partners in safeguarding digital memory and engaging communities, encouraging institutions everywhere to mark the milestone and link local collections to the global story of preserving the web.
211025 via mail issn
...
AKI internet cafe am 16.09.2024 in digital zum Thema "Internet Archive"
s.a.
Ab heute werden die Google-Suchergebnisse direkt mit dem Internet Archive verlinkt, um den Links in Ihren Ergebnissen einen historischen Kontext zu verleihen (via rbfirehose.com und 9to5google.com):
“We know that many people, including those in the research community, value being able to see previous versions of webpages when available. That’s why we’ve added links to the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine to our ‘About this page’ feature, to give people quick context and make this helpful information easily accessible through Search.”
120924 via digithek ch
Google und Wayback Machine
Marvin Fuhrmann erläutert in seinem Beitrag, warum Google zukünftig auf die Wayback Machine des Internet Archives verlinkt und wie die relevanten Seiten über die Google-Suchergebnisse aufgerufen werden: "Vorherige Versionen ansehen unter Internet Archive". t3n.de
Can You Chip In?
They’re trying to change history — don’t let them. In the chaotic atmosphere of 2020, the Wayback Machine is a crucial resource in the fight against disinformation, and now more than ever we need your help. Right now we’re preserving history as it unfolds, keeping track of who’s saying what and when—all without charging for access, selling user data, or running ads. Instead, we rely on the generosity of individuals to help us keep the record straight.
Right now, the Internet Archive (which runs this project) has a 2-to-1 Matching Gift Campaign, tripling the impact of every donation. If you find our public record useful, please pitch in.
—Brewster Kahle, Founder, Internet Archive
261220 via site
...
“The new administration has also abruptly deactivated reproductiverights.gov. Again, this is a Biden administration initiative taken after the Supreme Court’s decision in Dobbs v. Jackson Women’s Health Organization in June 2022 essentially overturned Roe v. Wade. The site offered legal, plain language resources on rights to emergency care, contraceptives, and abortion. Today, this site is simply gone. Load it in your browser and you get a black screen, as if the domain never existed. The Internet Archive is the only place you can see it.”
240125 via digithek ch
re:launch in 2017
http://www.univie.ac.at/voeb/blog/?p=38440 Oktober 22, 2015 ...
The Internet Archive will launch > a modernized Wayback Machine in 2017 The Wayback Machine, an > essential and amazing tool that's preserved 19 years of the web's > history, is getting a big redesign. The Internet Archive expects to > launch a rebuilt and modernized Wayback Machine sometime in 2017, > promising that it "will […]
Wayback Machine :: Site Search ab 2017
We are excited to share a beta release of the Wayback Machine featuring Site Search == You can now discover web sites, many which are no longer available via the "live web," by entering terms you think might be associated with those sites. Of course you can also still enter the URLs of site. Please give this new service a try: web-beta.archive.org. We would love your feedback so don't be shy! ... http://www.archive.org ... 101116
Internet Archive
Das Internet-Gedächtnis, das Zeitreisen zu Webseiten, Usenet-Beiträgen und Software ermöglicht, bietet viele Milliarden Seiten ... von Ende 1996 bis heute ...
zB
AKI===
https://web.archive.org/web/*/http://www.aki-stuttgart.de
DLA - archiviert seit 12/1996===
https://web.archive.org/web/19961227113626/http://www.dla-marbach.de:80/
Hubertus von Schoenebeck ist Vater von sechs Kindern.
The Complutensian Polyglot
presented the Old Testament in Hebrew, Greek, and Latin and the New Testament in Greek and Latin. It was prepared at the University of Alcala de Henares, in Spain, by a group of scholars under the sponsorship of Cardinal Francisco Jimenez de Cisneros and printed (probably 600 copies) in 1514-17. With the authorization of Pope Leo X, the work was published in 1521 or 1522." EB 2008. submitted by mjm, 2009.
100124 via site
...
Mehr als 500’000 Bücher
wurden aufgrund des Rechtsstreits Hachette gegen Internet Archive aus der Leihbibliothek des Internet Archive entfernt, darunter mehr als 1’300 verbotene und angefochtene Titel (via blog.archive.org):
«The potential repercussions of this lawsuit extend far beyond the Internet Archive. This is a fight for the preservation of all libraries, and the fundamental right to access information, a cornerstone of any democratic society. We believe in the right of authors to benefit from their work; and we believe that libraries must be permitted to fulfill their mission of providing access to knowledge, regardless of whether it takes physical or digital form. Doing so upholds the principle that knowledge should be equally and equitably accessible to everyone, regardless of where they live or where they learn.»
190624 via digithek ch
...