#Wayback1T

Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2026-01-14
2026-01-14

How did #librarian Megan Lotts turn 1 trillion web pages into an 8-page zine? 🤯

The Internet Archive invited the Rutgers art librarian to celebrate this milestone with a handmade tribute to the web.

The zine includes the Wayback Machine logo, collection icons, a vintage photo of Brewster Kahle, and playful design elements—capturing the scale, creativity, and history of preserving the web.

See the zine & read the story ➡️ blog.archive.org/2026/01/14/ho

#Wayback1T

A collage of pages from Lott's handmade zine celebrating the Internet Archive's 1 trillion web pages milestone with a handmade tribute to web preservation, showing all eight illustrated pages and an embossed gold seal bearing Lott's name.
Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-12-22

The Joyful Chaos of the Early Web: A Conversation with Creator Audrey Witters

fed.brid.gy/r/https://blog.arc

2025-12-05

It’s Final Draw day for World Cup 26! ⚽️
Decades of FIFA & World Cup-related sites are preserved in the Wayback Machine; some of the 1 trillion pages saved so far.
Ready to kick off a trip through the websites of the tournament & your favorite teams? Score your goal with the #WaybackMachine ➡️ web.archive.org

#WorldCup #Wayback1T @internetarchive

Image with text at the top that reads: "Wayback Machine Then and Now" and "FIFA.COM". Below are Wayback Machine captures of the FIFA website from December 7, 1998, alongside one from October 8, 2025. The logo of the Internet Archive appears at the lower right.
2025-12-02

Mosaic was the first web browser to hit the mainstream in 1993, built by NCSA at Illinois. 🌐 It integrated text, images, data, audio & video, sparking a web boom. Not the first browser, but the one that made the web usable for millions. Its legacy? Every browser since.

Visit its old website using your modern browser using the #WaybackMachine ⤵️ web.archive.org/web/1996122004

#Wayback1T #InternetHistory

Image with text at the top that reads: "Wayback Machine Then and Gone" and "NCSA.UIUC.EDU/SDG/SOFTWARE/MOSAIC". Below is a Wayback Machine capture of the NCSA website for the Mosaic browser from December 20, 1996, alongside a stylized computer window featuring a pixel art frowning face representing that the website is gone labeled "Now".
2025-11-24

Erin Malone — author, design historian, and Chair of Interaction Design at CCA — discusses building Kodak’s first website in the mid-1990s and gives a look at that site, now preserved in the #WaybackMachine.

📝 More ⤵️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/20/vo

#Wayback1T #WebHistory

2025-11-24

Friends, we gather to honor the dearly departed icons of the early web. 🖥️⚰️ Though they have vanished from our screens, their spirit endures both in our memory & in the Wayback Machine, preserved across 1 trillion pages of web history.

👀 Pay your respects in full resolution ⤵️
archive.org/details/in-memoria

#Wayback1T

Bill Sharpe GadflyOhMrBill@techhub.social
2025-11-21

#Futurism << Why do you use the twitter word when referring to X?. You can find Twitter posts on the #Wayback1t which is Pasturism...
Have a nice day.
Bill

Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-11-20
Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-11-18
2025-11-18

Jean Armour Polly, aka the Net-mom & the person who helped popularize the phrase “surfing the internet," celebrates the Internet Archive’s 1 trillionth webpage. Her message highlights the ephemerality of websites, the importance of preserving digital culture, & honors the librarians & archivists who make it possible.

More ⬇️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/17/vo

#Wayback1T #DigitalPreservation #InternetArchive @Netmom

Bill Sharpe GadflyOhMrBill@techhub.social
2025-11-18

@bloor
#Wayback1t take note...
:)
Bill

Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-11-17
Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-11-14
2025-11-14

"A truly historic accomplishment," as NPR President & CEO Katherine Maher puts it: “1 trillion web pages. That’s 1 trillion artifacts and snapshots of our interconnected world.”

🎬 Maher reflects on why preserving our digital record matters more than ever, and the crucial role of the Wayback Machine.

📝 More ⤵️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/14/vo

#Wayback1T

2025-11-14

Hi5 was an early social platform, launched in 2003. Mostly forgotten in the U.S., but big in Latin America & Southeast Asia with tens of millions of users around 2007–2008. Today it’s mostly social games & dating.

The #WaybackMachine preserves the early web, from the famous to the forgotten. Use it to find your forgotten corners of the internet. ⤵️
web.archive.org

#Wayback1T #Hi5 #DigitalHistory #SocialMediaHistory #Nostalgia

Image with text at the top that reads: "Wayback Machine Then and Gone" and "HI5.COM". Below are Wayback Machine captures of the landing pages of the Hi5 website from June 9, 2004, alongside one from September 26, 2025.
2025-11-13

Today’s web is fragmented, paywalled & dominated by a few powerful platforms. Some of the internet’s founders & current leaders gathered to discuss how it can still be saved: “a game with many winners.” Learn more ⤵️ blog.archive.org/2025/11/10/i... #OpenWeb #Wayback1T @brewsterkahle

Internet Luminaries Unite to D...

2025-11-13

Today’s web is fragmented, paywalled & dominated by a few powerful platforms. Some of the internet’s founders & current leaders gathered to discuss how it can still be saved: “a game with many winners.”

Learn more ⤵️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/10/in

#OpenWeb #Wayback1T @brewsterkahle

Luke Hogg moderates a panel with Brewster Kahle of the Internet Archive, Vint Cerf of Google, Cindy Cohn of the Electronic Frontier Foundation, and Jon Stokes of Ars Technica on Oct. 27, 2025. (Foundation for American Innovation, Washington D.C.)
Internet Archive Blogs | Updates from the Internet Archiveblog.archive.org@web.brid.gy
2025-11-12
2025-11-12

Internet pioneer Vint Cerf, co-creator of the TCP/IP protocols that built the Internet, celebrates the Internet Archive reaching 1 trillion pages & reflects on why preserving our digital history matters for generations to come.
More ⤵️
blog.archive.org/2025/11/12/vo

#Wayback1T

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