Internet Archive Says It Has Restored 9 Million Broken Wikipedia Links By Directing Them To Archived Versions in Wayback Machine (archive.org)
Mark Graham, the Director of Wayback Machine at Internet Archive, announces: As part of the Internet Archive's aim to build a better Web, we have been working to make the Web more reliable -- and are pleased to announce that 9 million formerly broken links on Wikipedia now work because they go to archived versions in the Wayback Machine.
For more than 5 years, the Internet Archive has been archiving nearly every URL referenced in close to 300 wikipedia sites as soon as those links are added or changed at the rate of about 20 million URLs/week. And for the past 3 years, we have been running a software robot called IABot on 22 Wikipedia language editions looking for broken links (URLs that return a '404', or 'Page Not Found'). When broken links are discovered, IABot searches for archives in the Wayback Machine and other web archives to replace them with. Restoring links ensures Wikipedia remains accurate and verifiable and thus meets one of Wikipedia's three core content policies: 'Verifiability.'
For more than 5 years, the Internet Archive has been archiving nearly every URL referenced in close to 300 wikipedia sites as soon as those links are added or changed at the rate of about 20 million URLs/week. And for the past 3 years, we have been running a software robot called IABot on 22 Wikipedia language editions looking for broken links (URLs that return a '404', or 'Page Not Found'). When broken links are discovered, IABot searches for archives in the Wayback Machine and other web archives to replace them with. Restoring links ensures Wikipedia remains accurate and verifiable and thus meets one of Wikipedia's three core content policies: 'Verifiability.'
Archive.org is precious! Since a long time I rather send my students the archived version of web pages. If it is not there, I upload it. That way I can reuse a web page many years later and trust it is still there. Phenomenally simple!
You just know people will file DMCA takedowns for their content archived on Wayback, breaking the links yet again.
Because people are petty and obsessed with controlling their content even though they're not making money from it anymore and they would have otherwise forgotten about it completely.
How are these 9 million links broken in the first place?
Wikipedia has a useful and seemingly complete archive of every version and edit for every article. I'm curious how these broken links originate, and how they differ from those that are available in the WIkipedia Revision History.
Until the domain's new owner sets up a robots.txt, causing Wayback Machine to retrospectively block public access to the archived copy of a document. See debate about this a year and a half ago.
Do they provide a health plan? The workers or their children might need hospital care.
Those articles were deleted for a reason!
These nazis are trying to plug up the memory hole!
Shut it down!
Most academic links go down because the student no longer works there, and the research lab has a clean out of old documents and web pages.
Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
Since you're assigning responsibility for updating outdated content, why isn't it the responsibility of the cited website's author to update their page, rather than taking it down?
In my experience with Wikipedia dead links, it's almost always a case of a server no longer existing or a site changing their CMS without setting up redirects.
The Amber project, http://amberlink.org/ provides a plugin for various content management systems to do the same thing on your own site.