The main Internet Archive website is back online after hackers breached the site earlier this month and stole personal information from its servers
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The Internet Archives' Wayback Machine site is now back online after a cyberattack hacked into the popular site last week and got access to 31 million user accounts.
The tons of web pages available on the Internet Archive's Wayback Machine site can now be directly accessed via Google Search.
Internet Archive and Wayback Machine have been facing DDoS cyberattacks for the last few days. The non-profit assured that collections are safe despite the service being inconsistent since Sunday.
Google has confirmed that it will no longer have a Cached feature for websites in its search results, claiming that the feature is no longer needed due to improvements in internet website loading.
Google and Wikimedia have entered into a formal agreement to pay for content the search giant sources from Wikipedia. Additionally, Internet Archive which operates Wayback Machine will benefit.
OldWeb.Today is the new version of classic.oldweb.today and it takes the fun you might have at Internet Archive's venerable Wayback Machine a few steps further with new Javasript tooling.
Brave web browser now has native support for Internet Archive's Wayback Machine. If you land on a dead page, you'll get an option to load a saved version of the page sourced from the Internet Archive.
A popular service named the Wayback Machine, which allows people to revisit thousands of old websites, has been blocked to many users in India. The block appears to have come from a government order.
The Internet Archive, the people behind the Wayback Machine, have uploaded and curated over 10,000 games, applications and demos designed for the Amiga. You can try them out in your browser.