If you have ever clicked a broken link and wished you could see what used to be there, you have silently thanked the Internet Archive. For nearly three decades, the nonprofit digital library—home to the Wayback Machine—has been the great equalizer of knowledge. It has preserved dead GeoCities pages, archived government websites that vanished after elections, and saved millions of out-of-print books.
The Archive has always run on donations, grants, and the goodwill of librarians. But goodwill doesn’t pay electricity bills for 100+ petabytes of data. With interest rates high and philanthropic dollars tightening, major grants have dried up. The Archive’s operating reserve is now dangerously low—estimated to cover less than six months of operations. parched internet archive
But today, the Archive is parched. Not of data, but of oxygen. For the last eighteen months, the Internet Archive has been fighting a war on three fronts: legal, financial, and technical. The result is a slow, public dehydration of one of the web’s last true public goods. If you have ever clicked a broken link