Source: email from The Internet Archive
Text:
Dear [Lemmy],
As reported last month, Vice Media will no longer publish on its flagship website, Vice.com, resulting in many journalists furiously trying to save their work before the feared deletion of the entire website. Similarly, news sites like Gawker and The Messenger have faced similar fates in recent years—websites currently devoid of reporting or articles.
The loss of these websites is a reminder that access to information must remain a fundamental right for all who seek it.
Thankfully, the Wayback Machine has become a vital resource in the fight to preserve media and knowledge for all. Journalists can save links to their works on the public archive, researchers can access original pieces of reporting, and nostalgic readers can revisit old favorites. And as the fight against misinformation and disinformation continues, the preservation of access to the historical record is more important than ever.
We have always provided our resources for free, powered by donations from individuals like you. If you find these services useful, please consider donating to help us build the digital library we deserve. If you cannot contribute, we understand, but any help is greatly appreciated.
Together, we can continue to advance universal access to all knowledge
Brewster Kahle Founder and Digital Librarian
PS: I would link the email, but it has my name in it. Also, if you’re a millionaire the Archive would probably appreciate like half of it, and more normal people can do five bucks a month (but I get it you might be broke!). Donation link
Probably the wrong place to ask, but does archive.org backup everything multiple times? The amount they have saved is absolutely nuts. They depend on donations and i just wonder if content they have had for awhile is still backed up to newer harddrives after a few years?
It says they duplicate and backup all files at various locations: https://help.archive.org/help/archive-org-information/
Probably but I think the point they were making was more along the lines of: what if the Internet archive itself ran out of money or closed up.