-
A harvest of Federal Agency public web sites as they existed prior to January 20, 2005.
-
A subscription service from the Internet Archive, which allows institutions to build, manage and search their own web archive. Includes the sites of universities, libraries, and special interest collections of websites.
-
Contains archives of FAQs, mailing lists, and newsgroups all related to developer/programming/IT. Free.
-
Journal article by Paul Wouters, Iina Hellsten, and Loet Leydesdorff. Examines the consequences and implications of internet search engines continuously reconstructing the past by updating their indices.
-
Long running online "museum" provides screenshots of defunct sites.
-
Enables users to search and browse the Usenet archives which consist of over 700 million messages, and post new comments.
-
Library of Congress Web Archiving Project aims to collect and preserve Web sites useful in serving the current or future informational needs of Congress and researchers.
-
Aims to archive and make available to the public all email newsletters and electronic mailing lists. It will rely on user contributions for its content.
-
Australia's Web archive, established initially by the National Library of Australia, and now built in collaboration with nine other Australian libraries and cultural collecting organisations.
-
Searchable online archives of mailing list discussions containing thousands of lists with millions of messages, with spam filters.
-
Article by Gary Price and Genie Tyburski. Explores the question of "what is a date on the web?" and notes that a searcher may be misled by the results of searches restricted by date.
-
Contains information gathered from BBS's in the early days of the Internet.
-
Digital library of cultural artifacts in digital form. The collection includes public information films, recordings and Web harvest of political related and government websites.
-
Nonprofit organisation established to preserve Web sites by taking regular "snapshots". The Wayback Machine provides links to older versions of a webpage. There are special collections, for example on Web pioneers.
-
Essay by Peter Abrahams pointing out "one of the weaknesses of most search engines and the Web itself: you cannot sort by date."
-
Opinion piece by Ashlee Vance about how archive.org doesn't permanently save material the way most people believe it does.
-
Announcement of the creation of the UK Web Archiving Consortium (UKWAC).
-
Opinion piece by Andrew Orlowski. Points out that Google can't always index, retrieve and/or sort everything in useful ways, but its supporters are overlooking these major drawbacks to using it as an archive.
-
Aimed at the broad research community and is systematically attempting to create an archive of social, historic and culturally significant web-based material from the UK domain.
-
Ten years of web design in an archive.