The free internet library with its "Wayback Machine" was unavailable for days. It was a cyber attack by a Russian hacker ...
The Internet Archive, which hosts the Wayback Machine, is on a mission to preserve online content and books, yet it now faces ...
The non-profit behind open access digital library was hit with both a data breach and a stream of DDoS attacks in one week ...
The nonprofit San Francisco-based Internet Archive provides free access to an online library of millions of videos, audio files and copies of billions of archived web pages on its Wayback Machine.
Taken offline after a breach, the huge collection of webpages, e-books, and other content is doing essential work abandoned ...
DDoS detectives deduce Mirai used to do the deed, using home entertainment boxes in Korea, China, and Brazil The Internet ...
The Internet Archive has been cyber attacked, exposing the data of 31 million users, compromising their email addresses and their screen names.
More details have emerged concerning the recent cyberattack against the Internet Archive, which appears to still not be fully ...
From Gawker to the Cartoon Network, online archives are vanishing — and they're taking our cultural history with them.
After nearly a week of downtime, the Internet Archive is back online in a "provisional, read-only manner." You're free to ...
The California-based Archive has run the Wayback Machine, devoted to preserving the internet as a historical and cultural artifact, since 1996. It has taken more than 150 billion snapshots of webpages ...