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Internet Archive

The Internet Archive is an American nonprofit digital library founded in 1996 by Brewster Kahle.[1][2][4] It provides free access to collections of digitized materials including websites, software applications, music, audiovisual and print materials. The Archive also advocates for a free and open Internet. As of February 4, 2024, the Internet Archive holds more than 44 million print materials, 10.6 million videos, 1 million software programs, 15 million audio files, 4.8 million images, 255,000 concerts, and over 835 billion web pages in its Wayback Machine.[5] Its mission is committing to provide "universal access to all knowledge".[5]

For other uses, see Internet archive (disambiguation).

Type of business

English

May 10, 1996 (1996-05-10)[1][2]

Brewster Kahle

Increase $30.5 million (2022)[3]

Increase $7.3 million (2022)[3]

Increase 169 (2022)[3]

No

1996 (1996)

Active

The Internet Archive allows the public to upload and download digital material to its data cluster, but the bulk of its data is collected automatically by its web crawlers, which work to preserve as much of the public web as possible. Its web archive, the Wayback Machine, contains hundreds of billions of web captures.[6][7] The Archive also oversees numerous book digitization projects, collectively one of the world's largest book digitization efforts.

IA's collection, which contains stop-motion animation filmed with Lego bricks, some of which are "remakes" of feature films.

Brick Films

IA's Election 2004 collection, a non-partisan public resource for sharing video materials related to the .

2004 United States presidential election

IA's FedFlix collection, Joint Venture NTIS-1832 between the National Technical Information Service and Public.Resource.Org that features "the best movies of the United States Government, from training films to history, from our national parks to the and the Postal Inspectors"[130]

U.S. Fire Academy

IA's Independent News collection, which includes sub-collections such as the Internet Archive's World At War competition from 2001, in which contestants created short films demonstrating "why access to history matters". Among their most-downloaded video files are eyewitness recordings of the devastating .

2004 Indian Ocean earthquake

IA's September 11 Television Archive, which contains archival footage from the world's major television networks of the of September 11, 2001, as they unfolded on live television.[131]

terrorist attacks

2019 Residency Artists: , Whitney Lynn, and Jeffrey Alan Scudder[164][165]

Caleb Duarte

2018 Residency Artists: Mieke Marple, Chris Sollars, and [166]

Taravat Talepasand

2017 Residency Artists: Laura Kim, Jeremiah Jenkins, and Jenny Odell

[167]

Kahle, Brewster (November 1996). . Scientific America. Archived from the original on October 11, 1997.

"Archiving the Internet"

(November 6, 2013). "Scanning Center Fire – Please Help Rebuild". Internet Archive Blogs.

Kahle, Brewster

(January 26, 2015). "The Cobweb". The New Yorker.

Lepore, Jill

Ringmar, Erik (April 10, 2008). . Times Higher Education Supplement.

"Liberate and Disseminate"

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Official website

Internet Archive Scholar