Parched Internet Archive Guide
Not because the servers crashed. Not because a hard drive failed.
— End of post — A split-photo: on the left, the familiar green Wayback Machine logo with a cracked, dry-earth texture. On the right, a librarian holding a single glass of water next to a row of humming black servers. parched internet archive
In late 2024 and early 2025, the Archive suffered repeated distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks. Hackers—some politically motivated, some just chaotic—knocked the Wayback Machine offline for weeks at a time. Each attack forced the Archive to spend emergency funds on cloud firewalls and bandwidth it never budgeted for. Not because the servers crashed
When the site goes dark, patrons assume it’s a server hiccup. It’s not. It’s a siege. And every hour of downtime means more lost URLs vanish from the record forever because the crawlers couldn’t reach them in time. On the right, a librarian holding a single
April 14, 2026
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.