The digital library's website was defaced earlier this month with a message boasting its theft of Internet Archive users' ...
The Internet Archive is gradually restoring its services following a cyberattack that led to a temporary shutdown of its ...
It’s the first time in its almost 30-year history that it has suffered an outage of longer than a few hours, founder Brewster Kahle told The Washington Post. Most of the site remains offline a ...
Days after a distributed denial of service (DDoS) cyberattack that damaged the Internet Archive site and exposed user credentials, the online database of web pages and open source media is slowly ...
The Internet Archive's founder, Brewster Kahle, also confirmed the breach and said the website had been defaced with the pop-up through a JavaScript library. The site was also hit with a series of ...
In short, the Internet Archive can’t seem to catch a break. “@internetarchive team spirits high, but tired,” Brewster Kahle, the archive’s founder, tweeted Tuesday. While an accidental fire—bruited to ...
However, Internet Archive founder Brewster Kahle said on X October 11 that “data is safe.” In its latest blog post, the non-profit further confirmed that “the stored data of the Internet Archive is ...
It then went offline to be hardened against further such attacks, a process founder Brewster Kahle said should take “days, not weeks.” As I’m writing this, only the Wayback Machine is back ...
Brewster Kahle, the Internet Archive's founder and digital librarian, acknowledged a series of distributed denial-of-service (DDoS) attacks -- aimed at disrupting a website or server -- since ...