ইন্টারনেট সংরক্ষণাগারটি ডাব্লুডাব্লুডাব্লু ব্যাক আপ শুরু করার প্রায় 30 বছর পরে একটি নতুন 1 ট্রিলিয়ন পৃষ্ঠার চিহ্নে পৌঁছেছে এবং তার পর থেকে 100,000 টিবিও বেশি ফাইল সুরক্ষিত করেছে।

The Wayback Machine, by the Internet Archive, now preserves a trillion web pages for the public. Decades of digital history are stored in 100,000 TB, providing snapshots of online memory. Daily users and researchers rely on archived pages to recover lost information. The Internet Archive has reached a major preservation milestone, recording a staggering 1 trillion web pages (a 1 followed by 12 zeros!), nearly three decades after it began backing up the World Wide Web. Over 10,000 TB of data, or the equivalent of about 21.3 million DVDs, is available through the Wayback Machine, a tool that allows users to view archived versions of websites throughout internet history. Since its founding in 1996, the Internet Archive has partnered with over 1,200 libraries and institutions to create a shared digital library aimed at protecting online content that might otherwise disappear. You can literally pick any 500 million pages a day. This ranges from cultural and news posts to private blogs and defunct sites like Gawker and MTV News. By preserving these pieces of the online world, it provides a lasting record of how information and culture has evolved online. If you would like to check out some of the earliest pages, click here. It’s also worth checking out then and now pages to see how sites like Apple, Microsoft, and Google have evolved over time. The Wayback Machine captures around 500 million pages daily and serves roughly 800,000 visitors. Visitors include scientists, journalists, students and everyday users like myself, and I suspect, you. When I encounter a missing page or a link that gives an error, I often check the Wayback Machine. It doesn’t always have a copy, but when it does, it’s great. Over the years, the archives have been used for just about every proposition you can think of, including immigration cases, memorial projects, and studies in chaos and media history. Examples include a Canadian musician who once relied on archived concert listings to support his residency application, and researchers at King’s College London who are using them to identify how digital news and open data has evolved over time. You can also find investigators and journalists turn to the archive to verify deleted or altered material, reinforcing online accountability. Throughout October, the Internet Archive is celebrating the trillion-page milestone with events honoring those who build and use the archive. The gatherings will also explore the future of web archiving and how the public can contribute to the internet’s collective memory. Follow TechRadar on Google News and add us as your favorite source to hear from our experts. News, reviews, and opinions in your feeds. Don’t forget to click the “Subscribe” button! And of course, you can follow TechRadar for news, reviews, unboxing videos, and get regular updates from us on WhatsApp. You may also like (tagstotranslate) Bangladesh (t) News
প্রকাশিত: 2025-10-14 23:36:00
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