Web content could be destroyed during the war.
Internet Archive, the non-profit that manages the Wayback Machine for archiving websites, says it is racing to archive as much online content in Ukraine as possible.
While web content doesn’t degrade like physical materials, it is susceptible to disappearing entirely. The organization worries that damage to data centers, routers and cable networks could take the content down permanently. Indeed, the Ukrainian country code domain .ua is under attack.
The Wayback Machine is stepping up the crawling of the entire .ua namespace. It’s also selecting specific sites – including government and educational sites – for deep crawling.
Another organization, Saving Ukrainian Cultural Heritage Online (SUCHO), uses tools to archive the Ukrainian web, including adding pages to the Wayback Machine. SUCHO is seeking volunteers to help gather URLs, perform archiving, and improve metadata. The group is especially in need of coders and people who speak Russian or Ukrainian.
Post link: Internet Archive races to save Ukrainian web content
© DomainNameWire.com 2022. This is copyrighted content. Domain Name Wire full-text RSS feeds are made available for personal use only, and may not be published on any site without permission. If you see this message on a website, contact editor (at) domainnamewire.com. Latest domain news at DNW.com: Domain Name Wire.
Original article: Internet Archive races to save Ukrainian web content
©2022 Domain Observer. All Rights Reserved.
TL;DR Rising Densities Dictate Design: As rack densities surge to 50–100kW and beyond to support…
In January 2026, more than 230 US-based advocacy groups signed a letter urging the US…
TL;DR Edge AI optimizes real-time performance: While cloud data centers are ideal for training massive…
This guide is for IT teams, security leaders, and businesses looking to strengthen their cloud…
The global data center heat exchanger market was valued at USD 2.8 billion in 2025…
In ever-higher-density data center environments, unplanned downtime is costly. Whether it’s interrupting AI training workloads…