Except for book publishers, the Internet Archive has done no one any harm. But that hasn't stopped hackers from beating up on ...
The digital library was taken offline by multiple cyberattacks last month and had been operating in read-only mode until ...
Users on the Internet Archive subreddit are reporting getting the replies, as well. Here is the message I received: It’s ...
A DDoS attacker that knocked the popular archive site offline has stolen millions of usernames, email addresses, and ...
The Internet Archive is facing another major setback after a series of cyberattacks disrupted its services. Just one day ...
The Internet Archive has suffered another data breach after a threat actor took possession of the email addresses of the ...
Hackers struck the Internet Archive, leaking millions of users’s data and causing founder Brewster Kahle to take a sprawling library of online history offline.
Though the Internet Archive may appear on the surface as just one service, it actually provides a variety of resources.
Law-enforcement officials urged people to report threatening messages.
The hack exposed the data of 31 million users as the embattled Wayback Machine maker scrambles to stay online and contain the fallout of digital—and legal—attacks.
NPR's Mary Louise Kelly talks with Brewster Khale, the founder of Internet Archive, about the attack by hackers that put the archive offline for days -- and what may have happened if it had succeeded.
“You are the media now” is also a good message because, well, it might be true.