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News [more]

Archive chronicles TV's take on 9/11
Archiving every book ever published
US scholar brings ancient Balinese scripts to digital age
At ALA Midwinter, Brewster Kahle, Librarians Ponder The E-book Future (Publisher's Weekly)
Libraries Have a Novel Idea Lenders Join Forces to Let Patrons Check Out Digital Scans of Shelved Book Collections (Wall Street Journal)
A field trip to the Internet Archive (Washington Post)
Washington Post: "Project puts 1M books online for blind, dyslexic"
Sherwood middle school students participate in nationwide program to archive Web sites
URL shorteners working with Internet Archive for long-term preservation
Planets and galaxies, with a score by Debussy (LA Times)

Removing Documents From the Wayback Machine

The Internet Archive is not interested in offering access to web sites or other Internet documents whose authors do not want their materials in the collection. To remove your site from the Wayback Machine, place a robots.txt file at the top level of your site (e.g. www.yourdomain.com/robots.txt).

The robots.txt file will do two things:

  1. It will remove documents from your domain from the Wayback Machine.
  2. It will tell us not to crawl your site in the future.

To exclude the Internet Archive’s crawler (and remove documents from the Wayback Machine) while allowing all other robots to crawl your site, your robots.txt file should say:

User-agent: ia_archiver
Disallow: /

Robots.txt can be used to block access to the whole domain, or any file or directory within. There are a large number of resources for webmasters and site owners describing this method and how to use it, including http://www.robotstxt.org/.

If you cannot put a robots.txt file up, read our exclusion policy. If you think it applies to you, send a request to us at info@archive.org.


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