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Why the Archive is Building an 'Internet Library' Future Libraries Related Projects and Research Storage and Preservation Server Statistics

News [more]

Google and US publishers reach settlement over book scanning, though authors’ suit remains
Internet Archive houses all TV news since 2009
Internet Archive collects, streams TV news archives
Seagate Helps Preserve Internet's Past
All the TV News Since 2009, on One Web Site
Internet Archive Launches TV News
Internet Pioneer, Former Banker Behind Newest Credit Union
Internet Archive Turns Up the Speed With BitTorrent
Alexandria 2.0: One Millionaire’s Quest to Build the Biggest Library on Earth
Internet Archive serves up 1.4 million BitTorrent downloads

Using the Internet Archive

The Archive’s purpose is to provide free access to the research and academic communities. It does not charge for access to the collections. Read about how we are using the collections.

Accessing the Collections

If the Wayback Machine does not provide the access you need and you would like secure telnet access to the Web or Usenet collections, use our form to send a proposal. Using the collections requires agreeing to our terms of use and privacy and copyright policies.

Technical Requirements

While the Internet Archive does not charge for access to its collections, you will need Unix programming skills to gain access to and use a collection of Web snapshots or Usenet postings. (The Wayback Machine provides free, easy-to-use access to individual Web pages.)

The diagram shows the architecture for storage of and access to the Web collections:

Architecture for Storage of and Access to the Internet Archive's Collections

The Archive assigns each user an ssh (secure shell) access account and disk space on the server facade.archive.org. (Secure shell access provides character-terminal log-in; it’s similar to Telnet access but more secure.) The server runs the Linux operating system.

The server facade.archive.org has access to a series of Linux machines (named ia000.archive.org, ia001.archive.org, and so on). Each machine has either 12 or 20 disk drives (named 0, 1, 2, and so on). On each drive are three types of files:

Users access the hard drives where the collections reside by referencing these remote files from facade.archive.org. You can use either FTP or NFS (network file system) access.


Terms of Use (10 Mar 2001)