The Wayback Machine debuts a new plug-in designed to fix the internet’s broken links problem
This week, the platform announced a new tool designed to expand on that mission by helping the world’s WordPress users keep their articles in peak digital health. The Archive’s Wayback Machine, which indexes the web through widespread snapshotting, has partnered with Automattic, the company behind WordPress.
” “Link rot” is the unfortunate phenomenon whereby online articles become populated by broken links — URLs that once led to active pages but now result in error messages or dead ends.
Such “digital decay” occurs across a broad diversity of web pages, from news and government sites to Wikipedia pages to tweets.
If there are none, it will automatically take new snapshots of the articles in question.
The tool also archives a user’s own posts, helping to ensure their longevity.
The tool is designed to keep a site’s visitors reading the best available version of a web page.
Indeed, Automattic’s plug-in perpetually checks a web page’s links, and if an original link that had gone offline is resurrected, the plug-in will start redirecting the user to that original page again instead of the archived version.
For instance, users can specify how often they want the plug-in to scan a link for validity (the default offered by the program is every three days)
Logic Quality Breakdown:
- Updated_At:
- Truth_Blocks:
- Analysis_Method: