#1-trillion-web-pages-archived — Public Fediverse posts
Live and recent posts from across the Fediverse tagged #1-trillion-web-pages-archived, aggregated by home.social.
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Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom – Internet Archive Blogs
Internet Archive Blogs, Updates from the Internet Archive
Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom
Posted on November 17, 2025 by Chris Freeland
Jean Armour Polly—better known as the Net-mom, and the person who helped popularize the phrase “surfing the internet” in 1994—adds her voice to the celebration of the Internet Archive’s 1 trillionth webpage preserved.
In her message, Polly reflects on the ephemerality of the web—how sites appear, vanish, change, or are censored—and why the Archive’s ability to reveal these shifts is essential to understanding not just events, but who was speaking, who wasn’t, and whose voices history might otherwise forget. Drawing on her own work digitizing fragile Civil War pension files, she compares the care of digital preservation to rescuing stories from dusty barns and bringing them back to life. Polly honors not only creators, but also the librarians and archivists who ensure that our cultural record endures.
“Without [Internet Archive], we risk not only losing the websites themselves, but the story of how society and culture has been shaped by them.”Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom
Hi, I'm Jean Armour Polly, also known as the Net-mom.
It's because in the early days of the internet, I helped a lot of people take their first baby steps on it. But I'm here today to help congratulate and celebrate the Internet Archive's 1000000000000th webpage archived.
That's just an amazing number. Wow. Because websites are ephemeral. They come up, they go down, links are added, links are deleted. Sometimes they're even censored. The archive reveals all these changes though, and that's important.
It's important for us to not only see how events were covered, but who was talking about them, what they were saying, and sometimes it's even as important or maybe more important about who wasn't talking and whose voices weren't heard.
The archive might even become the Rosetta Stone for future digital archeologists trying to decipher the hieroglyphs of emojis or inscrutable memes.
I have some experience with digitization myself. In recent months, I've been a volunteer at the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society's Digitize New York project. Here where I live. We've been scanning and digitizing a huge cache of Civil War pension documents that had formally been in a lawyer's office, but since 1930, they've been stored in Campbell's soup boxes in a dusty old hay barn.
When I scan something, I think of the soldier and the story that I'm helping to preserve, because it wasn't just about grievous war wounds or diseases he had picked up, but also about his family history, about camp life, about troop movements and battles, things you just can't find in a history book.
And I think about his family, I think about him when I scan these documents, but I also think about who had the forethought to save this stuff, and not just toss it or shred it or burn it, but to keep it in hopes that some day somebody would come along and rescue it, digitize it, so the stories would live.
And that's what the Internet Archive has done and will do. It's so important. Without it, we risk not only losing the websites themselves, but the story of how society and culture has been shaped by them.
So many kudos to the content creators, but also don't forget the critical work of the librarians and the archivists who have preserved them.
Save our stories, protect the past, and help shape our future.
Congratulations.Continue/Read Original Article Here: Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom | Internet Archive Blogs
#1TrillionWebPagesArchived #1994 #archivists #celebrating #culturalRecords #history #internetArchive #internetArchiveBlog #jeanArmourPolly #librarians #netMom #personal #video #webChanges
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Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom – Internet Archive Blogs
Internet Archive Blogs, Updates from the Internet Archive
Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom
Posted on November 17, 2025 by Chris Freeland
Jean Armour Polly—better known as the Net-mom, and the person who helped popularize the phrase “surfing the internet” in 1994—adds her voice to the celebration of the Internet Archive’s 1 trillionth webpage preserved.
In her message, Polly reflects on the ephemerality of the web—how sites appear, vanish, change, or are censored—and why the Archive’s ability to reveal these shifts is essential to understanding not just events, but who was speaking, who wasn’t, and whose voices history might otherwise forget. Drawing on her own work digitizing fragile Civil War pension files, she compares the care of digital preservation to rescuing stories from dusty barns and bringing them back to life. Polly honors not only creators, but also the librarians and archivists who ensure that our cultural record endures.
“Without [Internet Archive], we risk not only losing the websites themselves, but the story of how society and culture has been shaped by them.”Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom
Hi, I'm Jean Armour Polly, also known as the Net-mom.
It's because in the early days of the internet, I helped a lot of people take their first baby steps on it. But I'm here today to help congratulate and celebrate the Internet Archive's 1000000000000th webpage archived.
That's just an amazing number. Wow. Because websites are ephemeral. They come up, they go down, links are added, links are deleted. Sometimes they're even censored. The archive reveals all these changes though, and that's important.
It's important for us to not only see how events were covered, but who was talking about them, what they were saying, and sometimes it's even as important or maybe more important about who wasn't talking and whose voices weren't heard.
The archive might even become the Rosetta Stone for future digital archeologists trying to decipher the hieroglyphs of emojis or inscrutable memes.
I have some experience with digitization myself. In recent months, I've been a volunteer at the New York Genealogical and Biographical Society's Digitize New York project. Here where I live. We've been scanning and digitizing a huge cache of Civil War pension documents that had formally been in a lawyer's office, but since 1930, they've been stored in Campbell's soup boxes in a dusty old hay barn.
When I scan something, I think of the soldier and the story that I'm helping to preserve, because it wasn't just about grievous war wounds or diseases he had picked up, but also about his family history, about camp life, about troop movements and battles, things you just can't find in a history book.
And I think about his family, I think about him when I scan these documents, but I also think about who had the forethought to save this stuff, and not just toss it or shred it or burn it, but to keep it in hopes that some day somebody would come along and rescue it, digitize it, so the stories would live.
And that's what the Internet Archive has done and will do. It's so important. Without it, we risk not only losing the websites themselves, but the story of how society and culture has been shaped by them.
So many kudos to the content creators, but also don't forget the critical work of the librarians and the archivists who have preserved them.
Save our stories, protect the past, and help shape our future.
Congratulations.Continue/Read Original Article Here: Voices Celebrating 1 Trillion Web Pages: Jean Armour Polly, Net-Mom | Internet Archive Blogs
#1TrillionWebPagesArchived #1994 #archivists #celebrating #culturalRecords #history #internetArchive #internetArchiveBlog #jeanArmourPolly #librarians #netMom #personal #video #webChanges
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Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient -Internet Archive Blogs
Updates from the Internet Archive
Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient
Posted on November 5, 2025 by Chris Freeland
Brewster Kahle (left), Internet Archive’s founder and digital librarian, presents Sir Tim Berners-Lee (right), inventor of the World Wide Web, with the Internet Archive Hero Award during a discussion hosted by the Commonwealth Club of California.In celebrating 1 trillion web pages archived, the Internet Archive is proud to honor the visionary who made it all possible. As announced in The New Yorker, the 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award was presented to Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. Sir Tim’s groundbreaking work opened the door to a connected world and laid the foundation for our shared digital history.
Sir Tim was presented the award during a discussion at the Commonwealth Club of California on October 9. The conversation, “Building and Preserving the Web: A Conversation with Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Brewster Kahle,” was guided by Lauren Goode (Wired), and is now available for listening & download as an episode of the Future Knowledge podcast.
Listen to Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Brewster Kahle: https://share.transistor.fm/e/ce6b83bd
Sir Tim’s invention transformed how humanity shares knowledge, and his ongoing advocacy for an open and accessible web that empowers individuals continues to inspire us. We’re thrilled to recognize his enduring contributions as we mark this historic achievement for the web.
Watch the video from our celebration on October 22: https://archive.org/embed/sir-tim-berners-lee-internet-archive-hero-award-2025
The Internet Archive Hero Award is an annual award that recognizes those who have exhibited leadership in making information available for digital learners all over the world. Previous recipients have included the island nation of Aruba, public information advocate Carl Malamud, copyright expert Michelle Wu, and the Grateful Dead. Posted in News, Wayback Machine – Web Archive | Tagged hero award, Wayback1T | Leave a reply
About Chris Freeland
Chris Freeland is the Director of Library Services at Internet Archive.
View all posts by Chris Freeland →
Editor’s Note: The featured image at top of the post is via WP AI.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient | Internet Archive Blogs
#1TrillionWebPagesArchived #2025 #BrewsterKahle #ChrisFreeland #CommonwealthClubOfCalifornia #DigitalLibrarian #Director #HeroAward #InternetArchive #InternetArchiveBlog #LibraryServices #SirTimBernersLee #WorldWideWeb
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Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient -Internet Archive Blogs
Updates from the Internet Archive
Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient
Posted on November 5, 2025 by Chris Freeland
Brewster Kahle (left), Internet Archive’s founder and digital librarian, presents Sir Tim Berners-Lee (right), inventor of the World Wide Web, with the Internet Archive Hero Award during a discussion hosted by the Commonwealth Club of California.In celebrating 1 trillion web pages archived, the Internet Archive is proud to honor the visionary who made it all possible. As announced in The New Yorker, the 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award was presented to Sir Tim Berners-Lee, the inventor of the World Wide Web. Sir Tim’s groundbreaking work opened the door to a connected world and laid the foundation for our shared digital history.
Sir Tim was presented the award during a discussion at the Commonwealth Club of California on October 9. The conversation, “Building and Preserving the Web: A Conversation with Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Brewster Kahle,” was guided by Lauren Goode (Wired), and is now available for listening & download as an episode of the Future Knowledge podcast.
Listen to Sir Tim Berners-Lee and Brewster Kahle: https://share.transistor.fm/e/ce6b83bd
Sir Tim’s invention transformed how humanity shares knowledge, and his ongoing advocacy for an open and accessible web that empowers individuals continues to inspire us. We’re thrilled to recognize his enduring contributions as we mark this historic achievement for the web.
Watch the video from our celebration on October 22: https://archive.org/embed/sir-tim-berners-lee-internet-archive-hero-award-2025
The Internet Archive Hero Award is an annual award that recognizes those who have exhibited leadership in making information available for digital learners all over the world. Previous recipients have included the island nation of Aruba, public information advocate Carl Malamud, copyright expert Michelle Wu, and the Grateful Dead. Posted in News, Wayback Machine – Web Archive | Tagged hero award, Wayback1T | Leave a reply
About Chris Freeland
Chris Freeland is the Director of Library Services at Internet Archive.
View all posts by Chris Freeland →
Editor’s Note: The featured image at top of the post is via WP AI.
Continue/Read Original Article Here: Celebrating Sir Tim Berners-Lee, 2025 Internet Archive Hero Award Recipient | Internet Archive Blogs
#1TrillionWebPagesArchived #2025 #BrewsterKahle #ChrisFreeland #CommonwealthClubOfCalifornia #DigitalLibrarian #Director #HeroAward #InternetArchive #InternetArchiveBlog #LibraryServices #SirTimBernersLee #WorldWideWeb