edit: adjusted title slightly

  • argh_another_username
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    1 day ago

    Ok, serious question. Why is it normally read/write? I’ve always treated it as being read only.

    • antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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      23 hours ago

      You can (well, could) put in any live URL there and IA would take a snapshot of the current page on your request. They also actively crawl the web and take new snapshots on their own. All of that counts as ‘writing’ to the database.

      • SkaveRat@discuss.tchncs.de
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        18 hours ago

        Not just websites. Basically any digital media. From PDFs, book scans, manuals, floppy disks, CDs, basically anything even remotely worth archiving

        • antonim@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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          11 hours ago

          Yep, but I didn’t mention that because it’s not a part of the “Wayback Machine”, it’s just the general “Internet Archive” business of archiving media, which is for now still completely unavailable. (I’ve uploaded dozens of public-domain books there myself, and I’m really missing it…)

    • TheLugal@lemmy.world
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      1 day ago

      To you as a user it’s readonly. To the thousands that submits urls for archival it is readwrite.