Fascinating. Clicking that link finds the following:
Internet Archive's Wayback Machine
https://medium.com/@craig_10243/ccbe22f2637e
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Sorry.
This URL has been excluded from the Wayback Machine.
What could this mean? Is the Wayback Machine
not a bulletproof historical record after all?
He will have requested (or demanded) to have his content removed.
"He". Presumably Craig? Seems plausible, even likely. Does Wayback provide any attribution traceability? I.e., is there any way to prove that removal was requested, and if so, by whom?
While I never had any reason to look into it, I had always just sort of assumed that Wayback was an incorruptible, unalterable record of past states of parts of the internet. Imagine my surprise to learn that this is not the case.
You can still use archive.fo and archive.today.
Thanks. That even worked:
http://archive.ph/LMrM4I may have more to say after I read it.
Though it does occur to me that there seems to be a valid use case for a high-capacity, unalterable, append-only database, free to be written by anyone who might care to pay whatever the market deems proper to get their data included, and free to be read at no cost by anyone anywhere at any time.
If only such a thing existed....
Oh. Wait...