Via Benjamin Strick @bendobrown.bsky.social – The @archive.org has many epic features like saving sites and viewing deleted pages, but it’s also got some little useful functions like tracking edits, searching broadcasts and visualising topics in news items. I visit all of them in this YouTube tutorial. This tutorial is part 26 of the OSINT At Home series. In this episode we dive into the Internet Archive, with five Wayback Machine hacks that every investigator, journalist, and researcher should know. You’ll learn how to view deleted webpages, see old versions, prove quiet edits, save a page foreve…
Via Benjamin Strick @bendobrown.bsky.social – The @archive.org has many epic features like saving sites and viewing deleted pages, but it’s also got some little useful functions like tracking edits, searching broadcasts and visualising topics in news items. I visit all of them in this YouTube tutorial. This tutorial is part 26 of the OSINT At Home series. In this episode we dive into the Internet Archive, with five Wayback Machine hacks that every investigator, journalist, and researcher should know. You’ll learn how to view deleted webpages, see old versions, prove quiet edits, save a page forever, and even search TV news captions for “receipts” you can cite. We’ll walk through each tool step-by-step, show how to package proof links for your reporting, and demo real case studies—from resurrecting deleted articles to diffing stealth website changes and pulling broadcast clips that document narrative shifts.
- Internet Archive: https://archive.org/
- Wayback Machine: https://web.archive.org/
- TV News Search – https://archive.org/details/tv
- GDELT Summary: https://api.gdeltproject.org/api/v2/s…
Posted in: Censorship, Civil Liberties, Freedom of Information, Government Documents, Internet, Knowledge Management, Legal Research, Search Engines