archive.today

archive.today (formerly archive.is) is a web archiving website founded in 2012 that saves snapshots on demand, and has support for JavaScript-heavy sites such as Google Maps and Twitter/X.

[3] archive.today records two snapshots: one replicates the original webpage including any functional live links; the other is a screenshot of the page.

[8][9][10] Since its beginning, it has supported crawling pages with URLs containing the now-deprecated hash-bang fragment (#!).

[11] Archive.today records only text and images, excluding XML, RTF, spreadsheet (xls or ods) and other non-static content.

Web pages can be duplicated from archive.today to web.archive.org as second-level backup, but archive.today does not save its snapshots in WARC format.

A couple of quotation marks address the search to an exact sequence of keywords present in the title or in the body of the webpage, whereas the insite operator restricts it to a specific Internet domain.

[19] Removing advertisements, popups or expanding links from archived pages is possible by asking the owner to do it on his blog.

[25][26] In March 2019, the site was blocked for six months by several internet providers in Australia and New Zealand in the aftermath of the Christchurch mosque shootings in an attempt to limit distribution of the footage of the attack.