DDoSed by Policy: Website Takedowns and Keeping Information Alive
Deeplinks 2025-02-05
Summary:
Who needs a DDoS (Denial of Service) attack when you have a new president? As of February 2nd, thousands of web pages and datasets have been removed from the U.S. government agencies following a series of executive orders. The impacts span the Department of Veteran Affairs and the Center of Disease Control and Prevention, all the way to programs like Head Start.
Government workers had just two days to carry out sweeping takedowns and rewrites due to a memo from the Office of Personnel Management. The memo cites a recent executive order attacking Trans people and further stigmatizing them by forbidding words used to accurately describe sex and gender. The result was a government-mandated censorship to erase these identities from a broad swatch of websites, resources, and scientific research regardless of context. This flurry of confusion comes on the heels of another executive order threatening CDC research by denying funding for government programs which promoted diversity, equity, and inclusion or climate justice. What we’re left with has been an anti-science, anti-speech, and just plain dangerous fit of panic with untold impacts on the most vulnerable communities.
The good news is technologists, academics, librarians, and open access organizations rushed to action to preserve and archive the information once contained on these sites. While the memo’s deadline has passed, these efforts are ongoing and you can still help.
Fighting Back
New administrations often revise government pages to reflect new policies, though they are usually archived, not erased. These takedowns are alarming because they go beyond the usual changes in power, and could deprive the public of vital information, including scientific research impacting many different areas ranging from life saving medical research to the deadly impacts of climate change.
To help mitigate the damage, institutions like the Internet Archive provided essential tools to fight these memory holes, such as their “End of Term” archives, which include public-facing websites (.gov, .mil, etc) in the Legislative, Executive, and Judicial branches of the government. But anyone can use the Wayback Machine for other sites and pages: if you have something that needs archiving, you can easily do so here. Submitted links will be backed up and can be compared to previous versions of the site. Even if you do not have direct access to a we
Link:
https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2025/02/ddosed-policy-website-takedowns-and-keeping-information-aliveFrom feeds:
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