
Sign up to save your podcasts
Or


In 1996, the web was still young—a chaotic, creative frontier built one page at a time. That same year, the Internet Archive set out to preserve it all. Nearly three decades later, that audacious goal has reached a generational milestone: 1 trillion web pages preserved.
Co-hosts Chris Freeland (Internet Archive) and Dave Hansen (Authors Alliance) talk with Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine, about how this vast public archive came to be—and what 1 trillion captures mean for humanity’s collective memory.
This conversation was recorded on 10/16/2025.
Check out all of the Future Knowledge episodes at https://archive.org/details/future-knowledge
By Internet Archive & Authors Alliance4.2
1515 ratings
In 1996, the web was still young—a chaotic, creative frontier built one page at a time. That same year, the Internet Archive set out to preserve it all. Nearly three decades later, that audacious goal has reached a generational milestone: 1 trillion web pages preserved.
Co-hosts Chris Freeland (Internet Archive) and Dave Hansen (Authors Alliance) talk with Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine, about how this vast public archive came to be—and what 1 trillion captures mean for humanity’s collective memory.
This conversation was recorded on 10/16/2025.
Check out all of the Future Knowledge episodes at https://archive.org/details/future-knowledge

6,779 Listeners

9,650 Listeners

510 Listeners

207 Listeners

1,588 Listeners

8,855 Listeners

112,284 Listeners

15,676 Listeners

3,339 Listeners

578 Listeners

5,550 Listeners

16,302 Listeners

4,606 Listeners

9,411 Listeners

394 Listeners