Brewster Kahle to Receive Computer History Museum’s Fellow Award on April 25

Brewster Kahle, founder and digital librarian of the Internet Archive, has been named a 2026 Fellow by the Computer History Museum. The annual Fellow Award, to be presented on April 25, 2026, honors pioneers whose work has shaped the foundations of computing and expanded access to knowledge in the digital age. Brewster is recognized for his pioneering roles in online search engines, as well as his enduring leadership in digital preservation and open access through the Internet Archive. He joins an extraordinary group of past Fellows, including Steve Wozniak, Katherine Johnson, Gordon Moore, and Tim Berners-Lee.

The Computer History Museum describes this year’s Fellows as individuals who have “changed the world through their advancements in computing and evolution of the digital age”—a description that resonates deeply with Brewster’s decades-long mission to provide “universal access to all knowledge.”

Everyone is invited to join us online for the Fellow Awards ceremony livestream, starting at 7:30pm PT on April 25th. In-person attendance at the awards ceremony is by invitation only. During the awards ceremony, attendees will hear directly from honorees through reflections on their journeys, video tributes, and remarks on their visions for the future.

For the Internet Archive community, this recognition is not only a celebration of Brewster’s work, but of the shared effort to preserve our digital heritage and keep it accessible for generations to come.

Join Internet Archive and Partners for the National Summit on Local News Preservation

Join Internet Archive, Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE), and the Poynter Institute for the National Summit on Local News Preservation. This event will bring together the producers, preservers, and users of local news to develop collaborative, scalable solutions to address the urgent preservation challenges presented by the rapidly changing local news landscape. 

This free, in-person event will be held on June 17, 2026 in conjunction with the IRE 2026 Conference in National Harbor, Maryland just outside of Washington, DC. 

Through panels, presentations, and facilitated discussions, Summit attendees will:

  • Discover proven strategies and partnerships behind successful local news preservation initiatives
  • Shape recommendations for local news preservation to be distributed nationally to newsrooms and memory institutions
  • Network with leaders from news and cultural heritage organizations
  • Explore tools and programs that can support the preservation and access of local digital news assets

Learn more and register to attend

This event is part of Today’s News for Tomorrow, a program supported by Press Forward. Additional support for the Summit has been provided by the Society of American Archivists Foundation. 

Does the Internet Archive Have an Onion Address?

Yes, the Internet Archive has an onion address. The Internet Archive can be accessed via the Tor network at its onion address: archivep75mbjunhxc6x4j5mwjmomyxb573v42baldlqu56ruil2oiad.onion

What is an onion address?

Tor (The Onion Router) is a privacy-focused network that helps protect users’ identities and browsing activity by routing traffic through encrypted layers. Visiting the Internet Archive through Tor allows users to explore the Wayback Machine, books, audio, video, and other collections with an added layer of anonymity, which is an important option for researchers, journalists, and anyone seeking greater privacy or access in regions where the open web may be restricted.

Remix, Reimagine, Record: Internet Archive Partners with WNYC for the 2026 Public Song Project

The 2026 Public Song Project is here — and for the first time, WNYC’s Public Song Project is partnering with the Internet Archive! ⁠

⁠Here’s what you need to know:

Anyone can participate.⁠ You don’t need to be a professional musician. Voice memos welcome. Bedroom producers, shower singers, full bands — the public domain is for everyone.⁠

What’s the public domain?⁠ It’s the vast commons of creative works not protected by copyright — meaning you’re free to enjoy, remix, adapt, and build on them. In the U.S., that includes creative works published in 1930 or earlier, sound recordings from 1925 or earlier, plus U.S. federal government works from any year.⁠

What’s new this year?⁠ This year’s playlist will live not only with WNYC, but also on the Internet Archive, where millions can stream and share it.⁠

Fun fact: The submission deadline (May 10) falls on the Internet Archive’s 30th birthday!⁠

Learn more: Check out the rules and guidelines at https://www.wnyc.org/story/2026-public-song-project/

⁠Optional 2026 Bonus Prompt⁠

This year marks:⁠

  • 250 years since America declared independence⁠
  • 50 years since the Copyright Act of 1976⁠

Some ideas:⁠

  • Rewrite a public domain poem in your own language⁠
  • Highlight a historically marginalized artist⁠
  • Remix a government work (they’re all public domain!)⁠
  • Reimagine the national anthem⁠
  • Tell your family’s story through inherited songs⁠

⁠There’s no right or wrong way to do this. The public domain belongs to you. It’s a tool to celebrate, question, remix, critique, and create.⁠

Mickey Tunes In: 1930 Comics and Cultural Production

How Mickey’s 1930 comic strip turned borrowed hit songs into the foundation of Disney’s musical legacy.

On January 13, 1930, Mickey Mouse began starring in daily comic strips. This new endeavor “functioned as many fans’ most readily available source of Mickey Mouse entertainment.”1 Despite being a print medium, these works heavily featured musical motifs of popular songs—a staple of his contemporary cartoons. Unlike the concurrent animated shorts, which could incorporate synchronized sound, the comic strip relied on musical shorthand: fragments of lyrics, song titles, and musical notes that invited readers to “hear” the music. These musical moments are not incidental but intentional—Mickey participates within a popular cultural soundscape.

Early strips utilize the cultural cache of these already popular songs to reinforce Mickey’s own cultural relevance. Through subsequent references Mickey becomes associated with music that audiences recognize and consider culturally valuable. Ultimately, the Disney company utilizes this association—Mickey and music as culturally significant—to lend legitimacy to their own musical works. Through this technique the 1930 comics move from borrowing musical culture to manufacturing it.

The first instance of Mickey Mouse referencing a song is “Singin’ in the Bathtub”, a hit song from Warner Brothers’ The Show of Shows (1929).

March 10, 1930

A single panel—essentially a brief throwaway—the reference establishes the musical borrowing technique that the strip would employ throughout 1930. The song he borrows is a parody of The Hollywood Revue’sSingin’ in the Rain”, thus itself working within a cultural borrowing technique.

The borrowing strategy is repeated when Mickey and Minnie “sing” the parody’s inspiration, “Singin’ in the Rain” while camping out during a rainstorm.

May 20, 1930

The song’s optimistic tone mirrors the scene’s mood, and its inclusion requires no explanation for contemporary readers. The inclusion feels natural and of the moment: another instance of deft cultural association. Viewers of the time might have been reminded of the dazzling two-strip Technicolor sequence of the song in The Hollywood Revue.

Going further back than just the prior year, Disney pulls reference to the popular 1926 song “(Looking At The World Thru) Rose Colored Glasses

July 10, 1930

First published in 1926, “Rose Colored Glasses” is the oldest song referenced. This distance from initial publication emphasizes durability rather than novelty suggesting cultural staying power. Mickey is aligned not merely with recent hits but with songs that have proven lasting appeal. Mickey Mouse plus familiar music equals cultural relevance. At this point, Disney has established a framework that can be leveraged.

Throughout all of these references, Disney leans on the popularity and legitimacy of other musical works to establish the “sound” of their comic strip. Each song that Mickey references circulated as sheet music, 78rpm records, or in popular films of the time like The Hollywood Revue. These avenues established each song’s cultural value. By repeatedly placing Mickey alongside them, the strip transfers that value onto the character himself. Thus, it is significant when the appearance of Disney’s own original song, “Minnie’s Yoo Hoo,” appears in the strip.

October 28, 1930

First introduced in 1929’s Mickey’s Follies, “Minnie’s Yoo Hoo” utilized the new synchronized sound technology that contributed to Mickey Mouse’s popularity. In March 1930, Variety noted the song’s presence as such remarking that the “Mickey Mouse cartoons have come to the front with a theme song.” This song quickly became a marketing anthem for Mickey.


Cover design includes a drawing of Mickey Mouse playing an upright piano on top of which sits Minnie Mouse.
Sheet music cover of “Minnie’s Yoo Hoo”
(source: Library of Congress)

While the other musical numbers referenced by Mickey in the comic were also commercial properties Mickey’s presentation of them is not an attempt to sell those works. Rather, Disney and Mickey seek to benefit from their cultural value. By including “Minnie’s Yoo Hoo” in the strip it moves from a commercial song to a cultural work—referenced casually and without promotional framing. Its appearance signals that it belongs among the other recognizable tunes. As with the borrowed songs before it, sheet music and recordings were available for purchase, reinforcing its circulation beyond the page.

Today it is easy to assume that Disney songs have always held cultural significance. Yet, the 1930 comic strips exhibit the work required to achieve the earliest efforts of this. Through casual references to culturally popular musical works of the time, the Disney company established their own songs as culturally significant. Mickey’s work as the referential intermediary gave the in-house songs credibility that has grown since. The comics remind us that cultural dominance is rarely instantaneous; it is built, quietly and cumulatively. If you want to see how this happened go and read the 1930 comics in our collections.

  1.  David Gerstein and J. B. Kaufman, Walt Disney’s Mickey Mouse: The Ultimate History, 40th Anniversary ed. (Koln: Taschen, 2020), 121. ↩︎

The Seers: Mystic Cats, Feminist Histories, and the Art of the Archive

Internet Archive’s latest Artist in Residence, Cindy Rehm, has created The Seers, a project comprised of one hundred college drawings using images largely sourced from historic books at the Internet Archive. The Seers is inspired by the work of Hélène Cixous and Carolee Schneemann around their interest in the creative process, and mysticism often centered in the figure of the cat. Rehm searched historic books related to women and their feline companions including books on the history of cats in mysticism and witchcraft. For her collages, she gleaned images for their aesthetic and symbolic resonance, focusing on books related to histories of women including books on textiles and handiwork, art history, nature, cats, and other creatures. 

For the format of the series, Rehm researched Internet Archive’s collection of antique scrapbooks. The scrapbook is a vernacular form often associated with women and their private lives, and also shares a process relationship with collage, where small fragments are cut and pasted. Historic scrapbooks were often made using repurposed books like catalogs, ledgers, and music books. Rehm borrowed this gesture of layering fragments over a main image, as image cut outs were repeated and remixed across the series to develop a symbolic language and esoteric taxonomy. 

Sample scrapbooks:
Helen Louise Bailey scrapbook, 1920
https://archive.org/details/helenlouisebaileyscrapbook/page/n3/mode/2up

Edwina Devendorf Scrapbook, 1915/1936
https://archive.org/details/ccarm_008888

Charlotte Roese, “Album of a Family” 1895/1945
https://archive.org/details/cmlpl_000893

As part of her project, Rehm created a limited-edition poster that she distributed during her participation in Public Domain Day on site at Internet Archive. Rehm gave a talk about her project and process, view the livestream recording here.

In February, Rehm will take The Seers to Automata in Los Angeles for a residency focused on extending the project to include an installation and performance. Please visit Rehm’s website to view The Seers full series.

About the artist

Cindy Rehm (https://www.cindyrehm.com/) is a Los Angeles-based artist and an educator. She serves as co-facilitator of the Cixous Reading Group, and is co-founder of the feminist-centered projects Craftswoman House and Feminist Love Letters. She is the founder and former director of spare room, a DIY installation space in Baltimore, MD. In 2021, she launched HEXENTEXTE, a collaborative project at the intersection of image, text and the body. 

Rehm has held residencies at Performing Arts Forum in Saint Ermes, France and at Casa Lü, Mexico City. A book of her collage drawings, Transference, was released by Curious Publishing in 2022.

Wayback Machine Director Pushes Back on AI Scraping Fears Driving Archive Blocks

As reported by Nieman Lab last month, some major media organizations—including The New York Times, The Guardian, and Reddit—have started blocking the Wayback Machine from archiving their sites over unfounded concerns about AI scraping.

Last week, tech writer Mike Masnick (Techdirt) explained why this is “a mistake we’re going to regret for generations.”

Today, Mark Graham, director of the Wayback Machine, has published a response to the Nieman Lab reporting, pushing back on the media organizations’ concerns about the Wayback Machine being a backdoor to AI scraping. Graham writes:

“These concerns are understandable, but unfounded… like others on the web today, we expend significant time and effort working to prevent such abuse.”

Read the post to learn how Graham is working to protect the integrity of the Wayback Machine, and why limiting web archiving threatens our shared digital history.

Tuning in to College Radio Materials on World Radio Day 2026

On February 13, World Radio Day acknowledges the importance of radio around the globe. The annual event has been taking place for a little over a decade, dating back to a 2011 proclamation by UNESCO (United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization) Member States and adoption by the United Nations General Assembly in 2012. The theme for World Radio Day 2026 is “radio and artificial intelligence.” UNESCO encourages radio stations to participate in the day and offers suggestions that align with the theme. One of the highlighted topic areas is memory and AI.

“Radio stations have thousands of hours of archives, often underutilized because they are difficult to index, browse or restore. AI can transform this dormant memory into an active resource, harnessing transcription, keyword searching, automatic summary and thematic upgrading. When direct reporting is impossible, coverage can be enhanced by historical archives.” – UNESCO

The Internet Archive’s Digital Library of Amateur Radio and Communications (DLARC) serves as this type of active resource, allowing visitors to dig into radio history. In recognition of World Radio Day and the second anniversary of the launch of the college radio sub-collection within DLARC, here are some recent additions and highlights from the DLARC college radio and community radio collections.

Cover of ‘zine from Barnard College radio station WBAR. Source: DLARC College Radio from the Barnard Archives and Special Collections

Radio Station Playlists

For much of college radio’s existence, the record of what was played was logged on paper playlists. Handwritten DJ playlists don’t always get saved, with station summaries of airplay or featured music more commonly found. These tops lists, radio surveys, adds lists, and airplay reports are compiled by radio stations and sent to record labels, musicians, trade publications, local newspapers, and zines. Results of the combined reports can be found in charts and lists published in CMJ New Music Report, Gavin Report, Rockpool, and similar publications.

DLARC College Radio recently received a large collection of digitized paper radio station playlists from the band Get Smart! Band members meticulously saved communication from college, community, high school and public radio stations that played their records in the 1980s. Representing stations from all over the United States and Canada, the playlists in this collection are mainly monthly summaries of the albums and artists that a radio station was playing. Sometimes they include commentary from station music directors or handwritten notes to the band. One thing that I love about these lists is that they are often printed on colorful paper, from a very 1985-feeling hot pink WHRB list from Harvard to an autumnal orange list from high school station KRVM-FM. 

Airplay list from UC Berkeley’s college radio station KALX-FM from 1982. Source: DLARC College Radio (donated by Get Smart!)

Additionally, a representative of the now-defunct Cleveland College Radio Coalition donated a collection of digitized copies of playlists, program guides and more. The group was formed in 1982 in order to help increase awareness for the college radio stations in Cleveland, Ohio and also produced a joint program guide.

Cover of the Spring 1983 joint program guide produced by the Cleveland College Radio Coalition. Source: DLARC College Radio (donated by Mary Cipriani)

Other newly added playlists include a batch from Bowling Green State University’s college radio station WBGU-FM in Bowling Green, Ohio. They form the bulk of a new WBGU-FM collection, which currently features flyers, program guides, correspondence, and training materials from 1995-1997. 

You can peruse the entire collection of college radio playlists in DLARC College Radio.

Radio Station Stickers

Other new additions to DLARC College Radio include promotional stickers produced by college radio stations.

Selection of stickers from WVCW, the college radio station at Virginia Commonwealth University. Source: DLARC College Radio

KVRX-FM collection from UT Austin

One of DLARC College Radio’s newest collections is from KVRX-FM, the student-run college radio station at University of Texas, Austin. The Internet Archive digitized a wide variety of KVRX materials, including ‘zines, DJ notebooks, record reviews, organization documents, posters, and newsletters, spanning the years 1986 to 2025.

Cover of an issue of The Call Letter, an early newsletter from KTSB 91.7 cable FM, the predecessor to KVRX-FM at University of Texas, Austin. Source: DLARC College Radio (digitized from KVRX’s on-site collection)

Audio Transcriptions

Finally, in keeping with this year’s World Radio Day theme related to AI, the college radio collection has been enhanced by an AI-generated transcription tool within the media player of select audio items. This means that not only can one listen to recordings from college radio stations, but one can also read transcripts from radio shows, interviews, oral histories, and more. Audio with AI-generated transcripts in the DLARC College Radio collection includes:

The Digital Library of Amateur Radio & Communications is funded by a grant from Amateur Radio Digital Communications (ARDC) to create a free digital library for the radio community, researchers, educators, and students. DLARC invites radio clubs, radio stations, archives and individuals to submit material in any format. To contribute or ask questions about the project, contact: Kay Savetz at kay@archive.org. Questions about the college radio sub-collection can be directed to Jennifer Waits at jenniferwaits@archive.org.

Internet Archive and Partners Select Local Newsrooms from Across the US to Participate in the Today’s News for Tomorrow Program

Internet Archive, Poynter Institute, and Investigative Reporters and Editors (IRE) are pleased to announce the first cohort of newsrooms to join the Today’s News for Tomorrow program. With support from Press Forward, Today’s News for Tomorrow will bring together news organizations and memory institutions to address the urgent challenge of local news preservation and perpetual access. The project will create a national framework for digital preservation that serves newsrooms’ “immediate internal needs and communities’ future information needs,” according to Press Forward.

“Journalism is the first draft of history, and we’re at risk of losing that history due to changes in a newsroom’s technology, ownership, and even outside pressure to erase it,” said Kristen Hare, program instructor and Poynter’s director for craft and local news. “Today’s News for Tomorrow will help local journalists and newsrooms learn what we’re up against and make sure the first draft of news is still around for future generations.”

Participating newsrooms will receive access to Internet Archive’s services, tools, and infrastructure, share public local news resources through a unified local news access portal, and participate in knowledge-sharing opportunities centered around local news archiving. 

The first cohort will be made up of digital local news publications. Future cohorts in 2026 will be tailored to meet the preservation needs of print newspapers, public media organizations, and independent journalists. Members of the initial cohort were selected through a competitive application process and include:

The Berkeley Scanner (Berkeley, CA)

The Jefferson County Beacon (Port Townsend, WA)

Cityside (Berkeley, CA)

Athens County Independent (Athens, OH)

Hoy en Delaware (Wilmington, DE)

Bucks County Beacon (Warminster, PA)

Golden Today (Golden, CO)

The 51st (Washington, DC)

15 West (Chicago, IL)

The Rapidian (Grand Rapids, MI)

My Tarboro Today (Tarboro, NC)

Outlier Media (Detroit, MI)

Hmong Daily News (Sacramento, CA)

Front Range Focus (Denver, CO)

Lake County News (Lucerne, CA)

The Providence Eye (Providence, RI)

Grandview Independent (Richmond, CA)

The Well News (Washington, DC)

Prism Reports (Oakland, CA)

El Paso Matters (El Paso, TX)

The Oaklandside (Oakland, CA)

The Current GA (Savannah, GA)

Germantown Info Hub (Philadelphia, PA)

Evanston Now (Evanston, IL)

Conecta Arizona (Phoenix, AZ)

Charlottesville Tomorrow (Charlottesville, VA)

Wisconsin Watch (Madison, WI)

BK Reader (Brooklyn, NY)

Black Girl Nerds (Virginia Beach, VA)

Lede New Orleans (New Orleans, LA)

U.S. Press Freedom Tracker (Brooklyn, NY)

Wired (New York City, NY)

El Central Hispanic News (Detroit, MI)

Newsrooms are encouraged to apply to join future cohorts. Newsrooms publishing print newspapers should apply to join the next cohort by April 1. All other organizations may apply at any time to join additional cohorts. Questions about the program can be directed to the program team at tnt@archive.org

‘Depths of Wikipedia’ Creator Annie Rauwerda on ‘Fragile’ Internet Citations

Image credit: Annie Rauwerda, photographed by Ian Shiff, smiling in February 2023

Annie Rauwerda can’t remember a world without Wikipedia. Born in 1999, just two years before the platform launched, she says it has been omnipresent in her life and a source of endless fascination.

In the early days of the COVID-19 pandemic when she was a neuroscience student at the University of Michigan, Rauwerda said she spent a lot of time on Wikipedia and started posting quirky stories she found.

“As I clicked around, there were so many things with goofy titles,” said the now 26-year-old. “I thought to myself: ‘This could be big.’”

Making as many as five videos a day, Rauwerda indeed gained an audience with her off-beat discoveries — from stolen and missing moon rocks to the back story of people demonstrating “high fives.”  She created Depths of Wikipedia, a group of social media accounts and has more than 1.5 million followers on Instagram, 200,000 on TikTok, and 130,000 on BlueSky.  

In 2022, Rauwerda was named the Media Contributor of the Year by the Wikimedia Foundation, the nonprofit that hosts Wikipedia.

In October, Rauwerda was invited to present at the Internet Archive event in San Francisco celebrating the milestone of 1 trillion webpages saved. She brought a burst of energy and humor to the stage as she shared screenshots of some of her favorite Wikipedia articles.

Watch Annie at Internet Archive’s 1 Trillion Web Page Celebration:

Rauwerda calls herself an Internet Archive “super fan” and acknowledges its value in providing links to original sources.

“If Wikipedia is worth anything at all, it’s because of the citations, and those citations are increasingly hard to access,” she said, noting that more than half of the community articles contain a dead link. “That’s not a concern, though, for us, because we have partnerships with the Internet Archive to make sure that those links are archived and can be clicked by anyone.”

Professionally and personally, Rauwerda said she uses the Archive constantly as she looks for material, seeks out old blogs or edits Wikipedia pages.

“It’s really hard for me to think of an organization that I’m more enthusiastic about,” Rauwerda said of the Internet Archive. “I just love everything about it.”

What will matter most to future generations is hard to predict, Rauwerda said, so it’s crucial to save as much of the digital landscape as possible. “I’m thankful the Internet Archive exists,” she said, “especially given how fragile everything is online.”

Rauwerda said she’s had a “simultaneous love affair with the Internet Archive and Wikipedia” — often toggling back and forth as she dives into topics. She said she embraces the spirit of the open web and the community of people who support this work.

Beyond her social media presence, Rauwerda is writing a book about Wikipedia for Little Brown. The series of light-hearted essays about the off-beat people behind Wikipedia is slated for publication in the fall of 2026.

Rauwerda also turned her discoveries into a comedy show, which she first performed at small clubs in New York. After landing an agent, she went on a multi-city tour of the U.S., customizing the material for each region. She has another round of shows booked for 2026.

“It’s been so fun,” she said. “I’m gonna ride this while it lasts.”