
His name was Brewster Kahle.
He was born on October 22, 1960, in New York City, raised in Scarsdale. He attended MIT, studied artificial intelligence under Marvin Minsky, and graduated in 1982 in computer science and engineering. He joined Thinking Machines – the legendary supercomputer startup – and became lead engineer on its main product.
In 1989, he invented something that had never existed before, WAIS, the Wide Area Information Server. WAIS was the internet’s first distributed search and document retrieval system – a way for people to find and access documents across networked computers. It predated the World Wide Web. It was a primitive forerunner of Google. It worked.
He co-founded WAIS Inc. in 1992 and sold it to AOL in 1995 for $15 million.
Then he started thinking about time.
Here is the thing about the early web that most people did not stop to notice.
Websites disappeared. Not slowly or gracefully – they simply vanished. A company would update its site, and the old version would be gone. A politician would delete a speech. A newspaper would change a headline after the fact. A startup would die and its entire digital presence – years of activity, years of record – would simply cease to exist.
Nobody was writing any of this down.
Kahle thought about what had happened to other media. Early film reels had been destroyed or recycled for their silver. Much of early printing had not survived. The Library of Alexandria – the ancient world’s great archive of human knowledge – had burned. Each time a medium arrived, the first examples of it were usually lost.
The early internet was disappearing in real time. And it was disappearing faster than anything before it – websites then had a half-life of approximately 44 days. Half of all pages online in any given month would be gone within 6 weeks.
He founded the Internet Archive in April 1996.
He used money from the AOL sale. He registered the organization as a nonprofit. He set up servers. He began writing software that would automatically crawl the web – following link after link, page after page, capturing a copy of each page it visited, saving it, and adding it to an index.
He was not doing this for money. There was no business model. There was no revenue stream. There was no plan to monetize the archive.
“Universal access to all knowledge” was the mission statement. It has not changed.
For 5 years, the archive grew silently. Kahle and his team crawled the web and preserved what they found, but there was no public interface. Nobody outside the project could see what was being saved.
Then, in 2001, he released the Wayback Machine – named, deliberately, after the time-travel device used by the cartoon characters Sherman and Mister Peabody in Rocky and Bullwinkle.
The name was a joke about what it could do.
You could type any URL into the Wayback Machine and select a date, and it would show you what that website looked like on that date. The White House website in 1997. A newspaper homepage on September 12, 2001. A politician’s official biography before it was quietly edited. A company’s terms of service from 5 years ago.
Every broken link, every vanished page, every URL that now returns a “404 Not Found” error – if the Archive had crawled it, the Wayback Machine could show you what used to be there.
Journalists used it. Lawyers used it. Historians used it. Academics used it. Fact-checkers used it. People tried to reconstruct deleted histories with it.
The Archive grew beyond websites.
It now holds digitized books – millions of books and documents freely accessible to anyone.
It holds historical audio recordings, software, moving images, government documents, scientific papers. It digitized millions of texts that exist nowhere else in digital form, making them available for free to anyone with an internet connection.
Kahle also co-founded Alexa Internet in 1996, the web traffic analysis service that Amazon acquired in 1999 for $250 million in stock. He used the proceeds to fund the archive further – the most explicit example in tech history of a for-profit exit being used to fund a not-for-profit mission.
The Internet Archive is headquartered in a former church in the Richmond neighborhood of San Francisco. The servers fill what used to be the nave. The organization has a row of terra cotta busts of its earliest employees, displayed in the archive like library statuary.
They are archiving themselves.
In September 2025, the Internet Archive’s blog announced that the Wayback Machine had crossed 1 trillion archived web pages.
1,000,000,000,000 pages.
This is the result of Brewster Kahle starting a crawler in a San Francisco server room in 1996, before most people understood that the internet was a historical record that could be lost.
The question he asked in 1996 was simple, who is writing this down?
The answer was, nobody.
He decided that was unacceptable.
“The early manuscripts at the Library of Alexandria were burned,” he wrote in a 1996 paper for Scientific American. “Much of early printing was not saved. Many early films were recycled for their silver content. The history of early materials of each medium is one of loss and eventual partial reconstruction through fragments.”
He was determined not to let that happen to the internet.
He has been at it for nearly 30 years.
The Wayback Machine is free. The digitized books are free. The archive is open to anyone.
Everything on it was put there by a man from Scarsdale who studied artificial intelligence at MIT and decided, at some point in 1996, that the greatest threat to the digital age was not too much information – but the disappearance of it.
Share this with someone who needs to be reminded that the most important library in human history is a former church in San Francisco, run by a nonprofit, founded by a man who was told by nobody to do it – and who did it anyway.








