RE: INTERNET ARCHIVE ATTACK AND Q TIMESTAMP INTEGRITY
I noticed yesterday that normal Wayback Machine archive links are working for the Internet Archive, though the ability to save new snapshots has been temporarily turned off. >https://web.archive.org
The media archives are still down; that might affect the ability to play saved Youtube videos in Youtube Wayback links; but other than that the Wayback Machine was the part of the site that potentially effected the integrity of timestamps related to Q posts, and they seem to be confident that they have adequate security on that portion to keep a live version going, so that's a relief.
I should note that in addition to all of the real-time confirmation that occurred for the Q post timestamps as people commented about them across social media (one of the key reasons they tried to eliminate all Anon accounts) the actual messageboard threads themselves in which the Q posts were made are also usually saved in their entirety to both >http://archive.org and >http://archive.ph
Attacking those sites is; among other goals I'm sure; a blatant attempt to erase the independent record of the timestamps which can verify all of the time-based Q proofs.
First they went after Anon accounts that were confirming the timestamps in real time as the drops were being posted, then they went after Trump's Twitter account, then if you remember at the start of 2021 the Q research board itself was attacked by a rogue administrator who tried to wipe the entire board; luckily the community had complete backups ready to go the same day. Then, just recently, they went after Telegram, where we all started posting after getting kicked off of Twitter.
Now that all of that has failed they appear to be attacking the timestamps directly at the source, but this seems to have failed as well, at least for now.