Summary
The deletions began shortly after Donald Trump took office. CDC web pages on vaccines, HIV prevention, and reproductive health went missing. Findings on bird-flu transmission vanished minutes after they appeared. On 7 February, Trump sacked the head of the National Archives and Records Administration. More than a hundred and ten thousand government pages have gone dark in a purge that one scientist likened to a “digital book burning.”
Racing to comply with executive orders banning “DEI” and “gender ideology extremism,” agencies have cut materials on everything from supporting transgender youth in school to teaching children about sickle-cell disease, which disproportionately affects people of African descent. But they have also axed records having little to do with the Administration’s ideological priorities, seemingly assisted by AI tools that flag forbidden words without regard to context.
However, a coalition of archivists and librarians are trying to save this data and knowledge. They belong to organisations such as the Internet Archive, which co-created a project called the End of Term Web Archive to back up the federal web in 2008; the Environmental Data and Governance Initiative, or EDGI; and libraries at major universities such as MIT and the University of Michigan.
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