Is there a way I can "revive" it from archive.org in a more or less automated fashion? Have you ever encountered anything like it? I am familiar with web scraping, but archive.org has its peculiarities.
I really, really love the content on it.
It's a very niche site, but I would love for it to live on.
Buying a domain name does not award you ownership of the content it previously hosted. If you have not come to some agreement with the previous owner, you should not proceed.
1. Collect a list of archived URLs (via archive.org’s CDX endpoints). 2. Download each page and all related assets. 3. Rewrite all links that currently point to `web.archive.org` so they point to your domain or your local file paths.
The tricky part is the Wayback Machine’s directory structure—every file is wrapped in these time-stamped URLs. You’ll need to remove those prefixes, leaving just the original directory layout. There’s no perfect, purely automated solution, because sometimes assets are missing or broken. Be prepared for some manual cleanup.
Beyond that, the process is basically: gather everything, clean up links, restore the original hierarchy, and then host it on your server. Tools exist that partially automate this (for example, some people have written scripts to do the CDX fetching and rewriting), but if you’re comfortable with web scraping logic, you can handle it with a few careful passes. In the end, you’ll have a mostly faithful static snapshot of the old site running under your revived domain.
I scraped its contents (blog posts, pages, etcetera) with Python's beautifulsoup and redid its styling "by hand", which was not something otherworldy (the site was from line 2010 or so) and had the chance to put some improvements.
The thing with the scraping was that the connection was lost after a while and it was reaaaaaaaaaally sloooooooooow so I had to keep a register on memory of what was the last successful scraped post/page/whatever and, if something happened, restart from it as a starting point.
Got pennies for it, mostly because I lowballed myself, but got to learn a thing or two.
Anyways there are tools out there. I haven’t used them
But a tool like https://www6.waybackmachinedownloader.com/website-downloader...
Or
https://websitedownloader.com/
Should do the trick. Depending on the size of the site a small cost is involved.
They can even package them into unusable files.
https://superuser.com/questions/828907/how-to-download-a-web...
1) Download HTTrack if its a large websit with alot of pages 2) Download Search and Replace program, theres many of them. 3) The search and replace program allows you to remove the appended web archive url from the pages in bulk. 4. Upload to your host. 5. Run the site through a bulk link checker, that test for broken links. There is plenty of them online.
I pulled each page off internet archive, saved it as an archive; then did some minor tidying up, setting viewports for mobile, updating the linkback html snippet to go to my url instead of the old dead one, changing the snippet to not suggest hotloading the link image, crop the dead url out of the link image, pngcrush the images, put it on cheap hosting for static pages.
I did a bit of poking around trying to find a way to contact the owner, but had no luck. If they come back and want it down, I'll take it down. Copyright notices are intact. I'm clearly violating the author's copyrights, and I accept that.
https://hn.algolia.com/?q=ask+hn+resurrect+site+archive
Very odd.
Even the times of the comments have changed, this is what the post looked like yesterday:
https://web.archive.org/web/20241205054108/https://news.ycom...
For anyone who may be curious, wayback machine has an archive: fuckthesouth.com
Depending on the site you would use different tools, for eg for MediWiki/DokuWiki sites you would import the latest database dump on archive.org.
I have used wayback-machine-downloader before for completely static sites before:
wget --mirror --convert-links --page-requisites --no-parent URL
But yeah it's also not clear to me regarding copyrights and such.