Vanishing sources on the Wayback machine.

Chapter 5 of the Vanishing act explained in a way why it is important to put the date accessed on a citation, it is mainly because of the half-life of the citations. This whole time I thought that the date accessed section part of a citation was just for teachers to make sure their students weren’t procrastinating on a project.  It never occurred to me that the Wayback machine could be used to find disappearing citations and to find those disappearing citations the date when you accessed the web page would be required. Thanks to the Wayback machine’s archival of the web it is able to give us at least a glimpse into sources that may have disappeared due to their half-life.  I also now understand why journals are so highly valued in academic research besides being peer reviewed they also have a very high half-life an average of 5 years according to chapter 5.  With their high half-life it takes a while for them to disappear from the web; which helps them to get archived and to back up our papers.

1 thought on “Vanishing sources on the Wayback machine.

  1. William Maldonado

    Before reading you post I never really gave it a thought on why citations would have a date and I see why you would think of it as a way for teachers to check if we are procrastinating on a paper or not. Also the wayback machine could one day save your project from missing a citation.For example Lets say you are finishing up your paper and you have to hand it in, in two days and in between then and when you’ve finished your paper one of your online citations pulls the the vanishing act. Your professor would say one of your citations is missing but luckily you took LIB 1201 and remembered the wayback machine then you go find your citation on it and you saved your paper from having anything less than an A+, thanks wayback machine.

    Reply

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *