Koopa con Carne
Lidl K. Rool
- MarioWiki
- Koopa con Carne
This wiki, being an informational resource, relies actively and extensively on digital archives to cite info. Wayback Machine may be the most widely used and prestigious option, both here and overall, but it has its limitations (cannot parse Java Script too well, excludes certain sites), which leads people turning to a notable alternative: archive.today.
The problem with this site? Setting aside its occulted ownership and the fact that it is much less responsive to takedown requests than its bigger cousin, Wayback--it has been the perpetrator of a recent DDoS attack against a blog called gyrovague.com, essentially in response to acritical article doxxing attempt back in 2023. Here is this blog making the claim and detailing the situation:
gyrovague.com
Whether or not the owner of archive.today was in the right to retaliate is a different discussion. Why this concerns us is because archive.today is, apparently, using its visitors as proxies in this DDoS. This isn't just an inter-personal feud. It basically means that whenever a Mario Wiki reader is clicking an archive.today link on one of our articles, their traffic is instantly and unknowingly leveraged as part of the attack. As a result, I doubt these users would take steps to block related network requests.
What specifically made me confident enough to bring this up is the fact that Wikipedia itself is having a very lengthy debate at this moment on deprecating/blacklisting this archival service. While some users argue that it's the ethical thing to do, others are less eager to oblige, arguing that it remains a salient alternative to Wayback and that having a trustworthy encyclopedia should take priority over firewalling their readers.
What do we do? Do we straight up blacklist archive.today? Do we limit its use to citations where the original link is dead (and no other archival option is available)? Do we distance from it in any way?
The problem with this site? Setting aside its occulted ownership and the fact that it is much less responsive to takedown requests than its bigger cousin, Wayback--it has been the perpetrator of a recent DDoS attack against a blog called gyrovague.com, essentially in response to a
archive.today is directing a DDOS attack against my blog
Around January 11, 2026, archive.today (aka archive.is, archive.md, etc) started using its users as proxies to conduct a distributed denial of service (DDOS) attack against Gyrovague, my personal b…
Whether or not the owner of archive.today was in the right to retaliate is a different discussion. Why this concerns us is because archive.today is, apparently, using its visitors as proxies in this DDoS. This isn't just an inter-personal feud. It basically means that whenever a Mario Wiki reader is clicking an archive.today link on one of our articles, their traffic is instantly and unknowingly leveraged as part of the attack. As a result, I doubt these users would take steps to block related network requests.
What specifically made me confident enough to bring this up is the fact that Wikipedia itself is having a very lengthy debate at this moment on deprecating/blacklisting this archival service. While some users argue that it's the ethical thing to do, others are less eager to oblige, arguing that it remains a salient alternative to Wayback and that having a trustworthy encyclopedia should take priority over firewalling their readers.
What do we do? Do we straight up blacklist archive.today? Do we limit its use to citations where the original link is dead (and no other archival option is available)? Do we distance from it in any way?
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