It is well established that Web documents are ephemeral in nature. The literature now suggests that some Web objects are more ephemeral than others. Some authors describe this in terms of a Web document half-life, others use terms like 'linkrot' or persistence. It may be that certain 'classes' of Web documents are more or less likely to persist than are others. This article is based upon an evaluation of the existing literature as well as a continuing study of a set of URLs first identified in late 1996. It finds that a static collection of general Web pages tends to 'stabilize' somewhat after it has 'aged'. However 'stable' various collections may be, their instability nevertheless pose problems for various classes of users. Based on the l...
How fast does the web change? Does most of the content remain unchanged once it has been authored, o...
To discover the current situation and characteristics of web citations accessibility, the present st...
This paper examines the persistent accessibility of cited URLs in International Journal of Pavement ...
This report presents a study of URL and content persistence among 51 million pages from a national w...
An increasing amount of students and scholars use web references as a prime source in their papers. ...
International Journal of Education and Development using Information and Communication Technology (...
All text is ephemeral. Some texts are more ephemeral than others. The web has proved to be among the...
The researchers report on a study to examine the persistence of Web-based content. In 2002, a sample...
The aim of this work is the longitudinal study of the evolution and the state of 738 web sites in tw...
Abstract. As web technologies evolve, web archivists work to keep up so that our digital history is ...
The present study was conducted to examine the accessibility and corrosion of web references cited i...
How fast does the web change? Does most of the content remain unchanged once it has been authored, o...
Publisher: IEEE Computer Society PressThere is a surprising lack of empirical research into user int...
Web archival materials are not direct traces of the web, they are direct traces of crawlers. By desi...
In this paper, we suggest adjustments to best practices for persistent web referencing; adjustments ...
How fast does the web change? Does most of the content remain unchanged once it has been authored, o...
To discover the current situation and characteristics of web citations accessibility, the present st...
This paper examines the persistent accessibility of cited URLs in International Journal of Pavement ...
This report presents a study of URL and content persistence among 51 million pages from a national w...
An increasing amount of students and scholars use web references as a prime source in their papers. ...
International Journal of Education and Development using Information and Communication Technology (...
All text is ephemeral. Some texts are more ephemeral than others. The web has proved to be among the...
The researchers report on a study to examine the persistence of Web-based content. In 2002, a sample...
The aim of this work is the longitudinal study of the evolution and the state of 738 web sites in tw...
Abstract. As web technologies evolve, web archivists work to keep up so that our digital history is ...
The present study was conducted to examine the accessibility and corrosion of web references cited i...
How fast does the web change? Does most of the content remain unchanged once it has been authored, o...
Publisher: IEEE Computer Society PressThere is a surprising lack of empirical research into user int...
Web archival materials are not direct traces of the web, they are direct traces of crawlers. By desi...
In this paper, we suggest adjustments to best practices for persistent web referencing; adjustments ...
How fast does the web change? Does most of the content remain unchanged once it has been authored, o...
To discover the current situation and characteristics of web citations accessibility, the present st...
This paper examines the persistent accessibility of cited URLs in International Journal of Pavement ...