Wayback Machine Browser Extension

4 of 5 Stars

Useful for when you want to make sure the pages you're reading will still be around in some form in the future, and to easily get at additional context.

Privacy Alert: It checks every page you view against the Wayback Machine, so turn it off when you're not using it! There really isn't a good way around this without downloading their entire index as part of the extension. But that's the only way it can show you how many times the page has been archived, or automatically save a copy, or automatically check for archives when the current page isn't found.

If you enable auto-save, be sure to add to the exclusions list so it doesn't waste time trying to archive your webmail or control panel.

There is a private mode where it doesn't do anything until you ask it to. But that leaves you with essentially the same features as a pair of bookmarklets to check or save the current page.

I've used the Firefox add-on, the Chrome extension (with Chromium, Vivaldi and Arc) and the Safari extension.

Firefox add-on

Chrome extension

Safari extension

Alternative: Bookmarklets

I've also been using these bookmarklets from Wikipedia, which don't need an extension and work on just about any desktop browser. (Except Arc, where I wrote a "boost" back in the early beta period to add buttons to every page.)

bookmarklets from Wikipedia

Load archives of the current page:

Save an archive of the current page:

— Kelson Vibber, 2024-01-08. Updated 2025-02-26.

External

Available from:

The Wayback Machine

Software

Browser Add-On

Cloud

Archives

Firefox

Chrome

Vivaldi

Safari

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