1.5.2
Newsjunkie.net is a resource guide for journalists. We show who's behind the news, and provide tools to help navigate the modern business of information.
Use of Data1.5.2
1.5.2
Gizmodo. Trump’s crusade against ‘woke’ climate research threatens solar science
The White House is moving to dismantle a weather research facility in Colorado, a decision that would not only impact climate science on Earth, but our ability to understand space weather as well. – PL
Deal requires agency to review applications on their merits. – PL
Undark. Opinion: Trump supporters distrust science. We need new ways to engage
Funding cuts are devastating for U.S. science, article claims regaining support will require cleaning house and bipartisan messaging. – PL
Reuters. Trump administration to dissolve key climate research agency
National Center for Atmospheric Research (NCAR) in Boulder, Co. is the latest effort to gut climate-related research; the agency says cuts would deprive the US of competitive advantage. – PL
NYT. Trump administration plans to break up premier weather and climate research center
Russell Vought, the White House budget director, called the laboratory a source of “climate alarmism.” – PL
UCS. Disinformation Undermines Our Right to Science
One bright spot from COP30 was the launch of the Declaration on Information Integrity on Climate Change, which 20 countries from Austria to Uruguay have now signed. – PL
Health Affairs. To mitigate the health impacts of mis- and disinformation, states should mandate digital watermarking
Nearly 1.1 million Americans died directly from COVID-19, and this toll was exacerbated by the proliferation of mis/disinformation that exposed and deepened pervasive national health vulnerabilities: the deliberate politicization of scientific guidance, distrust in public institutions, deep-rooted vaccine hesitancy, and anti-science sentiment. – PL
AHCJ: New insights for health journalists from a climate communication research review
A review paper published in October summarizes the global literature published on climate-health communication between 2000 and 2023. The biggest take-home point is the need for more climate-health communication. – PL
Data Rescue Project. Federal Geographic Information System (GIS) data saved and archived
The Data Rescue Project has archived all of the data layers from the defunct HIFLD Open GIS repository in DataLumos. – PL
Protect Science and American Innovation (PSAI). Campaign to protect science and American innovation
The PSAI is leading an initiative to email and call Congress to insist they fight back against attacks on science, medicine, and innovation. – PL
StatNews. NIH shut out hundreds of young scientists from funding to start their own labs
The last 10 months have revealed that the research enterprise that lead to the country’s technological dominance was much more brittle than expected. – PL
The Stakes–Richmond Confidential. California may ask voters to offset Trump cuts with a bond measure to fund scientific research
State Sen. Scott Wiener proposed a way the state could raise its own research funding and steer how it is spent. – PL
Financial Time. Canada launches $1.2bn fund to poach academic US talent
Investment comes as the Trump administration cuts grants and slashes higher education funding. – PL
ProPublica. Livestock overgrazing quietly destroying public lands
A 2014 law allowed for less oversight on cattle grazing, allowing for permits to auto-renew if the Bureau of Land Management is unable to complete the review. Experts are worried this lack of upkeep is being exacerbated by federal job cuts and could lead to major environmental impacts. -acs
Grist. Understanding the silent epidemic impacting migrant workers
According to a 2022 study, high temperatures combined with physically demanding work are driving a surge in chronic kidney disease, which is now one of the world’s fastest-growing killers and likely to become the fifth largest cause of premature death by 2050. This is especially common for migrant workers in the Gulf who often face squalid conditions and extreme heat, sometimes leading to premature death. -acs
Editor & Publisher. The consequences of disappearing government data
Since Trump took office in January, federal data has been consistently disappearing, affecting several forms of data reporting and impacting services like mental health hotlines. Even in cases where datasets are still accessible, they are rarely updated and are occasionally heavily reduced. This is especially evident at the BLS and the CDC. -acs
Grist. Examining the gov shutdown and its impact on America's food chain
In their second term, the Trump administration enacted policies determining who gets to eat, what gets eaten, and who gets left behind. According to Grist, the most recent government shutdown only illuminated fractures in the food supply, and farms, distributors, and consumers alike will soon feel the effects. -acs
Wired. How the government shutdown affected the EPA
During the current U.S. government shutdown, the EPA has experienced widespread confusion and inconsistent furloughs. About 4,400 staffers have been sent home while others remain at work executing deregulatory priorities with little clarity or communication. -acs
Citizen Historians for the Smithsonian. Introducing new American heroes: Citizen Historians
Citizen Historians for the Smithsonian is a volunteer-run project launched in August 2025 to photograph and document every item on display across the Smithsonian Institution’s 21 museums, the national zoo, and the U.S. Holocaust Memorial Museum. In its first seven weeks, the initiative attracted over 1,500 volunteers, captured nearly 50,000 photographs and videos, and achieved full coverage of all current exhibits with leadership from more than 20 volunteer captains. -acs
Grist. New studies by The Lancet find climate change is killing millions every year
The report warned that the “past 50 years of gains in public health” were at risk due to the destabilization of planetary systems and environmental conditions that humans depend on for survival. -acs
BBC. Glaciers in rapid retreat could lead to faster sea-level rise
In late 2022, Hektoria Glacier retreated by more than five miles in two months. Scientists are rallying behind two main theories, finding an agreement on one definite point: changes happening in polar regions are concerningly rapid. -acs
PBS. Missing government data won't stop the Federal Reserve from rate-cutting
Despite postponed reports, missing data, and shortened statistics, the Fed is adamant about cutting rates in an effort to shore up growth and hiring. -acs
Inside Climate News. Asheboro, NC refuses to remove to toxins from water supply
Asheboro’s wastewater treatment plant has polluted the drinking water of 900,000 downstream residents with 1,4-Dioxane. Other municipalities, including Greensboro and Burlington, have sharply reduced their 1,4-Dioxane discharges by pressuring industrial sources to pretreat wastewater or find alternatives. -acs
Grist. White House issues new round of furloughs for EPA workers
The new round of cuts targets employees involved in scientific research and the enforcement of anti-pollution laws, including the U.S. Geological Survey, the Bureau of Land Management, the National Park Service’s regional offices, and the Department of the Interior’s main headquarters. Significant research positions are at risk, potentially compromising the accuracy of long-term projects and studies. -acs
ProPublica. The FDA hides factory contamination information
Despite evidence of several pharmaceutical factories being contaminated with pigeon feces, dirty water, and urine, the FDA blacked out the names instead of recalling the medications produced there. The agency also failed to track consumer harm, even with complaints about pills with abnormal tastes or residues, or patients experiencing sudden, unexplained health concerns, including stomach pain and breathing problems. -acs
Alaska Public Media. Flooding from "unusual storm track" ravages western Alaska
Western Alaska is experiencing severe flooding, destroying homes, injuring residents, and sweeping people away. The indigenous towns of Kipnuk, Kwigillingok, and Napakiak have been hit the hardest. The Alaskan National Guard has been deployed by Governor Dunleavy. -acs
CBS. 153 unvaccinated students in South Carolina quarantined after measles exposure
Students were exposed without immunity are now left with no choice but to stay home and quarantine until the transmission threat is over. The South Carolina Department of Public Health stated “it is vital to ensure that the public have received their measles vaccinations.” -acs
Federal News Network. Senate Democrats warn of at risk federal data
According to Senate Democrats, DOGE has put federal data generated by the Social Security Administration, General Services Administration, and the Office of Personnel Management at serious risk. Senator Gary Peters warns of a 65% chance of a catastrophic data breach at the SSA due to a lack of security protocols. -acs
The Atlantic. How vaccine mandates affect pediatrics
Pediatricians face increasing financial pressure to stop offering vaccines due to high upfront costs, limited reimbursements, and rising operational burdens, making immunizations an economic liability in many practices. Doctors are now facing impossible decisions, as insurance companies often refuse to cover vaccination costs. -acs
CBS. Trump administration cancels $8 billion in climate funding amid government shutdown
In the wake of the government shutdown, the Trump administration announced it would cancel $8 billion in climate-related projects across 16 states. Data shows all affected states voted for Kamala Harris in 2024 and are represented by Democrats in the Senate. -acs
Inside Climate News. Study finds freshwater surge disrupting key Atlantic ocean current since 1950s
A new study analyzing chemical signatures from clam shells suggests that a rising influx of freshwater since the 1950s has disrupted the subpolar gyre in the North Atlantic, potentially weakening its ability to redistribute heat globally. A weakening or shutdown of the subpolar gyre and related currents would weaken the northward transport of ocean heat from the tropics to higher latitudes, with varying regional impacts including higher temperatures and increased droughts. -acs
On International Day for Universal Access to Information, the International Press Institute urged governments to guarantee unrestricted media access to climate and environmental data, warning that without it, public oversight of ecological policy and accountability are severely undermined. -acs
The Conversation. A walk across Alaska reveals that losses reported in climate data are very real
Walking across the sea ice off Utqiagvik, Alaska, polar climate scientist Alexandra Jahn, witnesses first-hand the thinning, cracking, and instability of the ice that climate models and satellite data already forecast. These field observations, especially as voiced by Indigenous hunters and scientists, underscore how the accelerating decline in sea-ice duration reshapes traditional lifeways and the resilience of Arctic communities. -acs
Grist. How small details in a 1996 bill could strip away federal land safeguards in Alaska
Republican lawmakers are pushing to use the Congressional Review Act, an obscure legislative tool originally buried in a 1996 bill, to strip away long-standing federal land use plans and environmental safeguards. If successful, this could unravel decades of protections across millions of acres, especially in Alaska’s Central Yukon, and expose a wave of uncertainty for conservation, tribal rights, and land management nationwide. -acs
Global Witness. 146 land and environment defenders were killed or disappeared last year, most for standing up to mining and logging
More than one-third of the victims were Indigenous people and many more were Afro-descendants, with violence most intense in Latin America and Asia, where weak state oversight and extractive industries persist. -acs
George Mason University. Guide to deleted government data
George Mason University’s library runs a guide listing alternative sources for locating deleted government data. The list includes sites taken down since January 2025. -acs
EFF. Electronic Frontier Foundation analysis warns on the dangers of consolidated government data
Rapid manipulation and consolidation of private data by DOGE and other groups into one single super database is illegal, warns EFF. -acs
Inside Climate News. Nature study finds world's top cement and fossil fuel producers play a significant part in global heating events
A new study in Nature finds that emissions from the world’s 180 largest fossil fuel and cement companies are responsible for about half of the increase in intensity of recent global heat waves compared to preindustrial levels. -acs
Bellingcat. Ukrainian citizens are undoing environmental destruction from Russia's war
Farmers and demining teams in Ukraine are racing to clear landmines and other unexploded ordnance using tools from rakes, tractors, metal detectors, to drones and AI-analysis in order to reclaim farmland and revive agricultural output. Lots of land remains inaccessible or only “suspected” contaminated, meaning delays in clearance not only threaten lives but also impose large economic costs as usable land lies fallow. -acs
The Narwhal. Narwhal investigation reveals connections between big oil and the government
An investigation by The Narwhal reveals that many Alberta oil and gas companies listed by the regulator as delinquent in failing cleanup obligations are tied to wealthy and well connected individuals, including former prime minister Stephen Harper and businessman Don Taylor, through complex ownership structures. -acs
The Kansas City Defender. Kansas City residents demand environmental equity
Residents on Kansas City’s East Side are demanding environmental justice and basic infrastructure (such as clean creeks, intact sidewalks, and maintained parks) that have long been neglected compared to more affluent parts of the city. Community members, faith leaders, and local activists are calling for accountability through a funded Brush Creek Master Plan, and an oversight board to ensure promises made by city officials are honored. -acs
PBS. Washington state lawsuit rules Trump admin must restore deleted data on government websites
Following lawsuits from doctors and health organizations, the Trump administration agreed to restore health data to government websites where it had been removed. The Washington State Medical Association was a primary plaintiff, arguing the removal was a political act harming the medical community and patients. Leader of the organization, Dr. John Bramhall stated, "This was trusted health information that vanished in a blink of an eye—resources that physicians rely on to manage patients’ health conditions.” -acs
ProPublica. Burning oil, air pollution, and more emissions than meets the eye
“President Donald Trump’s administration has maintained that drilling in the U.S. is cleaner than in other countries due to tighter environmental oversight,” but locals and workers in Texas oil country tell a different story. Texas attempted to curtail emissions by requiring a permit to flare or vent oil; however, with nearly 100% approval, not much was done to reduce emissions. In fact, released emissions could have powered “more than 3 million homes and generate millions of dollars in tax revenue” if they had not been released into the atmosphere. -acs
Time. Utility bills could be the next hotbed political issue
According to environmental policy scholars, electricity has the potential to play a much larger role in US politics in the upcoming years. There are several factors being considered including the price of operating a business, environmental pollution, and the increase in electricity use with the advent of AI. All of these factors are definitely affecting the consumer, with data from the Energy Information Administration finding that “across the U.S., electricity-price increases have outpaced inflation, increasing 13% since 2022.” -acs
The Wire. Fired federal climate workers bring back shuttered climate.gov on their own terms
A growing group of former federal employees is working to restore critical climate resources removed during the Trump administration. With Climate.gov offline, a new site, Climate.us, aims to fill the gap. The effort is led by Rebecca Lindsay, the former managing editor of Climate.gov, who was fired from the National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration in February, alongside hundreds of other ex-employees.
Association of Health Care Journalists. AHCJ calls for more coverage on environmental impacts
The US has a history of environmental injustice against minority groups. The history of industrialization in the Western world is often marked by pollution and sickness, but the past is not behind us. Modern US industry is still harmful, however, it's often ignored while its advances are praised without acknowledging the consequences. Read more to see how we can change that. -acs
The Tufts Daily. Tuft's Fletcher School Institute for Business in the Global Context investigates ways to improve technology and stay sustainable
The Fletcher School “was motivated by three key questions: How big is the digital economy everywhere? What is the pace of change in the growth of digital technologies? Where are the trade-offs between the benefits and the costs of the greatest?” The COVID-19 pandemic brought exorbitant amounts of change all over the world. One of the greatest advancements being the race for a technological revolution. Tuft’s Daily investigates countries that are on the right path, and others that may be inflicting more harm than good. -acs
The Hill. https://thehill.com/policy/energy-environment/5481695-climate-change-trump-epa/
85 Climate Scientists have released a report refuting the Trump Administration’s claims that Climate Change is not as bad as we thought. The dismantling of the EPA, along with the placement of Lee Zeldin as its head, has disrupted decades of intense scientific research on environmental impacts. The report directly combats several points raised by the administration, claiming that its findings were not based in real science. -acs
The Open Notebook. Introducing: The Open Notebook, a guide to science writing
The Open Notebook is publishing its first sample science writing syllabus for aspiring science reporters. The guide covers 12 topics in individual modules, ranging from sourcing and interviewing to journalistic ethics. For a more in-depth look into science reporting, check out their full book, The Craft of Science Writing. -acs
Scientific American. What happens when theories of science are disproven?
From Louis Pasteur to Michelson and Morley, science is in a constant cycle of improvement. The desire to expand on ideas, old and new, is never-ending. But what happens when most, if not all, scientists in a specific field change their minds? -acs
Federal News Network. The NSF was once "the jewel of the government" now its a shell of itself 149 National Science Foundation workers signed a letter to Congress expressing concerns about the future of science in the US. Nearly a third of the staff has been laid off, with more facing job losses due to budget cuts. For more details, see the interview with Terry Gerton and Dr. Jesus Soriano, President of AFGE Local 3403 and an NSF researcher. -acs
Louisiana Illuminator. RFK Jr. is dismantling the research programs he promised to back
RFK Jr. vowed to find the cause of autism, now he’s helping dismantle the research initiatives doing just that. Studies done under the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences have found that exposure to tNational Institute of Environmental Health Sciences found that genetics, as well as environmental factors (such as exposure to to certain chemicals during pregnancy) lead to increased cases of autism in children. -acs
The Guardian. Increased NIH budget cuts lead to research impossibilities
Senior officials at the NIH believe there is a “multi-pronged” attack being waged on scientific research. The United States and its universities used to be a research powerhouse, under the current Trump administration, that seems to be changing. Politically driven cuts to NIH funding, particularly in areas like cancer and HIV prevention, are decimating the U.S. scientific research infrastructure. Funding uncertainty, extremely low grant approval rates, and disrupted careers are leading scientists to warn that this disruption may be "impossible to rebuild." -acs
BBC. The US alters global human rights reports, leaving out vital pieces of information
The Trump administration has made big cuts to the US governments reports on global human rights abuses. This report is generally known to be the most comprehensive report of its kind, despite scaling back some reports on countries it favors as allies. Not only have big changes been made going forward, but “entire sections included in reports from previous years are also eliminated, dramatically reducing coverage of issues including government corruption and persecution of LGBTQ+ individuals.” -acs
Reynolds Journalism Institute. RJI is on a mission to reframe reports on drugs
Susan Stellin has been hard at work creating a guide for journalists who want to report on drugs in a “non-traditional” way. What is non-traditional? In this case, it means moving away from approaches based on the war on drugs, race, ethnicity, and drug stereotypes, and moving towards a health-based methodology. She hopes that those interested in similar progress in reporting will take a page out of her resource book. -acs
Harvard Medicine Magazine. Science was once seen as pinnacle of truth, now it falls to the wayside
Federal support for basic biomedical science in the U.S. originated during World War II, inspired by Vannevar Bush’s 1945 “The Endless Frontier” vision, which argued that government-backed basic research would drive technological and societal progress. This model paved the way for institutions like the NSF (founded in 1950) and an expanded NIH, enabling breakthroughs such as the Framingham Heart Study and the Human Genome Project, ultimately helping to save millions of lives. While Bush viewed “Basic research [as] the pacemaker of technological progress,” the current administration appears to be at odds with this belief, seeing research as the enemy of truth with mass takedowns of essential reports. -acs
Milwaukee Independent. US national climate reports are disappearing from federal websites
According to the Milwaukee Independent, websites for the national assessments and the U.S. Global Change Research Program were down as of June 30, with no links, notes, or referrals elsewhere. These legally mandated reports are essential for providing the public with vital information on climate change in their areas. The disappearance of this data, coupled with public denial of climate change from government officials, will create a dangerous society where citizens are unaware of shifts in their own neighborhoods until it is too late. -acs
The Environmental Data and Governance Initiative found that “in the first 100 days of the first Trump administration, there were 371 important changes made to websites, while in the same period this year there were 632 changes.” The report also found that climate change information has been altered or removed from federal websites, though less consistently than environmental justice and DEI sites. Data is being removed at an impressive rate, even with fewer volunteers monitoring the disappearing information, the change is stark. -acs
AP. Trump fires Erika McEntarfer, director of the Bureau of Labor Statistics
President Donald Trump fired the head of the Bureau of Labor Statistics (BLS) after it released its third negative report on job growth statistics in the United States. The government agency's data contradicts the Trump's statements, as the job market is not on the rise. Erika McEntarfer, who was appointed by Biden, is being blamed for manipulating the numbers to negatively impact the Republican establishment and bring embarrassment to president and his cabinet. -acs
Brennan Center for Justice. Trump’s DOJ cuts $820 million in grants that effectively work to reduce crime in the US
According to the Brennan Center for Justice, in April 2025, Baltimore recorded its lowest monthly homicide rate, a 62% drop from the previous year, citing similar trends in other major cities. This is due to a new “all-of-the-above approach” to safety, which involves increased funding for programs alongside traditional law enforcement, such as community programs, youth organizations, and gun violence reduction initiatives. By cutting these grants, effective policy is being abandoned, and these reduced crime rates are at risk.-acs
US Department of Energy. Department of Energy brings public opinion to the front, asking for commentary on the impact of Greenhouse Gases
Last week, the U.S. Department of Energy released a new report evaluating existing peer-reviewed literature and government data on the climate impacts of greenhouse gas emissions. The department says that climate change is real; however, it is not the most important threat at the moment. In fact, the focus on it directly condemns the engineering feats that allowed humanity to flourish over the past two decades, and increased criticism of these systems is, perhaps, more damaging to progress than climate change itself. This comes alongside Lee Zeldin’s announcement that the EPA “doesn’t have the authority to regulate Greenhouse Gas Emissions” and that the agency would deregulate carbon emissions requirements for vehicles. -acs
PBS. Trump administration’s NIH budget cuts threaten Sickle Cell research, citing DEI
Since taking office in January, the Trump administration has cut more than $1 billion in NIH grants, gutting several research programs. One notable casualty: Sickle Cell research, which affects approximately 100,000 Americans, over 90% of them Black. -acs
Connecticut Public Radio. The EPA’s scientific research arm to be shuttered by Trump administration
A government sector that “provides expertise for environmental policies and regulations” is yet another victim of budget cuts from the new administration. This shutdown will cause unprecedented changes to the health of Americans and the environment around them, ultimately replacing real scientists with politicians, or with no one at all. -acs
The Duke Chronicle. Fulbright board members announce their resignation, citing accusations of the program's politicization by Trump
In a decision not taken lightly, eleven out of twelve members resigned from the Fulbright board last month. With history as a bipartisan organization, the board attempts to represent the whole of the United States, however, they claim the current administration’s actions are ‘“antithetical to the Fulbright mission and the values, including free speech and academic freedom, that Congress specified in the statute.”’ -acs
TheLogic. Internet Archive Canada preserves Canada's web history, and more
Internet Archive Canada may have launched back in 2006, but its importance really became evident shortly after U.S. President Donald Trump’s first election win in 2016. -gjw
WA State Nurses Assn. Health groups in Washington sue as the federal government deletes vital health data and resources
John Bramhall, MD, PhD, of the Washington State Medical Association warns “These executive-ordered website deletions were driven by ideology, not by science or evidence.” Urging medical professionals to recognize wiping of data as an attack on science, patients, and the medical system at large. -gjw
PBS. Ex-Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden talks getting fired by Trump and the legacy of scholarship
Former Librarian of Congress Carla Hayden first woman and first African-American to lead the National library, details her time at the LOC, citing struggles with the White House and the importance of libraries for all generations. -gjw
Brookings. Deleted US government data creates performance challenges in policy and research
Taxpayer-funded data has disappeared. Now "policymakers are trying to find ways to make sure that people still have access to that data," but there's a still long road ahead in the struggle for comprehensive information and methodology. -gjw
The Appeal. Trump DOJ Erases Trans People from Crime Data Surveys
The federal government will no longer collect data about the gender identity of people who experience violent crime or sexual misconduct. -gjw
IEEE Spectum. Saving public data: more than snapshots
Digital archivists combine efforts to preserve complex government sites. -gjw
Brown Daily Herald. Brown librarians, professors lead effort to archive government data under threat by Trump administration
Frank Donnelly, the head of geographic information systems and data services at the Brown University Library has been working to archive this data being lost to shutdowns. Donnelly said since Trump’s inauguration, “librarians (were) forming different groups across the country to make sure that we had backups of a lot of federal data sets.” -gjw
Forbes. USAID website is offline
USAID’s website, usaid.gov, displays a message stating the server cannot be reached as of March 22, 2025. -gjw
NPR. As Trump administration purges web pages, EOT rushes to save them
Radio interview and transcript. NPR’s Emma Bowman interviews Mark Graham and Brewster Kahle on the effort to save government websites and data.
NPR/KCBX. Reporter Emma Bowman’s article explains what’s at stake re EOT
Six weeks into the new administration, Internet Archive had cataloged some 73,000 web pages that had existed on U.S. government websites that were expunged after Trump's inauguration. The Internet Archive is currently the only place the public can find a copy of an interactive timeline detailing the events of Jan. 6, a product of the congressional committee that investigated the Capitol attack, and has since been taken down from their website.
New Yorker. Can guerrilla archivists save the country’s files from DOGE?
“This is how we know about our country,” social scientist Lynda Kellam told the New Yorker. “People who support the ‘drain the swamp’ mentality don’t seem to understand how much the government does.” Kellam described the vulnerable data as “irreplaceable.” - gjw
NYT. Vast quantities of climate and environmental information have been removed from official websites
Hundreds of volunteers, including EOT Harvest members Internet Archive and EDGI, are working to download government data recreate the digital tools that allow the public to access that information.
Trump has created a smoke-and-mirrors version of reality that counters the evidence, from taxpayer-funded government data, that could frustrate his ambitions. -gjw
Washington Post. Photos are disappearing, one archive at a time
[Indirectly related to the EOT effort] As photographers try to find homes for their work, traditional archives (hard copy photos, negatives, and slides) are also vanishing, especially in local journalism, where generations of photographers built shared visual records of community history. - gjw
Clean Technica. US Cultural Revolution: Bonfire of NASA, NOAA, EPA, CDC, & USDA Climate Programs
NASA, NOAA, NIH, National Science Foundation data and budgets slashed as if Mao's Cultural Revolution lives on. - acb
Columbia Journalism Review. Fighting the Great Federal Website Purge
By preserving such information, newsrooms are not only aiding themselves and other journalists, but are showing data archivists where to dig and supporting countless scientists whose work the current purge has devalued. - acb
AP. Judge tells agencies to restore webpages and data removed after Trump’s executive order
Removing important information from the CDC and FDA websites is delaying patient care, hampering research and hindering doctors’ ability to communicate with patients, the plaintiffs’ attorneys argued in a court filing. - acb
CivilRights.org. Why We Must Stop Trump’s Attempts to Erase Our Communities
These rollbacks do not merely threaten the integrity of scientific research — they undermine the fundamental goals of our federal statistical system to produce and share timely, relevant data while ensuring accuracy, credibility, objectivity, and confidentiality. Eliminating critical data allows for agencies to absolve themselves of accountability, obscures population-policy impacts, and worsens inequities. Without trusted data to make decisions, mistrust and disinformation can proliferate. - acb
GWU National Security Archive. Disappearing Data: Trump Administration Removing Climate Information from Government Websites
Community-led advocacy groups, archivists, and universities scramble to download climate resources and datasets. EPA, NOAA, and CEQ all targets of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. End of Term Web (EOT) Archive and Internet Archive's (IA) Wayback Machine crucial in preserving web data.download climate resources and datasets. EPA, NOAA, and CEQ all targets of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. End of Term Web (EOT) Archive and Internet Archive's (IA) Wayback Machine crucial in preserving web data. - acb
Internet Archive Blog. EOT Update: 500 terabytes of material, more than 100 million unique web pages preserved so far
Coverage includes websites in the .gov and .mil web domains, as well as government websites hosted on .org, .edu, and other top level domains.
As an added layer of preservation, the 2024/2025 EOT Web Archive will be uploaded to the Filecoin network for long-term storage. Separate from the EOT coalition, this is part of the Internet Archive’s Democracy’s Library project. -gjw
MIT Technology Review. Inside the race to archive the US govt websites
“I consider the actions of the current administration an assault on the entire scientific enterprise,” says Margaret Hedstrom, professor emerita of information at the University of Michigan. -gjw
CNN. What the White House takes down, Wayback Machine puts back up
A model of understatement: “the second Trump administration seems to have taken down more content than usual.” Cue the Wayback Machine. -gjw
Fierce Pharma. CDC’s ‘Wild to Mild’ flu vaccine campaign muzzled amid HHS handover
According to snapshots collected by the Internet Archive, at some point between Feb. 14 and Feb. 18, the Wild to Mild webpage was wiped of its information and resources. - gjw
The Verge. The mad dash to protect environmental data from Donald Trump
“Trump’s second term in office could pose a bigger risk to information about climate change and pollution on federal websites, advocates warn” - gjw
Freedom of the Press Foundation. Here’s how you can help save government data and research
President Donald Trump’s administration has been quick to purge information about “vaccines, veterans’ care, hate crimes and scientific research, among many other topics” from thousands of federal government websites. - gjw
Harvard-Shorenstein Center. Researchers rush to save federal health databases disappearing from government websites
Researchers and students at the Harvard T.H. Chan School of Public Health have been scraping and downloading data related to health equity from U.S. government agency websites before they disappear. Their goal is to make the data publicly available through repositories such as the Harvard Dataverse and the Wayback Machine.
Nat’l Security Archive. Trump kills climate science information
Advocacy groups, archivists, and universities scramble to download climate resources and datasets; EPA, NOAA, and CEQ all targets of Elon Musk's Department of Government Efficiency. End of Term Web Archive and Internet Archive's Wayback Machine crucial in preserving web data. -gjw
CNN. Scientists fear Trump will erase public research
NYT. Could Trump’s return pose a threat to climate and weather data?
Breaking News I E. What’s in a name? Trump set to wipe government language
Fast Company. The Internet Archive is even more essential than I realized
Forbes. Safeguarding against a Trump data dump
Verge. How scientists scrambled to stop Donald Trump’s EPA from wiping out climate data — the birth of EDGI
Research Information. Public access to published science “under threat in the US”
AIP. White House Issues New Security Rules for Government-Funded Research
Union of Concerned Scientists. Protecting Government Science from Political Interference
Brennan Center for Justice. Five Cases of Political Threats Against Scientific Integrity
Edited by Alex Smythe, Jenny Young, Damon Gitelman, AC Blaisdell, Peter Landau, and Gordon Whiting
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