To be perfectly clear, archive.org/nationalsecurityarchive is NOT the national security archive from GWU. It is wholly separate, and omitted the "internet" from National Security Internet Archive (NSIA) from the identifier in the URL because of length and because NSIA is too few letters. 

The WWU NSArchive is great and has a lot of stuff mine doesn't, but there's plenty in NSIA you won't find in the GWU NSArchive, too.

On Mon, Oct 12, 2015 at 10:36 AM, Razer <Rayzer@riseup.net> wrote:
"Let me make this PERFECTLY CLEAR"

It's not a 'mirror'. So far as I can see, it's a dump. The National Security Archive maintains a mirror @IA and you aren't going to find any dox 'in the wild' or modified, or even SUSPECTED of being modified dox on that reflector.


On 10/11/2015 03:45 PM, coderman wrote:

for this, i am quite grateful to see the archive.org natsec section expanded with cryptome mirror!




On 10/11/2015 03:45 PM, coderman wrote:
On 10/10/15, Shelley <shelley@misanthropia.org> wrote:
...
The Cryptome archives *are* publicly accessible.  John limits bots and
leechers to a certain number of files per day (as is his right, he is
paying for the bandwidth), approx 100 iirc, but anyone who can use search
strings can find anything on the site.

it is exceptionally difficult, short of ordering physical duplicates,
to obtain a significant portion of cryptome archive from cryptome.org.

part of this is inherent abuse - any mirror gets serious algorithmic
beatings - akin to HackingTeam mirrors perhaps, not counting the
mindless cloud VM bot walkers, annoying enough.  even the hidden
service only mirrors got offensive proddings. remember, some of
cryptome-opponents are relying on obscurity - thwarted every time some
makes a mirror...

for this, i am quite grateful to see the archive.org natsec section
expanded with cryptome mirror!
https://archive.org/details/nationalsecurityarchive

thanks to all involved (esp. you, Michael 


best regards,