News

The removed portions of the Constitution include clauses that limit Congress' power to suspend habeas corpus and forbid titles of nobility in the United States ...
A number of key sections from Article I of the U.S. Constitution — including one tied to habeas corpus — recently vanished from a federal government website, as first reported by 404 Media and flagged ...
In recent days, internet users noticed that portions of Article 1 were missing from the Library of Congress' Constitution Annotated website: Sections 9 and 10, and part of Section 8. Article 1 ...
Portions of the U.S. Constitution, including sections on habeas corpus and rules against the government issuing titles of ...
In January, James Billington, the Librarian of Congress, will retire after a long career in public service. He’s held a post that carries tremendous influence: running the world’s largest ...
The San Francisco-based Internet Archive now has federal depository status, joining a network of over 1,100 libraries that archive government documents and make them accessible to the public — even as ...
Memes Are the New Jump-Rope Songs The Library of Congress has long cataloged American folklore. Now it’s turning to the internet for a new generation of shared culture.
Six years after the announcement, the Library of Congress still hasn’t launched the heralded tweet archive, and it doesn’t know when it will. No engineers are permanently assigned to the project.
The Library of Congress opened its newest collection — called The Seth MacFarlane Collection of the Carl Sagan and Ann Druyan Archive — on Tuesday (Nov. 12).
The Internet Archive is an online digital library based in San Francisco, California, and founded in 1996 with the stated mission of providing “Universal Access to All Knowledge.” ...
The Internet Archive’s legal woes are not over. In 2023, a group of music labels, including Universal Music Group and Sony, sued the archive in a copyright infringement case over a music ...
The Library, she said, regularly prepares reports for members of Congress on topics like terrorism, nuclear weapons, and the Middle East, as part of its Congressional Research Service.