f..-
`LU
`
`ARCHIVE
`
`
`
`ZML
`
`u
`[.—
`2H
`
`www.mchiveorg
`415.561.6767
`413840—0391 eafax
`
`Internet Archive
`300 Funston Avenue
`
`San Francisco, CA 94118
`
`AFFIDAVIT OF ELIZABETH ROSENBERG
`
`I am a Records Request Processor at the Internet Archive, located in San Francisco,
`California. I make this declaration of my own personal knowledge.
`
`The Internet Archive is a website that provides access to a digital library of Internet
`sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free
`access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public. The Internet
`Archive has partnered with and receives support from various institutions, including
`the Library of Congress.
`
`The Internet Archive has created a service known as the Wayback Machine. The
`Wayback Machine makes it possible to browse more than 450 billion pages stored
`in the Internet Archive's web archive. Visitors to the Wayback Machine can search
`archives by URL (i.e., a website address). If archived records for a URL are
`available, the visitor will be presented with a display of available dates. The visitor
`may select one of those dates, and begin browsing an archived version of the Web.
`Links on archived files in the Wayback Machine point to other archived files
`(whether HTML pages or other file types), if any are found for the URL indicated
`by a given link. For instance, the Wayback Machine is designed such that when a
`visitor clicks on a hyperlink on an archived page that points to another URL, the
`visitor will be served the archived file found for the hyperlink’s URL with the
`closest available date to the initial file containing the hyperlink.
`
`The archived data made viewable and browseable by the Wayback Machine is
`obtained by use of web archiving software that automatically stores copies of files
`available via the Internet, each file preserved as it existed at a particular point in
`time.
`
`The Internet Archive assigns a URL on its site to the archived files in the format
`http://web.archive.org/web/[Year in yyyy] [Month in mm] [Day in dd] [Time code in
`hh:mm:ss]/ [Archived URL] aka an “extended URL”. Thus, the extended URL
`http://web.archive.org/web/ 19970126045 828/http://www.archive.org/ would be the
`URL for the record of the Internet Archive home page HTML file
`(http://www.archive.org/) archived on January 26, 1997 at 4:58 a.m. and 28 seconds
`(1997/01/26 at 04:58:28). A web browser may be set such that a printout from it
`will display the URL of a web page in the printout’s footer. The date indicated by
`an extended URL applies to a preserved instance of a file for a given URL, but not
`necessarily to any other files linked therein. Thus, in the case of a page constituted
`by a primary HTML file and other separate files (e.g., files with images, audio,
`multimedia, design elements, or other embedded content) linked within that primary
`HTML file, the primary HTML file and the other files will each have their own
`respective extended URLs and may not have been archived on the same dates.
`
`Attached hereto as Exhibit A are true and accurate copies of browser printouts of
`the Internet Archive‘s records of the archived files for the URLs and the dates
`
`Microsoft
`
`Ex. 1022 - Page 1
`
`Microsoft
`Ex. 1022 - Page 1
`
`
`LU
`
`ARCHIVE
`
`
`
`ZML
`
`u
`[.—
`2H
`
`www.mchiveorg
`415.561.6767
`413840—0391 eafax
`
`Internet Archive
`300 Funston Avenue
`
`San Francisco, CA 94118
`
`AFFIDAVIT OF ELIZABETH ROSENBERG
`
`I am a Records Request Processor at the Internet Archive, located in San Francisco,
`California. I make this declaration of my own personal knowledge.
`
`The Internet Archive is a website that provides access to a digital library of Internet
`sites and other cultural artifacts in digital form. Like a paper library, we provide free
`access to researchers, historians, scholars, and the general public. The Internet
`Archive has partnered with and receives support from various institutions, including
`the Library of Congress.
`
`The Internet Archive has created a service known as the Wayback Machine. The
`Wayback Machine makes it possible to browse more than 450 billion pages stored
`in the Internet Archive's web archive. Visitors to the Wayback Machine can search
`archives by URL (i.e., a website address). If archived records for a URL are
`available, the visitor will be presented with a display of available dates. The visitor
`may select one of those dates, and begin browsing an archived version of the Web.
`Links on archived files in the Wayback Machine point to other archived files
`(whether HTML pages or other file types), if any are found for the URL indicated
`by a given link. For instance, the Wayback Machine is designed such that when a
`visitor clicks on a hyperlink on an archived page that points to another URL, the
`visitor will be served the archived file found for the hyperlink’s URL with the
`closest available date to the initial file containing the hyperlink.
`
`The archived data made viewable and browseable by the Wayback Machine is
`obtained by use of web archiving software that automatically stores copies of files
`available via the Internet, each file preserved as it existed at a particular point in
`time.
`
`The Internet Archive assigns a URL on its site to the archived files in the format
`http://web.archive.org/web/[Year in yyyy] [Month in mm] [Day in dd] [Time code in
`hh:mm:ss]/ [Archived URL] aka an “extended URL”. Thus, the extended URL
`http://web.archive.org/web/ 19970126045 828/http://www.archive.org/ would be the
`URL for the record of the Internet Archive home page HTML file
`(http://www.archive.org/) archived on January 26, 1997 at 4:58 a.m. and 28 seconds
`(1997/01/26 at 04:58:28). A web browser may be set such that a printout from it
`will display the URL of a web page in the printout’s footer. The date indicated by
`an extended URL applies to a preserved instance of a file for a given URL, but not
`necessarily to any other files linked therein. Thus, in the case of a page constituted
`by a primary HTML file and other separate files (e.g., files with images, audio,
`multimedia, design elements, or other embedded content) linked within that primary
`HTML file, the primary HTML file and the other files will each have their own
`respective extended URLs and may not have been archived on the same dates.
`
`Attached hereto as Exhibit A are true and accurate copies of browser printouts of
`the Internet Archive‘s records of the archived files for the URLs and the dates
`
`Microsoft
`
`Ex. 1022 - Page 1
`
`Microsoft
`Ex. 1022 - Page 1
`
`
`
`
`
`specified in the footer of the printout or an attached coversheet (in the case of
`records for which a browser does not provide a ready option to print a URL in the
`footer, e.g., in the case of a PDF file).
`
`7.
`
`I declare under penalty of perjury that the foregoing is true and correct.
`
`DATE: 0 Z [Z 7126@
`
`lizabeth Rosenbe
`
`Microsoft
`
`Ex. 1022 - Page 2
`
`Microsoft
`Ex. 1022 - Page 2
`
`
`
`Microsoft
`
`Ex. 1022 - Page 3
`
`ÿ
`
` ÿÿÿÿÿÿ
`Exhibit A
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`ÿ
`
`Microsoft
`Ex. 1022 - Page 3
`
`
`
`
`