CIA Sunsets World Factbook Ending Decades of Public Access
- •CIA unexpectedly sunsets The World Factbook, removing decades of public domain intelligence archives.
- •All legacy pages now redirect to a closure notice, breaking thousands of external research links.
- •Simon Willison preserves 2020 Factbook edition on GitHub to maintain open data availability.
The CIA has abruptly shuttered The World Factbook, a vital repository of global intelligence and demographic data that has served as a cornerstone of the public internet since 1997. In what many are calling an act of cultural and informational vandalism, the agency did not merely stop updates; it replaced the entire site—including historical archives—with a blanket 302 redirect to a brief closure notice. This move effectively severs access to decades of public domain data used by researchers, educators, and developers worldwide, many of whom relied on the site's structured geographical and political insights for critical projects.
In response to this sudden loss, developer Simon Willison (a prominent open-source advocate) has stepped in to preserve the Factbook's legacy. By leveraging the last available annual zip file from 2020, Willison has hosted a static version of the site via GitHub Pages. This intervention ensures that the 384MB of curated data remains accessible to the public, even as the official source goes dark. The repository serves as a critical stopgap for those relying on the Factbook's unique editorial voice and granular geographic statistics, such as the recently updated height of Mount Everest following the 2015 earthquake.
The disappearance of such a structured, high-quality dataset is particularly noteworthy for those developing reliable information systems. The Factbook has long been a reliable source for Ground-truth information used to verify facts or anchor a Foundation Model in reality. While the Internet Archive holds older versions, the loss of a maintained, official endpoint highlights the fragility of the digital commons and the increasing importance of independent data stewardship in an era where verifiable information is becoming an increasingly rare and premium resource.