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What can you do now that Google cache is gone?

Posted: Wed Jan 08, 2025 3:57 am
by shaown
The discussion about Google's cache saw the first signs and the first exchanges at the end of last year. Then came the confirmation, always through social media, that there was indeed the intention to greece phone number discontinue the cache operator: .

These days the operator has stopped working. Trying to search for the cached version of any site what you get is a page with no results with bigfoot fishing in the ice. The use of the cache was used in the past to allow users to look at sites as if they were evolving beings .

Sometimes, for example, journalists have used cached versions of websites to track down small or large flaws that the owners of the sites themselves have tried to hide by perhaps changing texts or images.

The purpose of cached versions is mainly to go back in time but, in the past, they were also used to allow, in case of network problems, to have at least one version of the website you were looking for.

Now this is no longer possible, “ yes, it has been removed ” reads a message published more recently on the Google Search Liaison account. And the question, for those who relied on the SERP to also examine cached versions of websites is: what is the alternative?


The one suggested directly by Google is The Internet Archive and their Wayback Machine . Apparently there is an agreement , we always read in the discussion that was opened in February on Elon Musk's social network, between Google and The Internet Archive to redirect users looking for cached versions of websites to the service that the platform provides.

And it's not just the Wayback Machine. Another way to access previous versions of a site is to go through Google Search Console and use the URL Inspector service. It's clear, however, that the URL Inspector service only works if you examine websites that you own and that are connected to your account.