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Q&A

How to document and cite website downtime properly?

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I couldn't find anything on this one, so maybe someone has a good idea on what would be considered good practice in a scholarly context.

Background

For a semester project, I have to observe an online newspaper and summarize their weekly topics. Each week I have to submit a short note containing my findings and analysis, and of course quote the source properly according to the Chicago style.

However, the website was down for a day or so and I would like to have that documented. But how to document and cite absence?

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This post was sourced from https://writers.stackexchange.com/q/43359. It is licensed under CC BY-SA 3.0.

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2 answers

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As a former university professor at one university, and now a full time research scientist at another, I would just add a footnote for any weeks in which the site was down. As a note, which is what they were invented for.

So "Week 7: Mar 11-17[1] The following headlines were gathered:

blah blah blah

And in the footnote:

[1]The site was inaccessible Mar 12, thus no data is shown for that date.

You can do the same for any other time missing, in hours if needed, or specify the times if you wish. The above is just a formatting example.

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Did you take screenshots of it being down? Does the site have an errors log? Is there a site you checked those days to make sure it wasn't just you? (https://www.isitdownrightnow.com/ and https://downforeveryoneorjustme.com/ are a few).

If the site is consistently archived on Archive.org's Wayback Machine, if you can show that on days surrounding it, there is an image of the site, but on the down-day, it shows just a (whatever) error, then that's another piece of evidence.

Whatever you use, then just cite it like any other website. If you did screenshots as evidence, then I would include those as an appendix.

(source - I used to teach Technical Writing at a local university)

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