About Wikibin

Wikibin is a free, open archive dedicated to preserving Wikipedia articles that have been deleted. We believe in the free flow of information and the importance of preserving knowledge—even when it doesn't meet Wikipedia's strict notability guidelines.

Our Mission

Every day, Wikipedia editors delete hundreds of articles. While some deletions are warranted, many removed articles contain valuable information about emerging topics, local history, lesser-known individuals, and niche subjects that simply haven't received mainstream media coverage yet.

Wikibin exists to ensure this knowledge isn't lost forever.

Why Preservation Matters

Wikipedia's notability requirements, while well-intentioned, can be exclusionary:

By preserving these articles, we create a more complete historical record and support researchers, journalists, and curious minds who seek information beyond what Wikipedia deems "notable."

Free Speech & Open Knowledge

We believe that information wants to be free. While we respect Wikipedia's right to curate their encyclopedia, we also believe there's value in maintaining an archive of content that was researched, written, and contributed by volunteers worldwide.

Wikibin is not a mirror of Wikipedia—it's a preservation archive for deleted content that would otherwise be lost to history.

How It Works

  1. Monitoring: We track Wikipedia's Articles for Deletion (AfD) discussions
  2. Harvesting: When articles are marked for deletion, we capture their content
  3. Quarantine: Articles are held for 30 days to ensure the deletion is finalized
  4. Publication: After quarantine, articles are published to our searchable archive

What We Don't Archive

We apply content filters to exclude:

Our Commitment

Wikibin is committed to:

Wikibin has archived over 100,000 deleted Wikipedia articles since its founding, making it one of the largest preservation efforts of its kind.