116 pointsby mxfh9 hours ago20 comments
  • simonw7 hours ago
    Urgh, this is nasty:

      curl -i 'https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook'
      HTTP/2 302 
      content-length: 0
      location: https://www.cia.gov/stories/story/spotlighting-the-world-factbook-as-we-bid-a-fond-farewell/
    
    They didn't even have the decency to give it a 410 or 404 error.

    Same for all of the country pages - they redirect back to the same story: https://www.cia.gov/the-world-factbook/countries/morocco/

    The thing was released into the public domain! No reason at all to take it down - they could have left the last published version up with a giant banner at the top saying it's no longer maintained.

    • CamperBob26 hours ago
      [flagged]
      • slg4 hours ago
        I'd be surprised if there was a single American who had the CIA Factbook as the deciding factor in determining their vote. It being shutdown is more evidence of how broken the American political system is rather than an indication of the will of the people.
        • overfeed2 hours ago
          > I'd be surprised if there was a single American who had the CIA Factbook as the deciding factor in determining their vote

          That's just the specifics: Steve Bannon explicitly made it clear that one goal was to "dismantle the administrative state"

        • bdcravens4 hours ago
          As a single issue, probably not. However, the meta-issue that they did vote for was eliminating anything the government pays for (other than military, ICE, or related to drilling oil)
          • slg4 hours ago
            Maybe in the philosophical sense in that this is what their vote wrought, but there is absolutely no way to conclude that people wanted their institutions dismantled. The number of Americans who voted for Donald Trump was nearly identical in 2020 and 2024 once we compensate for population growth (22.4% of the population vs 22.7%). Anyone making drastic conclusions on the will of the people is just making something up whether they are conscious of that or not.
            • jfengel3 hours ago
              What changed is the number of people who decided they were ok with dismantling institutions. That grew by about 7 million, who voted for the opponent in 2020 but stayed home in 2024.

              So perhaps the number of people who wanted institutions dismantled remained the same. But the will of the people as a whole changed sharply, mostly because of people who decided it wasn't worth the effort to oppose it.

        • simonw4 hours ago
          Right, World Factbook single issue voters probably don't exist.

          That aside, something that frustrates me about US politics is that I rarely see any evidence of consideration given to taxpayers who want value for their money as opposed to having their taxes cut.

          I pay taxes here. I like it when those taxes spent on wildly ROI-positive initiatives like the World Factbook.

          The Trump lot appear to be killing off a huge range of useful things that I like getting in exchange for the taxes I pay.

          • oldmanhorton4 hours ago
            Sure, but this is based on a fundamental trust in governments ability to spend money effectively. The ineffective spending has been in the news way more than the effective spending, so some people take this to mean all of the spending is ineffective.

            I don’t know how to square this skepticism of government against very vocal “patriotism” coming from the trump camp, but humans can contain multitudes, I guess?

        • cucumber37328424 hours ago
          I think it's a pretty strong condemnation of the CIA that they can't find something more important to flamboyantly kill though.

          https://www.creators.com/read/thomas-sowell/03/13/budget-pol... (you can stop reading after the first couple paragraphs, it goes into federal budget politics circa 2013)

      • sylos6 hours ago
        Actually I don't think he did win. Not legally, but he is there now.
        • daedrdev5 hours ago
          nope, us Americans are truly the kind of people to vote for him, no matter how bad a reason each of them had
          • russdill4 hours ago
            Very much "that's not who we are! ... Checks history book, oh, oh ,oh my".

            Much more apt to say "that's not who we aspire to be'

  • simonw6 hours ago
    I managed to pull a zip file archive of the 2020 edition from the Internet Archive - I've uploaded the contents of that zip file to this GitHub repo: https://github.com/simonw/cia-world-factbook-2020

    And turned on GitHub Pages so you can browse it here: https://simonw.github.io/cia-world-factbook-2020/

  • josephscott7 hours ago
    • 6 hours ago
      undefined
  • sparrish7 hours ago
    I remember doing research in the print version of the World Factbook back in college days. It was the most accurate and up-to-date info we could get on countries before the Interwebs. RIP.
  • drecked7 hours ago
    > Finally, only CIA insiders would know that officers donated some of their personal travel photos to The World Factbook, which hosted more than 5,000 photographs that were copyright-free for anyone to access and use.

    Isn’t this sufficient to keep it around, even if the facts themselves may be available on Wikipedia?

    • sandworm1015 hours ago
      Facts are, today, a threat. An encyclopedia of facts about various countries, published by a respected US agency, is dangerous.

      What if public policy changes? What if it is announced that there are millions of jewish people living in Iran? A CIA website claiming that there are in fact far fewer than millions would fly in the face of declared national policy. We cannot have a list of official "facts", not when new facts are being announced almost daily.

      How could one ever justify invading greenland to save all those penguins when the CIA's own website states that the penguin popultion of greenland increased by 27% in the last five years?

      • dwd39 minutes ago
        "The past was alterable. The past never had been altered. Oceania was at war with Eastasia. Oceania had always been at war with Eastasia."
      • CGamesPlay3 hours ago
        You say this, but the opposite is equally true. Why should I trust the CIA's website when it says that there are no penguins in Greenland, and so there's no ecological harm to strip mining the place?
        • mikeyouse2 hours ago
          Well I would hope that's what the Factbook would say since penguins exclusively live in the Southern Hemisphere.
      • jfengel3 hours ago
        I suspect that may literally be true. 127% of 0 is 0.

        You were by accident more factual than the administration can be deliberately.

  • helle2538 hours ago
    why in the world is this being sunset i wonder
    • sixdimensional7 hours ago
      I concur.

      Also, it was paid for by US taxpayer dollars - the entire content should have been released somewhere for free, maybe even someone would have started up a new project to maintain it, for example, something under Wikimedia or some other nonprofit.

      This wholesale elimination of valuable information and data owned by the public is so incredibly sad and damaging to our future.

      Maybe we need a FOIA request to get the entire contents released to the public.

      • oxfeed652617 hours ago
        It seems to be archived on the wayback machine, for example https://web.archive.org/web/20260203163430/https://www.cia.g...

        It was available for online browsing or as a downloadable file, I think a zip compressed PDF. I’m sure copies are available, but it would be nice to have an authoritative source.

      • rbanffy7 hours ago
        > Maybe we need a FOIA request to get the entire contents released to the public.

        That’s a sound idea.

      • shevy-java7 hours ago
        Agreed. Though perhaps they will open source some stuff. What would interest me is HOW they got the information they showed.
        • simonw4 hours ago
          It was all released into the public domain already. If you can obtain a copy it's yours to do what you like with.
        • anigbrowl6 hours ago
          Every country puts out an official gazette with abundant regulatory and statistical information. Of course you'd be foolish to rely on all these at face value, but it's an excellent starting point for assessing the economic activity of any given country. You can then synthesize it with things like market data and publicly available shipping information. Plus the CIA has (at least I hope it still has) a large staff of people whose only job is to study print, broadcast, and electronic media about other countries and compile that into regular reports of What Goes On There.

          Obviously there's all sorts of covert information gathering that also goes on, but presumably the product of that is classified by default. Fortunately our executive branch is headed by intellectual types who enjoy reading and synthesizing a wealth of complex detail /s

    • 8 hours ago
      undefined
    • mavhc8 hours ago
      Facts are not a thing the government is interested in now
      • mr_toad3 hours ago
        > Facts are not a thing the government is interested in now

        They’re not too keen on the world either. Or books.

      • rbanffy7 hours ago
        Nor is soft power.

        The factbook was much more a tool for propaganda than anything else. While you could trust most of the numbers, you shouldn’t expect it to be fair about any socialist or communist countries, usually classified as brutal dictatorships, while it would always be exceedingly kind to countries with US sponsored dictators.

        • eldavido7 hours ago
          I'd be interested to see concrete examples of this, if they exist.
          • verdverm6 hours ago
            by "this"... that the current US govt isn't interested in soft power?
            • pseudalopexan hour ago
              They wanted examples of propaganda in the World Factbook probably.
          • throwawayq34237 hours ago
            I would also like to see a comparison to prove the point.
        • nl6 hours ago
          > you shouldn’t expect it to be fair about any socialist or communist countries, usually classified as brutal dictatorships,

          The World Fact Book doesn't have this kind of commentary. For example read the entry on North Korea. I've excerpted the most critical parts here, and I think they are a long way from your characterization:

          > After the end of Soviet aid in 1991, North Korea faced serious economic setbacks that exacerbated decades of economic mismanagement and resource misallocation.

          > New economic development plans in the 2010s failed to meet government-mandated goals for key industrial sectors, food production, or overall economic performance. At the onset of the COVID-19 pandemic in 2020, North Korea instituted a nationwide lockdown that severely restricted its economy and international engagement.

          > As of 2024, despite slowly renewing cross-border trade with China, North Korea remained one of the world's most isolated countries and one of Asia's poorest

          https://web.archive.org/web/20260103000011/https://www.cia.g...

        • shevy-java7 hours ago
          While that is true, the current government makes heavy use of propaganda too.
          • rbanffy6 hours ago
            True, but they have abandoned the subtlety of the factbook.
        • pxc7 hours ago
          Yep. This seems somewhat similar in motivation to the cuts to USAID.
    • themafia8 hours ago
      The internet now exists and easily surpasses the value of this static publication.
      • varun_ch8 hours ago
        The World Factbook was a really useful resource on the internet.
      • tombert7 hours ago
        Has it though? Isn't one of the concerns of information on the internet (regardless of political affiliation) that a lot of it is total bullshit?

        I've seen so many responses from AI and AI "Summaries" that source claims from 20 year old unsourced forum posts. For that matter, people just make shit up, all the time, often for no apparent reason. It's upsetting that it took me until my 30's to realize that, but regardless I think there is value in canonical, well-funded sources, even with the internet.

        • cyberge997 hours ago
          I think the quality of internet content depends on where you lurk and contribute.
          • mmooss6 hours ago
            in what social venue do you find high-quality content? I don't know of any that come close to matching serious publications, IME.
      • thaumasiotes7 hours ago
        The existence of secondary sources doesn't reduce the need for primary sources. Before something can be published everywhere, it has to be published somewhere.
        • arrowsmith5 hours ago
          The CIA World Factbook is a tertiary source.
        • themafia7 hours ago
          The CIA was a secondary source. This bulk of this material is all drawn from other publications. Which you can now access in ways you could not before.
          • anigbrowl6 hours ago
            We get it, you can't see any utility in having this information aggregated anywhere in a consistent format.
        • throwawayq34237 hours ago
          Not if everything is made up on the spot for clicks and views, which is where we're heading.
      • MattGaiser7 hours ago
        This is an odd thing to say for something heavily used on the internet. It was not just a physical book.
    • hn_acc15 hours ago
      To avoid pesky facts getting in the way of them attempting to re-write history, like in 1984 (the book).
  • kayo_202110307 hours ago
    Waaaht? And, why? Budgets? This is/was a wonderful resource. I'll be sad to see the back of it.
    • shevy-java7 hours ago
      The why is a good question. I don't think it is the budget; to me it seems more as if Wikipedia kind of phased it out.
      • pseudalopex6 hours ago
        Wikipedia used it. And it had much information not in Wikipedia. And it was concise. And its structure was consistent.
  • FeistySkink7 hours ago
    Huh. I had a native Android app way back when on the Play Store, that presented the Factbook in the mobile-friendly manner. Was quite popular in Africa of all places. But ultimately had to first delist it and then close the account altogether, once Google started requiring more and more unnecessary SDK updates, and ultimately identity verification. What a trip down the memory lane.
  • itsrobreally6 hours ago
    This isn't ideal but the book is still in print:

    https://www.amazon.com/CIA-World-Factbook-2025-2026/dp/15107...

    I couldn't find a PDF or archive of the site online (other than the obvious archive.org) but I didn't look very hard.

    • saguntum16 minutes ago
      Thanks. Is this one officially not getting released?

      https://www.amazon.com/dp/151078604X/

      I was thinking it would be nice to have a final print edition for the book collection, Amazon seems to be under the impression that this newer version is coming out in April.

    • toomuchtodo6 hours ago
      Thanks, picked up copies for the Internet Archive's OpenLibrary and to have a copy scanned for a public PDF.
  • simonklitj7 hours ago
    Ah, was just finishing a geography quiz game with this as one of the fact sources. Oh well!
  • crazygringo5 hours ago
    It made sense in an age of print. But in the era of Wikipedia it's not really needed anymore. If you want population statistics or whatever, Wikipedia will tell you and link to the country's own official metrics. You don't need the CIA to collate it all for you.

    And, as multiple commenters here have noted, it's on the Internet Archive. So let's just cherish it as another print tradition that would inevitably end.

    • simonw5 hours ago
      It hasn't been a print-first publication in many years - the site was updated weekly.

      It's also where a lot of the facts on Wikipedia came from. This is a real loss.

      I trust CIA over official population numbers from a lot of countries. There was a thread on here recently that pointed out a lot of countries haven't conducted an effective census in many years, if at all: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46810027

    • jfengel3 hours ago
      Wikipedia isn't a source. Wikipedia gathers data from elsewhere, including the World Factbook.

      Wikipedia has other sources for most of that information. It comes from organizations like the UN, which the administration detests, and now lacks its own way of gathering that information.

    • burnt-resistor44 minutes ago
      > It made sense in an age of print.

      Reading books is still important. That has nothing to do with the CIA factbook website edition.

      Archiving copies of internet-published information is important, especially when a regime lies, tries to rewrite history, and destroys knowledge and public resources regularly.

      > So let's just cherish it as another print tradition that would inevitably end

      Self-fulfilling prophecy, learned-helplessness doomer fallacy. It only ended because some assholes ended it.

  • shevy-java7 hours ago
    Hmmm. They do not mention Wikipedia, but the CIA book kind of had information about countries for a very long time. I get that Wikipedia would objectively make more sense; so while it may make sense to stop investing resources into the CIA book, I still think it would be better to keep tabs on the content of Wikipedia. Kind of like a secondary quality control. It may not be hugely important here, but if 100.000 other websites vanish, I still think it may be an indirect problem for Wikipedia, as all its presented facts may become increasingly more and more circular to itself - which is made worse by AI slop spamming down the global quality.
    • 7 hours ago
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    • pimlottc6 hours ago
      Kids who grew up playing Carmen Sandiego will definitely remember it fondly
      • secretballot4 hours ago
        I played a bunch of that too, was that a cited source for it? Don’t remember. I do recall that the very-early-90s geopolitics simulation game Shadow President contained large portions of the fact book in its in-game information system (with citations, which is my first recollection of ever knowing of the thing by name)

        I later leaned on the Web version of the factbook quite a bit for basic country stats in undergrad.

        I don’t know of a replacement of comparable quality. Damn good resource. Not that you can necessarily trust a government source, and especially one from an intelligence agency, but most of what it covered wasn’t exactly useful for the kind of propaganda you’d expect the US government to push, so you could expect it to broadly be a sincere attempt at describing reality (it didn’t hurt that it wasn’t a super-widely-known resource outside certain academic disciplines, so lying about e.g. the major exports of Guyana or whatever wouldn’t have much effect anyway, lowering the likelihood that anyone would bother)

    • transcriptase6 hours ago
      As it stands you only need a few friends or likeminded journalists at a few major publications to repeat the same falsehood, and it becomes a properly cited fact on Wikipedia and in the public eye for as long as you need it to be. If it’s later proven to be a falsehood and the underlying sources quietly issue retractions it doesn’t matter.

      How many people out there still believe the Hunter Biden laptop story, and all the politically damaging material on it was Russian misinformation?

  • jl67 hours ago
    What is now a good source of aggregated population statistics?
  • B1FF_PSUVM6 hours ago
    Back in the peak-paper days - when the Sunday newspaper was for the man "smart enough to read it and strong enough to carry it", and the Computer Shopper magazine vied with phone directories for thickness - you could go into a gas station and pick up a paperback copy of the CIA World Factbook, usually from a shelf also sporting the Rand McNally road maps.

    Tears in rain, sic transit, etc.

  • throwawayq34237 hours ago
    At least they let the people behind it give a farewell message.

    Most cuts to government are abrupt and unceremonious.

  • themafia8 hours ago
    I don't know that the Schlesinger memo was real but I think it's conclusions were perfect. The CIA needs to be split into two divisions. The research division and the operations division.
    • callmeal7 hours ago
      They should all just go home. They already won. Remember this quote?

      "We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false." - William J. Casey, CIA Director (1981)

      • shevy-java7 hours ago
        Well - the easier take-away is that the general public can not trust any of those top organisations. I think when a citizen can not trust the government anymore (in any country, at the least in a democracy), this is worrying. It's then more like the novel 1984 - while that referred primarily to the Soviet Union (Big Brother referred to Stalin for the most part), one could also find so many correlations to a "strong man"-led democracy too.
      • throwawayq34237 hours ago
        > This quote, often phrased as "We'll know our disinformation program is complete when everything the American public believes is false," is widely attributed to William J. Casey, who served as the Director of Central Intelligence (CIA) under President Ronald Reagan from 1981 to 1987.

        > While frequently cited in literature and discussions about propaganda and media manipulation, the quote's authenticity is highly disputed and unverified.

        Are you trying to be ironic?

      • csours7 hours ago
        There Is No Disinformation Department.
        • shevy-java7 hours ago
          Everyone should read 1984! It is such a time-less classic.
        • cyberge997 hours ago
          I see what you did there.
  • kittikitti3 hours ago
    Why would anyone trust this? Even as a small child, I found their "Factbook" to be highly dubious. I bet MAGA hated the pages on Greenland, Venezuela, and Israel; even when presented with distorted facts. I'll give the CIA credit for taking it down before MIGA forced them to publish obvious propaganda. That's something Mossad is better suited for. These intelligence agencies have lost all of their reputation and credibility.
  • theturtle7 hours ago
    [dead]
  • DaveZale5 hours ago
    they swapped out the "t" for an "e"

    /s