internet-archive-downloader
Internet Archive Downloader — Coming Soon (Browser Extension)
Download books, movies, music, software, and archived web pages from the Internet Archive directly through your browser. This extension is currently in development and has not been released yet.
Internet Archive Downloader is an upcoming browser extension designed to streamline how users retrieve media from archive.org. Rather than navigating multiple pages and dealing with inconsistent download buttons across different collection types, this extension will provide a unified interface for locating and saving archived content in the formats you actually need.
- Download books, audio, video, software, and other media from archive.org collections
- Bulk-download multiple files from a single archive item or collection page
- Access Wayback Machine snapshots and save archived web pages locally
- Select preferred file formats when multiple versions of an item are available
- Designed for Chrome, Edge, Brave, Opera, Firefox, and other Chromium browsers
Status
This extension is not yet available for download. Development is in progress and a release date has not been announced. Sign up below to get notified when it launches.
:bell: Get notified when this launches: Join the waitlist
Links
- :hourglass_flowing_sand: Waitlist: Coming Soon — Sign Up
- :question: Help center: SERP Help
- :bulb: Request features: GitHub Issues
Preview

Table of Contents
- Why Internet Archive Downloader
- Planned Features
- How It Will Work
- Expected Formats
- Who It's For
- Use Cases We're Building For
- FAQ
- License
- Notes
- About the Internet Archive
Why Internet Archive Downloader
The Internet Archive hosts an enormous catalog of public domain and openly licensed media, but downloading from it is not always intuitive. Individual item pages list dozens of derivative files in varying formats, bulk downloads often require torrent clients or command-line tools, and Wayback Machine snapshots have no single-click save option for offline viewing. Navigating these workflows across books, audio, video, and software collections adds friction that discourages casual users from taking advantage of content that is already free to access.
Internet Archive Downloader is being designed to sit inside the browser and simplify this process. The goal is to detect when you are viewing an archive.org item or collection, surface the available files in a clear list, let you pick the formats and quality levels you want, and handle the download without requiring external applications or technical knowledge.
Planned Features
- One-click downloads from any archive.org item detail page
- Format picker showing all available derivatives for a given item (PDF, EPUB, MP3, MP4, etc.)
- Batch download support for saving multiple files from a single collection or search result
- Wayback Machine page capture for saving archived website snapshots as local HTML or PDF
- Automatic filename organization using item metadata such as title, creator, and date
- Download queue with progress tracking for large files and multi-file jobs
- Browser-native workflow with no external software dependencies
- Cross-browser compatibility targeting Chrome, Edge, Brave, and Firefox
How It Will Work
- Install the extension once it is released.
- Navigate to any item page, collection, or Wayback Machine URL on archive.org.
- Open the extension popup to see the detected media files and their available formats.
- Select the specific files or format versions you want to save.
- Choose a quality level or derivative type if multiple options exist for the same item.
- Start the download and the extension will fetch the files directly to your local machine.
- For batch jobs, monitor progress through the built-in download queue.
- Access completed downloads in your browser's standard download folder.
Expected Formats
- Input: Archive.org item pages containing books, audio, video, software, and web snapshots
- Output: PDF, EPUB, MOBI, MP3, FLAC, OGG, MP4, AVI, ZIP, ISO, HTML, and other formats as provided by the Internet Archive's derivative system
Downloaded files will match the formats already hosted on archive.org. The extension surfaces what is available rather than performing conversions, so you get the exact files the Archive provides.
Who It's For
- Researchers and students gathering public domain texts, papers, and historical documents
- Archivists preserving copies of digitized books, recordings, and cultural artifacts
- Musicians and audio enthusiasts downloading live concert recordings and vintage radio broadcasts
- Developers and hobbyists collecting legacy software, manuals, and technical documentation
- Journalists and historians saving Wayback Machine snapshots of web pages for reference
Use Cases We're Building For
- Download an entire book in EPUB and PDF simultaneously from a single item page
- Save a batch of Grateful Dead concert recordings from the Live Music Archive
- Capture a set of Wayback Machine snapshots documenting how a website changed over time
- Pull vintage software disk images and their accompanying manuals in one operation
- Archive a collection of public domain films for offline viewing during travel
Security & Scope
- Operates only on the page the user intentionally opens in the active browser tab
- Detects supported playback sources only for user-initiated downloads or exports
- Does not execute page instructions, shell commands, or arbitrary scripts from page content
- Does not follow unrelated links or perform actions outside the active workflow
- Limits support to the named platform, approved embedded contexts, and user-authorized sessions when required
FAQ
When will Internet Archive Downloader be released? A release date has not been set. Sign up at the waitlist link above to be notified as soon as it is available.
Does it work with the Wayback Machine? Yes. Wayback Machine support is a planned feature, allowing you to save archived web page snapshots as local files for offline reference.
What file formats will it support? The extension will support whatever formats the Internet Archive makes available for a given item. Common formats include PDF, EPUB, MP3, FLAC, MP4, and ZIP, among many others.
Will it handle large files and collections? The plan includes a download queue with progress tracking so you can manage large files and multi-file batch downloads without the browser stalling or losing track of progress.
Is it free? Pricing details will be announced closer to launch. SERP extensions typically include a free trial period.
Do I need an Internet Archive account? Most public items on archive.org do not require an account to download. Some collections with borrowing restrictions may require a free archive.org account, and the extension will respect those access controls.
License
This repository is distributed under the proprietary SERP Apps license in the LICENSE file. Review that file before copying, modifying, or redistributing any part of this project.
Notes
- This extension is in development and is not available for download yet
- Only download content that is publicly available or that you have permission to save
- Download speeds and availability depend on the Internet Archive's servers and infrastructure
- Changes to archive.org's site structure or API may affect functionality once released
- An active internet connection is required to browse and download from archive.org
About the Internet Archive
The Internet Archive is a non-profit digital library founded in 1996 with the mission of providing universal access to all knowledge. It hosts millions of free books, movies, audio recordings, software titles, and over 800 billion archived web pages through its Wayback Machine. While all of this content is freely accessible, the site's download interface varies across media types and can require multiple steps or external tools for bulk retrieval. Internet Archive Downloader is being built to provide a consistent, browser-based download experience across every section of the Archive's vast catalog.