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Scope and content:  This item is an inspection of factory sheet produced by the Food and Drug Administration officials that detailed their inspection of the Estate of A. Brakeley factory on October 2, 1918. In addition to the factory inspection, this file also includes a survey of employees, factory
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Trump Administration Shuts Down Public CIA World Factbook

The Associated Press reports that the Trump administration permanently shut down the publicly accessible CIA World Factbook on February 4, 2026, ending more than six decades of free access to the agency’s curated country‑by‑country data. The CIA framed the closure as part of an internal modernization and a shift in its core mission, issuing a "fond farewell" that urged readers to "stay curious" but offered no comparable replacement for students, journalists, and researchers who relied on the site. The Factbook, first made public in 1975 and rooted in post‑Pearl Harbor intelligence reforms, had become a de facto global standard for basic information on nations’ geography, demographics, militaries, and customs. Critics quoted in the piece say the move undercuts an American tradition of sharing vetted information, and some see it as consistent with an administration that has repeatedly promoted "alternative facts" and pared back public data across agencies. The shutdown leaves schools, media outlets, and policymakers more dependent on commercial databases, scattered government sources, and AI‑generated content of uneven reliability at a time when misinformation is rampant.

U.S. Intelligence and Transparency Education and Public Data Access

📌 Key Facts

  • The CIA World Factbook’s public website was shut down on February 4, 2026, by the Trump administration.
  • The Factbook had been publicly available since 1975 and was produced by CIA analysts as an unclassified reference on countries’ basic facts.
  • The CIA described the closure as part of a shift in its mission and issued a 'fond farewell' message telling readers to 'stay curious.'
  • Educators, students, and other longtime users are publicly lamenting the loss, warning it will be harder to find authoritative, non‑commercial country data and easier for misinformation to fill the gap.

📊 Relevant Data

The CIA World Factbook garnered millions of views each year on CIA.gov since going digital in 1997.

Spotlighting The World Factbook as We Bid a Fond Farewell — CIA

In 2025, 32% of Black households in the US lacked a broadband connection at home, compared to the national average of 18%.

How The Digital Divide Reinforces Internet Inequality Across America — Forbes

Alternatives to the CIA World Factbook, such as worldfactbook.io, launched in 2026 as a free successor using public data sources to provide comprehensive country profiles.

worldfactbook.io vs The Old CIA Factbook: An Honest Comparison — worldfactbook.io

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