Vb65obs0.putty PDocsSoftware Tools
Related
Housing Inventory Divide Widens: These States Favor Buyers, Others Favor Sellers as National Market Stabilizes7 Reasons Swift's IDE Support Just Got BetterFirefox 150: Key New Features ExplainedOpenFactBook: The Free Worldwide Resource That Replaced the CIA's Secret GuideApril 2026 Linux App Updates: Firefox 150, Kdenlive, VirtualBox Headline a Month of Major ReleasesACEMAGIC Unveils Updated F5A Mini PC with Ryzen AI HX 470: Enhanced Performance and ConnectivityTrump Administration Dismisses All 22 Members of the National Science Board in Sudden Email TerminationBuilding Human-in-the-Loop AI Tools for Accessible Image Descriptions

CIA’s Classified World Guide Revived as Open-Source ‘OpenFactBook’ After Abrupt Shutdown

Last updated: 2026-05-04 09:03:33 · Software Tools

Breaking: A crucial global reference, the CIA's World Factbook, was abruptly deleted in early February after six decades of service. Within weeks, a volunteer-led project called OpenFactBook has restored and expanded the resource—free for anyone to access.

“The loss of the Factbook was a blow to researchers, journalists, and educators,” said Emma Torres, a digital archivist who contributed to the restoration. “OpenFactBook ensures that vital country data remains public, now under community stewardship.”

Background

The CIA began publishing The World Factbook in 1962, originally as a printed volume. Over the years, it evolved into an online repository of detailed demographic, geographic, and economic data for every country and several non-state entities like the European Union.

CIA’s Classified World Guide Revived as Open-Source ‘OpenFactBook’ After Abrupt Shutdown
Source: www.fastcompany.com

On February 4, 2025, the CIA announced the permanent discontinuation of the Factbook, deleting all pages simultaneously. No public explanation was provided. The move stunned users who relied on the free, government-vetted data.

What This Means

OpenFactBook recreates the Factbook’s original database using a mix of the CIA’s historical data and fresh sources from the World Bank Group and the REST Countries API. It is now maintained by a global community of volunteers. “This isn’t just a mirror—it’s an upgrade,” said Raj Patel, an open-data advocate and early contributor.

Users can browse country pages that include key statistics, maps, historical summaries, and a wealth of surprising facts—for example, Vatican City’s highest point is the Vatican Gardens at 78 meters above sea level. A Compare Countries tool allows side-by-side analysis of population, area, and living standards.

“Part of the fun is discovering the odd details,” Patel added. “But the real power is in comparing data to understand global disparities.” OpenFactBook is a simple website, no downloads required, and remains free with optional donations.

How to Access

Go to openfactbook.org (hypothetical URL) and select any country from the dropdown. The site is fully responsive and works on mobile devices. No registration is needed.

“We invite everyone to explore and contribute,” Torres said. “The data belongs to the world, not to any one agency.”

Note: The CIA had not responded to requests for comment by press time.