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A significant number of U.S. government websites have gone offline as part of a controversial shift in policy. As reported by WIRED, at least seven sites linked to the U.S. Agency for International Development (USAID), including USAID.gov and Youth.gov, were taken down within a two-hour window on February 1, 2025. This has been attributed to new guidelines mandating the removal of content perceived to "promote gender ideology."
Employees within USAID reported staff outages and fears of losing access to crucial documents, with one anonymous source stating, "Decades worth of taxpayer-funded reports...gone in an instant." These removals follow an executive order by President Donald Trump aimed at reassessing foreign assistance programs, which has raised alarms about the impact on humanitarian initiatives.
Moreover, other sites such as HealthData.gov and Oversight.gov have encountered intermittent access issues, although it remains unclear whether this reflects technical glitches or is linked to recent policy directives. WIRED's monitoring has detected over 450 domains persistently offline, underscoring the ongoing disruptions at various federal agencies.