Karl Dubost wrote:

to really evaluate this, there are two parameters to take into account.

nb of xhtml pages
-----------------   [now]
nb of total pages

I can probably tell you both of those numbers for the last couple of months. Knowing how many pages are malformed might take a bit longer.

but in my humble opinion, more interesting would be to have this ratio for each year with *only the new pages* created during the year. Unfortunately because there is no uniform way to sign the date of pages, and because HTTP is even a worse shape than HTML, it is almost impossible to evaluate.
Not so. The Internet Archive knows the first time they've seen an URL, over the past ten years; they can also tell you when the content has significantly changed. Obviously, there is a bias towards pages (and sites) with higher traffic, but that seems reasonable if you're evaluating standard practices. ~ Derrick Pallas

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