Genocide.live Archives Nearly 20,000 Conflict Evidence Entries to Preserve Alleged Israeli War Crimes Records
Updated
Updated · Roya News English · May 25
Genocide.live Archives Nearly 20,000 Conflict Evidence Entries to Preserve Alleged Israeli War Crimes Records
1 articles · Updated · Roya News English · May 25
Genocide.live has cataloged 19,899 videos, social posts and eyewitness records in a searchable archive built to stop conflict evidence from being deleted or buried on major platforms.
Databases for Palestine organizes the material by date, location, weapons, targets and specific Israeli military units, giving researchers and lawyers a way to trace incidents across maps and timelines.
Recent entries heavily document the April-May 2026 Global Sumud Flotilla detentions, including activist testimonies from several nationalities describing alleged abuse at Ashdod Port and Ketziot Prison.
The archive also preserves footage tied to strikes on journalists and alleged "triple-tap" attacks on rescue teams, widening its use beyond a single incident stream.
Organizers say the database is not a final legal judgment but a preservation tool whose crowdsourced material still needs external verification before use in formal accountability cases.
In an era of AI deepfakes, can a digital archive provide undeniable proof of war crimes?
When truth itself is a battlefield, how can an evidence archive prove its own neutrality?
Genocide.live 2026: Building a Digital Archive of 20,000+ Atrocity Reports for Legal and Journalistic Action
Overview
Genocide.live is a vital digital platform launched in May 2026 to address the urgent need for transparent documentation of alleged atrocities. Driven by challenges of information control and evidence suppression, it compiles and presents raw data as a counter-measure against digital censorship. By making critical information accessible for scrutiny and investigation, Genocide.live serves as an exhaustive starting point for future accountability and investigative reporting. The platform supports international legal bodies, independent journalists, and human rights watchdogs, ensuring that evidence remains available for justice efforts and helping to resist the obfuscation of truth in conflict zones.