Digital platform launched with 64,000 videos, 17,000 photos of genocide crimes in Gaza
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- A new online platform has published more than sixty-four thousand videos and seventeen thousand photos documenting the war in Gaza.
- The archive includes geolocation data, a live map, and a searchable index covering content from more than 300 journalists and sources.
A new online archive has been launched compiling over 64,000 videos and 17,000 photographs documenting the war in the Gaza Strip, creating one of the largest publicly accessible visual databases of the war to date.
The platform centralizes footage collected from Gaza into a searchable system, allowing users to access individual files without downloading the full archive.
According to its developers, the archive includes material sourced from more than 300 journalists and contributors, along with geolocation data intended to verify where events took place.
It also features a live map with minute-by-minute updates, a structured index for navigation, and a victim list intended to document those killed during the war.
The creators say the archive was built to preserve visual evidence, protect what they describe as Gaza’s digital record, and support potential future accountability efforts.
They warn that footage from the war is increasingly being deleted, removed from platforms, or lost in online noise, making systematic archiving more urgent.
As the attacks continue, independent documentation efforts have become central to preserving material that could be used in future investigations, legal proceedings, or historical records of the war in the Gaza Strip.



