News publishers take paywall-blocker 12ft.io offline
theverge.comhttps://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bypass_Paywalls_Clean
Repeatedly DMCA'd so you know it's good.
The Talk page for that wiki entry is a microcosm of tech society, and illustrates the need for Wikipedia and its commitment to neutral point of view. It’s a difficult position to stake out, and it’s a nuanced one.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Talk:Bypass_Paywalls_Clean#Web...
it's so good that I didn't even realise I wasn't logged into my bloomberg and NYTimes subscriptions.
Frustrating. Someday, I'd like to see headlines that focus on news publishers working on reasonable payment systems for article access. Like bulk buys ( X articles for $) via giftcard or whatever. Instead, every single time this comes up, it always ends with less access, more siloing...less connections made, more cruft to shift. Innovation requires access to info, but if you never see it...it's hard to make connections that count or that could be helpful. Same problem that appears in Science research...if only on a smaller scale.
Here's my take on the format: https://github.com/kylefmohr/archive.is-redirector Available in the Chrome Web Store
I commend all those who take the risk of setting up these bypasses. You take enormous personal legal risk in providing a service that morally shouldn't have been paywalled in the first place. Knowledge wants to be free after all.
Can't these services be run from a country where The News/Media Alliance doesn't have jurisdiction?