A lot of why people turn off ads and paywalls has to do with how obnoxious people make them. I've noticed certain Chrome ads on FB have repeating images and movies. Time to go reset the AdBlock filters.
I pay for my NYTimes subscription because I want to support the news industry. Supporting paywall subversion isn't the best move, methinks, for somebody whose income relies on getting paid for written content.
The L.A. Times is probably the toughest paywall to crack. (Also the content I'm least likely to pay for.) But here's a hint: they aren't using their own cookie. They partnered with a larger entity to piggyback the paywall on the other company's cookie. It's a cookie most folks do not want to delete.
@5 NYT has cookie detection, and the site has pop-ups if you disable their specific tracking cookie. This doesn't stop you from just deleting their cookie every few days, or in my preferred method, simply reading their site using private browsing. Ctrl+Shift+N (Chrome), nytimes.com or latimes.com; when the firewall comes up just close the window, open a new one and resume consumption.
This isn't new at all. I've been doing it since it went in place. And you don't have to put the "/" in, just delete everything from the question mark on.
If there's a not-too-food-smeared copy of the NYT or Fairview Fannie laying around in my favorite coffee shop, I'll grab it and read the second-hand news for free.
There's no way to read second-hand online content, but I guess as long as someone, somewhere pays for it, I can convince myself I'm just reading their leftover edition.
I've been truncating the URL for years, but if I ever get an actual job that pays actual money I will redeem my debt of honor to the Times and subscribe.
How to locally disable the NYT paywall
(Unlike the NYClean bookmarklet, this doesn't affect the visibility of article comments in Chrome, if you like reading them or commenting. It also doesn't make you clear all cookies, which logs you out of all websites you're normally logged in):
1. In Chrome, go to the Chrome store and install the Edit This Cookie extension.
2. Read some NYT articles, get annoyed at the "Pay up or else" banner.
3. Click the cookie button in the Chrome bar, you get a menu of NYT cookies.
4. Click on the "nyt-m" cookie, then on "Flag this cookie"; it will disappear from the list.
5. Read on & spread the word if it worked for you.
@13: There is a sort of method for getting at NYT online second-hand. NYT allows web surfers to read articles freely that they locate by way of some alternate sites. If you do a Google search using the title of the article, you will often find websites -- i.e., blogs, feeds, etc. -- that abstract the stories and link to their NYT pages. If you follow those links you can read them without encountering any paywall grief.
Milks, that's brilliant. However, NYTimes now has a link at the bottom of all articles saying "To see full article, subscribe here." How do we get around this??
New York Time is not just somebody making money off of printed journalism which often is questionable at best.
NY Times ain't Joe working in his garage with a printing press hoping to make a couple hundred dollars for the summer so he can buy his expensive Yamaha dirt bike he dreamed for!
It is a big committee with people doing boring tedious jobs that 75 percent of them likely hate and there is no one person with a vision or goal except to make money even though they got MILLIONS a year and can afford to lose a little.
If they were out of a job they would not suffer very much except they would be forced to learn how to (gasp) balance a budget!!! Balance a budget you say? NO WAY!!!
A lot of why people turn off ads and paywalls has to do with how obnoxious people make them. I've noticed certain Chrome ads on FB have repeating images and movies. Time to go reset the AdBlock filters.
The L.A. Times is probably the toughest paywall to crack. (Also the content I'm least likely to pay for.) But here's a hint: they aren't using their own cookie. They partnered with a larger entity to piggyback the paywall on the other company's cookie. It's a cookie most folks do not want to delete.
There's no way to read second-hand online content, but I guess as long as someone, somewhere pays for it, I can convince myself I'm just reading their leftover edition.
Right...? Right...?
Even a journalist won't pay for journalism. Astonishing.
Ten bucks says he's got his New Yorker subscription on autopay.
Journalists are like anyone else-- they'll pay for news that flatters their self-image.
(Unlike the NYClean bookmarklet, this doesn't affect the visibility of article comments in Chrome, if you like reading them or commenting. It also doesn't make you clear all cookies, which logs you out of all websites you're normally logged in):
1. In Chrome, go to the Chrome store and install the Edit This Cookie extension.
2. Read some NYT articles, get annoyed at the "Pay up or else" banner.
3. Click the cookie button in the Chrome bar, you get a menu of NYT cookies.
4. Click on the "nyt-m" cookie, then on "Flag this cookie"; it will disappear from the list.
5. Read on & spread the word if it worked for you.
Go to AdBlock options, click on the 'customize' tab, click 'edit' to manually edit your filters, paste this in, and hit save:
*://*.nytimes.com/*/gwy.js*
*://*.nytimes.com/*/gw.js*
NY Times ain't Joe working in his garage with a printing press hoping to make a couple hundred dollars for the summer so he can buy his expensive Yamaha dirt bike he dreamed for!
It is a big committee with people doing boring tedious jobs that 75 percent of them likely hate and there is no one person with a vision or goal except to make money even though they got MILLIONS a year and can afford to lose a little.
If they were out of a job they would not suffer very much except they would be forced to learn how to (gasp) balance a budget!!! Balance a budget you say? NO WAY!!!