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Working Around the Pay Walls
Metafilter mentioned Lil Nas X in full lilac jumpsuit on the cover of the NYTimes Sunday Magazine.
https://www.nytimes.com/2021/07/07/magazine/lil-nas-x.html
Followed the link and I hit the pay wall: "sign in to your account or subscribe.*"
I do pay for local publications. I won’t pay for the NYTimes because then I’d read the NYTimes and my mental health would plummet.
My workarounds in order of use:
- Try another browser
- Wayback Machine
- Find another archive
- Use my local library’s subscription
Try Another Browser
Sites use cookies and fingerprinting to count how many times you visit, and these are browser specific. I have five browsers on my laptop, so when my free views are done on Safari, I try again in iCab, Firefox, Brave, or MS Edge.
Wayback Machine
The Internet Archive's Wayback Machine** lets anyone save a page view at a particular time. Many people save NYTimes links!
Paste the paywalled link into the form at https://archive.org/web/
You’ll see a monthly calendar — scroll down to the blue spots and click there to get a snapshot.
If WBM doesn’t have it, visit https://archive.today
And paste the link in the lower "I want to search" box.
A Random Archiver
When that fails, I Google the URL. That leads to somebody who loved a piece so much they copied it wholesale. (This is the digital equivalent of reading a discarded newspaper you find on the bus.)
The Library’s NYTimes
And if that fails, I use my city library’s subscription — when I feed my library account number in, I get 24 hour access to the NYT site.
Tell me about your pay-wall tricks!
* advertising supported print media for a couple centuries before the net.
** On "Rocky and Bullwinkle," Mr Peabody extracted his fractured history from a mainframe computer called the Way Back Machine
no subject
No account needed at all.
NOPE!
The NYT makes you think you need an account, but you don't. The workarounds don't require you create an account either.
If you want to make an Archive.org account, you can. It's handy if you want to use the Archive to host audio or video for the AO3. Archive.org already host lots of scanned-text books (free for print-impaired readers), as well as wonderful old movies and cookbooks and much more.