Apologies, I run the Bypass Paywalls Clean extension for Firefox so I don’t even notice when sites have paywalls (and I recommend everyone else do the same). It’s right up there with adblockers as being almost an essential component of browsing the web these days.
https://github.com/bpc-clone/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean
Here are a few more options for viewing the article without a paywall if you don’t want to install an extension.
Looks like mostly C++.
I see it more like the browser group wanted it to be a ‘real’ browser and not held down by having to be compliant with the hobby OS. But that’s just my reading from the outside. :)
They mentioned being more open to OSS packages, which probably wouldn’t work on Serenity.
Lol it’s not a link in the markdown so it’s just the Lemmy web UI making assumptions. Also it’s funny that they don’t own that domain.
Didn’t they recently get bought by Canva? Not saying that’s a good or bad thing, but it’s something to keep in mind.
They expect most users to not care, and sadly they’re right.
Will that work even if the plane registration is private/anonymized? Sure you can know where every plane is, but can you know whose it is?
I run a “public” instance with basic auth so I can use it from anywhere (phone, work). I’ve made my instance my default search engine everywhere. (I know basic auth is not the most secure but I wouldn’t even really care it other people used my instance; I just don’t want it hammered.)
Just a reminder that there are tons more options like this (and this is just the tip of the iceberg when it comes to movie piracy).
I’ve been really impressed by Dart as a programming language. I’ll admit I don’t have a breadth of knowledge, but coming from C# I feel right at home, and it has a few extra neat tricks that C# is picking up in return (like empty list syntax and the spread operator).
This is not a very helpful article summary.
Sorry it wasn’t meant to be. I just thought it was funny that they’re taking advantage of VideoLAN’s library (which is presumably open source) rather than their own.
I think most comments are missing the fact that you were using someone else’s Emby server and might not want to set up your own.
If that’s the case, you could look into a movie-web instance like https://sudo-flix.lol/. Check out the list of instances.
If you really want to be overwhelmed with options, take a look at the FMHY page.
That is the pre-forked version, which doesn’t have nearly as much support as Magnolia’s version.
The pre-forked version’s code is still on GitHub, but the last commit was 6 months ago.
https://github.com/iamadamdev/bypass-paywalls-chrome
Here’s a bit of history of the forks (unfortunately the conversation was on GitLab, so this is an archive).
What does Proton have to to with this?
If your subdomains being public is a security issue then I’d argue something else is wrong. Otherwise you’re using security through obscurity.
But I appreciate the insight and I see how this was a harder sell back when it happened. Thanks!
Hmm I hate Google as much as the next guy and am actively trying to de-Google myself, but I’m not sure I can get behind the outrage here. Certificates are free and easy to obtain with LetsEncrypt, so there’s really no excuse for sites not to accept unencrypted traffic these days. I’m sure Google does lots of things to delist the small guys and promote their big payers, but I don’t think this is one of them.
What’s the easiest way to run Android apps on Linux?
This and Zune were peak music.
Sorry about that! See this comment for a few ways around the paywall.