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https://pubs.acs.org/doi/10.1021/acs.est.3c01942 (It's linked in the bottom right of the article)


It's still loginwalled/paywalled from there. Not all of us have institution access.


Congratulations! Quite the journey since we did YC S08! :D


Cool! Good chance that was mine which I posted on HN and Reddit! Great that you further improved it! Thanks for sharing!


Looks like it was, thanks!


Was an exchange student at a High School in Michigan (I’m German): Hacked the local school network to access the cafeteria system and changed my friend’s photo to Tux (Linux mascot). Would also have been able to change the credit of each student - but mentioned to the sys-admins which then challenged me to brute force their Admin password. I successfully did that and they offered me an internship. I learned a lot over the half year that I worked with them, switched from Windows to Debian (on a Mac! I wasn’t allowed to be paid, but they gifted me an iBook before I left).

While I was there I also setup a cgi (web) proxy on a host in Germany, called it “cproxy” and shared it with friends in the high school. At the end of my year, I think half the school was using it to circumvent the schools accept/reject list for web browsing. I kept it running and two years later my parents received a call from the FBI, that they wanted to have a word with me (I was back in Germany at that point). Supposedly someone used it for fraud on eBay. I remember how I had to tell my teacher in (German) school that I had to keep my cellphone with me because the FBI was about to call :-) Fun times! Really glad that the school in Michigan was so supportive and helped me keep my hacker spirit!


If you are on an iOS/iPad OS device, you can use my Shortcut to circumvent the paywall:

https://www.icloud.com/shortcuts/11a5ce44a9dc44e6b525b22ca62...

It clears the cookies of the current page, takes the URL and uses Google to redirect you back to that URL, causing the page to assume that you clicked on a search result and are a first time visitor.


This looks very nice. But I’m concerned that I’d be left with Google cookies after this is run.


I've made another one that uses Facebook. But I can't tell which is worse! ;-)


Does this work for all sites? Or only WSJ?


All sites that allow a number of free articles when coming from Google (e.g. NYTimes, WSJ)


Ok thank you!


Here’s the Japanese news post by the Sumida Aquarium, which includes the Email addresses to FaceTime the eels:

https://www.sumida-aquarium.com/news/details/2236/

A shame that The Guardian’s article did not include a backlink to it.


It's absurdly common with news articles. They never link the stats/paper/organisation. I often wonder about the amount of collective time spent by individuals simply trying to find the data summarised in an article.

For all the lamenting about the media's decline there's plenty of amateur blogs out there that manage to link their sources when writing an article.


This is my biggest pet peeve with news in general. Why does a high school paper have more rigor in terms of citations than the average post from a major news organization? It honestly drives me crazy.

How in the world can a majority of major news organizations not overcome the hurdle of... adding links to what they're covering..?

It makes digesting political news all but impossible.


I suspect there is motivation for a news organisation not to send users away from their website.


Probably because content outside of news websites is a lot more worth a read.


And often, but not always, actually contradicts the headline and/or the content of the "news" article itself.


>This is my biggest pet peeve with news in general. Why does a high school paper have more rigor in terms of citations than the average post from a major news organization?

Because news is not meant to inform, it's meant to indoctrinate and keep you passively under the thumb of the rich.

https://www.amazon.com/Manufacturing-Consent-Political-Econo...

>It makes digesting political news all but impossible.

The question is do you know the upper classes know your brain doesn't see the world as it is, you can be told the facts and not reason to the right conclusion?

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PYmi0DLzBdQ


One reason I heard, but have not verified, is that their content managements systems don't support links.

Pathetic, right?


It's even more infuriating when certain words have a link you would expect to be the source, but it turns out the link only leads to a sub-category of news about the word.


I was wondering the same and once when I asked someone who knows about the topic the answer was basically: Don't want to give free backlinks for SEO, don't want people to just scroll to the link and leave the site.

It might just be a policy to not add links except if it's to articles on the same site, which is obviously stupid from the user's point of view.


My pet peeve is when news organizations write about a court case (whether civil, like a lawsuit, or criminal) and forget to include (1) the court name and docket number so you can look up the status and filings yourself; (2) a copy of the latest filings to date (this can be harder to do depending on your platform).


Fwiw, I recently started writing for a well-known website.

When I asked if it's okay to link to sources, they told me I was allowed to if absolutely necessary. I should try not to because it takes readers away from our site, and they might not come back.

I suspect that many sites have the same line of reasoning.


> I should try not to because it takes readers away from our site, and they might not come back.

> I suspect that many sites have the same line of reasoning.

Not your fault, obviously, but FFS: this is the most vapid line of reasoning. If I want to find out more I'm going to leave your site anyway, so surely it's better if I'm not irritated by your lack of citations when I do inevitably go?

Does Wikipedia worry about people leaving and not coming back? No. Do you know why I go back to Wikipedia all the effing time, often using it as a starting point for research? Well, one of the big reasons is that many articles have a decent list of authoritative citations and external links at the bottom that I can use to find out more when I need or want to.

Talk about myopic: even the BBC do this, and it's incredibly frustrating. Absolutely smacks of some clueless senior manager[1] setting up the wrong metrics for measuring site performance.

[1] Manager bashing is a bit of a tired trope here on HN and I'm not trying to make a generalisation but, as with every job, some of them are certainly idiots/clowns.


You're probably an outlier. Most people are lazy (in particular, unlikely to embark on research projects), and accustomed to newspapers not citing sources (no hyperlinks in the dead-tree version, after all). They probably have data showing the rate at which people leave the site via external links.


You may be right, but people leaving the site isn't really the key metric here. The key metrics are ad and subscriber revenue: in this case particularly ad revenue.

If the reason they're leaving makes it's more likely they'll come back again in future this may lead to an increase in ad revenue due to more sessions even though average session duration falls.

Obviously I don't know, and unfortunately I've learned not to trust that higher-ups in certain organisations have done their homework on revenue-affecting decisions, but you'd at least hope that they had some data to back up the thinking.


Wikipedia’s business isn’t monetising people’s attention.


You've completely missed my point: if you want my attention you're more likely to get it for the longer term if you provide me with what I'm looking for, including citations, because I'll keep coming back. If on the other hand you're obstructive by not providing this, you probably won't. From a monetisation perspective it therefore makes sense to provide those citations.


Exactly! If a site gives me useful info and leads me to more, the site is much more likely to be the FIRST place I look for similar stuff next time. Otherwise they go on a mental blacklist and I never click on the links to that site in the first place.


Thus news should not be a business. The business model of news is diametrically opposed to informing the public. We’re better off sticking to nonprofit journalism.


Yet Wikipedia is the one creating actual economic value


It’s not very relevant to a story about eels, but the problem media has with primary sources, is that you can’t spin primary sources. They would rather have you read their editorial account of the primary source, rather than provide it to you, where there’s a greater risk of you making up for own mind about what to think of it.


It’s infuriating how true this seems to be. Especially in politics, so many big-name news sites across the entire political spectrum seem to consistently run stories that collapse instantly when checked.

How on earth do they still exist with a business model that seems to consist solely of making absurd interpretations of YouTube videos and tweets?


I suggest to repurpose the hashtag (#pleaseRememberHumans) for an initiative about human needs regarding news sites – and also for issues with overly crafted UX in general (e.g., websites shying away behind a shield and hiding behind a subscribe dialog as soon as a human visitor shows up) –, once the original event is over.


Thanks for linking to the source. This is super cool! I'm going to try and get through tomorrow night. I hope the eels appreciate English.


Oozou | Bangkok, Thailand | Full-time | ONSITE | VISA | https://oozou.com

Oozou continues to grow, striving to be the number one Web and Mobile application development studio in South East Asia. With an amazing team of full-time in-house designers, developers and support staff, we are able to successfully deliver projects of any size.

We recognize that we can always be better. Therefore, we have strong opinions, loosely held, and take initiative to improve ourselves, the company, and our community.

Our team works in a relaxed and educational environment to create excellent products for our clients. We work a sustainable pace of 40 hours/week, Monday to Friday. We also like to learn. Everything we do is predicated on having a great team and a culture of growing. We use the latest technologies and are always down to try new methods on both internal and client projects.

Our careers page: http://jobs.oozou.com Questions [email protected]


Any plans to support WebVR or similar? I always thought it would make lots of sense for real estate companies to allow a VR walkthrough of their properties.

Pretty sure most people would be blown away with a HTC Vive setup to walk through your future home!


..actually I think I would add a “order VR Kit” button/landing page and just see if there’s any interest.

Then start shipping a “good-enough” VR headset (possibly branded with your company) and support for your 3D files.


I can for sure say there is interest! 100% percent on board with getting you these kits. Email me [email protected]


I just tried the editor. Really smart how Characters, Scenes, Dialogs etc. are handled.

Re Cookie policy: I think that is only for the EU? You could probably remove the modal for others (like me, in TH).


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