The sites that don’t try and ask your permission are often the most dangerous, and Cookies are Banned, but the Ban kept getting pushed, however there time is UP and the final date is Q2 of 2023, so all sites are trying to embed clear-pixels, gif-pixel, all manner of other ways to hook into your browser. There are a couple decent extensions for the lay-man like “Edit this Cookie 🍪 “, and “Stop the Madness”(Good for MacOS, Safari), another one called Forget Me. Either way every marketing company (Trillion Dollar business) is after whats called First-Data, which is why there are so many email sign-up requests and free stupid trials of garbage ware. Any Mac App that has ties to “MobTech” (check the privacy) is a huge danger ⚠️
We don’t care about whether you stay or leave, the main goal is to get your email address so we can sell it. Your delusional if you think we are targeting the 98% of you with barely passing intelligence enough not to disclose it in the first place or just leave. Your not making some kind of statement they really don’t care about you
@@cedricvillani8502your comment is a perfect example of someone not knowing what they are talking about at all but being confident enough to embarrass themselves. Cookies are not and will not be banned any time soon or in the far future. Cookies are literally the only way to keep a user securely logged into a website without violating their privacy by storing their password in plain text. What you are misunderstanding is how only the google browser is going to be removing ThirdParty cookies. Which are not the same as regular cookies. And you obviously think that’s a good thing but what you don’t realize is google is only doing this because they have created a proprietary technology that can track you 1000x better than third part cookies could and because it is proprietary by removing third party cookies they are making it so now they are the only company capable of tracking you and even better than they can before. This means one single company is allowed to know absolutely everything about you as an individual and the only way another company can advertise to you is by paying google for the knowledge they have on you since they will be the only ones capable of gathering it with such ease and for so many people. Google is reducing your privacy by removing third party cookies and normal cookies are NOT being removed. Also tracking pixels are an extremely old and archaic form of tracking that practically no modern website are implementing. Modern websites use server side fingerprinting mixed with client sent signals to fingerprint your identity across websites browsers and even when your not logged in and using an incognito tab the fingerprinting id generated for you will always remain the same and identify you with 99.5% accuracy
@@npxmnpxmthis is not about working for free. But if we as a society did more into collectively funding research better, it could change. We do not invest in this as much anymore, instead for profit companies invest. What does for profit companies want? Return on Investment.
@@shadysaarPress Ctrl+Shift+I or whatever methods to open the inspect element menu. Then, press Ctrl+Shift+C, click on the annoying interface element and delete it (press the DEL key or whatever methods). Afterward, press Ctrl+F, type in 'overflow: hidden', and if found (highlighted text), change it to 'overflow: scroll'.
@@Romy--- unfortunately. But I found out on Medium, if you're not fast enough, their crap will pop up in your face. In many cases, the load time is so bad, you can beat the lockout. Other cases, it will give you a partial.
On the MS Edge, I just turn on the reading mode, very clean and easy page to read. No paywall, no cookies disclaimer or complaints about my ad blocker. It works on the phone as well.
It doesn't work on all websites. There's when one newspaper website where this used to work, but then they must've changed something because it stopped working at all.
That’s assuming the article was once free and then put behind a paywall. It won’t work with articles that started as premium content and stayed as such until you found them.
Another tip, most of these sites give you a couple free articles before forcing you to log in. You can just close the page, delete the site cookies, then go back to the site
I added a browser add-on that lets meet toggle javascript on and off. Many of the login popups that block the page stop working when JS is disabled. Remember to toggle it back on when you’re finished reading.
@@grace52775 William and Zack Zulock. The media is being very quiet about those two. One of the articles on town hall on them was behind a paywall. I think that’s disgusting in itself. Nobody should be making money off abused children
Thank god for India that we are not forced to pay or login for information. I just went on the site and I did get a prompt to pay 600 Indian Rupees for a yearly subscription which is like 7.23USD (Fairly reasonable I might add) but it came with a cross so that one could dismiss that prompt and the full length of article is open for reading.
@@4rc11 depends on the browser. For chome if you click on the permissions icon next to the url in the address bar you can disable it for that site from that menu
@@nekojosh Although this only works with some websites. Some websites may use JavaScript to "GET" the story from an API (so disabling will break the website).
That doesn't always work.. actually I am trying to see a site I used to go all the times and now it says access denied.. I tried disabling Javascript and it only work for a short times and not everytime.. so I will try this archive trick..who knows..
Dude you're awesome. I thought I knew a lot of websites that did things that are handy but you take it to another level. Also keyboard commands I thought I knew a lot until I started watching you. Thank you for putting this all out there. You're the man.
There is also another way if there is no archive for it, although doesn't always works and reworks a bit of trial and error. You just edit the HTML code though the Inspect feature. Again, requires a bit of thinking, and is definitely tiresome, but worth it for those pesky little ones.
Yep, worked for me too in The Telegraph here in the UK. And it’s so simple. I love all these comments from people who think they’re clever coming up with “better” ways to get around it that are just far more complicated. 😄
For some you can press control A (or command A in Mac)and copy paste it into a document. This selects all the words in the article and copies them so you can paste them somewhere to read it
Only works if the paywall is truly blocking the actual page with the article. Websites like the Wall Street Journal are not just showing you only a portion of the article, it’s a page designed to ONLY have that bit of the article. When you pay for the article you are reading the full article on an entirely different page.
It's their right. Pay for Premium if you want premium features. It's only fair since YT makes a lifetime of information and video upload storage freely available.
Yeah, how dare they make money to pay their writers and staff so they can keep a roof over their heads and food on the table, and keep the lights on and the machines to run. So rude huh? People like you are what's wrong with the world.
@@TheRockinDonkey it still works my god how many ways can you get around this... ive spent so much time loathing people with nyt accounts because i can never read the articles but now I can and its easier than ever!
I get it, we can’t all afford to pay the prices for all these news services, but also this is how journalism dies. If you can afford it, then pay for it.
Actually it’s a really interesting paper and I’m a Brit living in france ! The quality of the journalism is incredible. Just saying , don’t berate what you don’t know.
Yay, thank you for this video. This is going to be really helpful, the amount of times I have missed out on reading an article because it wanted me to sign in and I just didn't bother. This is great