Yeah 12ft doenst seem to work on any sites anymore. Does anyone have any alternatives that work? I’m already familiar with the airplane mode trick but that’s not always fit for purpose.
Yeah 12ft doenst seem to work on any sites anymore. Does anyone have any alternatives that work? I’m already familiar with the airplane mode trick but that’s not always fit for purpose.
12ft.io is a website that allows you to bypass paywalls on websites. Specifically for articles/news. The idea being “show me a 10ft wall and I’ll build a 12ft ladder.” It worked well against a lot of article and news outlet paywalls originally, but as time has gone on more and more sites are starting to show up on it as unable to bypass.
So what you’re saying is that we need 13ft.io
12ft1in.io
Go as small as possible so that our ladder only has to get slightly longer. Plus I’m petty.
Everyone besides US Americans won’t understand imperial measurements
Since there’s approximately 17,000 Subway Sandwich locations across 100 countries outside the United States I’m gonna say that most people can just imagine 12 (maybe 13 if we assume the 11in subway lawsuit) full size Subway Sandwiches stacked on top of each other.
More than 400000 of us for each of those locations then, and how many of us have then bothered to wander in, I wonder?
Anyway, would you really trust an American company to actually make their sandwiches 1ft tall?
How would you even start to eat such a thing?
(Also most standardized feet are around 30 cm, so 12ft is ~ 3.6 m)
Ah got it, thanks.
The great enshittification continues.
How is it enshittification to stop people from pirating your stuff?
On the one hand, you’re absolutely right.
On the other hand “The truth is paywalled, but the lies are free.”
These websites generally only work due to poor website coding. If they properly implemented a paywall, sites like Archive and 12ft would never work because you would actually need to pay for access.
Sites like Archive still seem to work, while 12ft returns empty pages.
I wouldn’t really consider improving their website coding so that people can’t pirate it enshittification.
Enshittification is based around a platform first creating something good for users and then making it good for suppliers and then when they are locked in, reduce quality. You aren’t locked into a news website that you aren’t even paying for, and you aren’t entitled to their products either.
That’s not the issue I am describing. Instead of improving their website code so people cannot pirate it, it seems like they are specifically blocking 12ft. Other workarounds still work.
How is specifically blocking 12ft enshittification then.
Because it’s slapping a bandaid fix on the side instead of fixing it as a whole?
It’s a poor, sloppy way to address the problem. But that’s just how these companies operate I guess.
I just went to 12ft.io and got the following message:
So I’m guessing the site is gone?