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Edit: The parent comment was orignally asking about linking to non-paywalled secondary sources.

In the HN guidelines https://qht.co/newsguidelines.html

>Please submit the original source. If a post reports on something found on another site, submit the latter.

Also, on paywalls https://qht.co/item?id=10178989


So knowledge should be trapped behind a paywall?


We've been through this countless times, which is why it's in the FAQ. Paywalls suck, but HN would suck worse to do without NYT, WSJ, Economist, and New Yorker articles, to name a few. It's the lesser of two evils and it's off-topic to endlessly litigate this.


Antibiotics resistance is getting stronger, probably because people eat a lot of meat which is full of antibiotics. Because they feed animals with antibiotics to grow faster and bigger. People should really think what food they put in their body and less about some magic pill.


Is there a good open source "Little Snitch" alternative?


Try umatrix, it's available for both firefox and chrome, and allows you to do whitelisting of third party domains for each domain you visit.


They don't cover the same use cases.

Little Snitch is basically a user-friendly general-purpose application Firewall. When a connection hasn't been whitelisted before, it pop up a dialog box allowing you to accept/reject connection to a host/domain/port permanently/temporarily.

uMatrix does not protect you against 'malicious' connections initiated by non-browser applications. Little Snitch does not provide the fine-grained URI-level filtering that uBlock/uMatrix provide.

Edit: if you have a Mac, Little Snitch is well-worth the money. It is very polished, does the job, and the developers are not greedy (I think I purchased an update once after I started using it in 2007 or 2008).


Maybe, but I haven't found anything as polished as Little Snitch. The level of control is amazingly high. I really don't use it to the full extent with profiles and the like. I set up some basic rules and let it work for awhile, then I pick and choose what to allow/disallow permanently... like a King :P

It's one of the first things I install on my Macs. Worth every penny.


Not exactly the same, but Privacy Badger from EFF is great.


For the network monitoring part, Private Eye is a free alternative, though not open source: http://radiosilenceapp.com/private-eye/

Disclaimer: I made it.


Wireshark or even tcpdump will get you most of the way there, I think.


Little Snitch doesn't just show you traffic, but also allows to block requests per domain per application.


Then add iptables to that list and I think you're set :-) seriously, all due respect to Little Snitch - I've heard a lot of good things about it and I'm sure it's much easier to use than the raw tools. But I doubt it's doing anything that can't be done with tcpdump/iptables.


Probably not iPhone 6S, but it could be iPhone 7, because of European Union regulations.

http://www.geek.com/apple/apple-will-be-forced-to-use-micro-...


You can access Wallstreet journal articles by searching title in google ( because if referal is from google then article is free )


but it did cost millions to insurance company


If the insurance company is doing its job right, this was priced into its rates.


Then the failure wasn't free. This customer and all other customers paid for this failure. Other customers, who may have done more and more expensive work to avoid failure, are stuck paying for this failure. Insurance thus incentivizes a race to the bottom -- using other customers to finance ones own risk.


Then it cost millions to a lot of people.


Which is understood by all those people when they purchase insurance. This isn't news. Spreading the risk around is why people buy insurance in the first place.


Billions, not millions.


One launch is dozens of millions, not billions.


Probably CloudFlare makes difficult for Russian government to censor certain sites.


Angular didn't work.


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