Source code... for a website?
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Subscription software. Tracking software. Ad tools. Promotion tools. Tools for journalists.
The website is just what you see.
Yeah, I guess I didn't consider all the other operational shit that goes into providing content and funding for the website.
It’s why our PCs have gotten insanely fast but websites still load like fucking trash. All the back end spying shit takes up a ton of cpu cycles. If you don’t already have em run ublock origin and no script and the internet is so fucking speedy 😆
Anything more complicated than a static website is going to have a significant amount of server-side code.
Also, the article explains that it's not just the website, but ALL of their repos, which would include their smartphone apps, backend tools, etc.
We still have no legal right to use, change and share exact and modified copies of its source code, control it both ourselves and in groups. It's still anti-libre software, useless, dangerous.
Anything that may help develop better adblockers/paywall bypasses or exposes how/what of our personal information is collected is a win in my book. And this may very well be none of those things.
They only exist when we keep them relevant and we already know we can't prove it's private but if it helps some people, that's good.
Right, because fuck paying for proper journalism. Everything must be free!
Remind me again, how does that work?
I pay for the NYT, and yet every other screen is a fucking ad (often the same ad repeated over and over). You already have my subscription money, and unless they decide not to be so greedy (haha), their ads get shoved up my pihole.
Very few care about licenses unless the use of such material can be proven, and good luck with that
Just seeing how something is approached helps.
I sometimes rebuild software from one language to another for practice.
I expect that paywall to be fully useless soon.
That's a really silly take ... a Paywall is just an authorization mechanism.
That's like saying the source code of lemmy leaks and you expect your account to be compromised any second.
I can sell you a copy of lemmys source code, are you interested?
I'll sell it for cheaper!
I can give you 25 schmeckles.
It's mostly node modules
270GB of mostly node modules?
You're right, it would be bigger if it was node
Sounds pretty average
"send nodes"
I hate Web 3.0
I also hate making things from smaller pieces, the engineering in software engineering. /s
Node has been around longer than web3
NPM nightmares intensify
reminds me of the time someone said "Who is this 4chan?" on tv and it became a meme. good times
Source for the curious: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=qz5i171h_no
Here is an alternative Piped link(s):
https://www.piped.video/watch?v=qz5i171h_no
Piped is a privacy-respecting open-source alternative frontend to YouTube.
I'm open-source; check me out at GitHub.
I have not read the news in a really long time just cause paywalls are annoying as frick.
Consider paying for the news...?
I'd only do that if you want independent news.
I'm not sure what you're saying here ...
He probably means one of these (or both):
-
New York Times is a huge corporation. The commenter would only support a site which is run by one creator, or with a genuine small team, which is transparent and not an asshole.
-
New York Times is biased politically or accepting bribery attempts from other corpos to make them look in a better light.
- New York Times is a huge corporation. The commenter would only support a site which is run by one creator, or with a genuine small team, which is transparent and not an asshole.
Yeah but good luck chasing multiple stories across the world as a small team.
Jesus Christ, no. It's almost like you're trying to sow distrust in the news and facts.
The NYT isn't perfect, but it's some of the most reliable news the world has.
As of March 2023, The New York Times Company employs 5,800 individuals,[101] including 1,700 journalists according to deputy managing editor Sam Dolnick.[122] Journalists for The New York Times may not run for public office, provide financial support to political candidates or causes, endorse candidates, or demonstrate public support for causes or movements.[123] Journalists are subject to the guidelines established in "Ethical Journalism" and "Guidelines on Integrity".[124] According to the former, Times journalists must abstain from using sources with a personal relationship to them and must not accept reimbursements or inducements from individuals who may be written about in The New York Times, with exceptions for gifts of nominal value.[125] The latter requires attribution and exact quotations, though exceptions are made for linguistic anomalies. Staff writers are expected to ensure the veracity of all written claims, but may delegate researching obscure facts to the research desk.[126] In March 2021, the Times established a committee to avoid journalistic conflicts of interest with work written for The New York Times, following columnist David Brooks's resignation from the Aspen Institute for his undisclosed work on the initiative Weave.[127]
Pay for news if you want it to be independent, and not beholden to sponsors.
I'd go as far as to say that paying for news (if you have the means to do so comfortably), is your duty as a commitment to democracy.
Ahh, yes I agree on all points; thanks for the clarification!
It's amazing the number of times on Lemmy that someone will come in with the completely opposite "explanation" for what I was saying. Almost like they have an agenda.
It's so weird to turn my statement of "support the news with money" into "the mainstream media can't be trusted".
Maybe it's only happened twice, but it's still weird that it's happened twice.
Phrasing things in semi-sarcastic converse will do that
I was wondering if that's where you were going in part.
I think it's a bit of the phrasing; you stated an opinion that's vague to the point of tiptoeing towards the potentially loaded question: "who's independent media?"
It's not uncommon in the conservative media sphere to see a similar (typically series) of leading ambiguous questions. They're never genuine, it's always in the style of:
You know what the best operating system is? I'll tell you what the best operating system is, it's Linux. Do you know why Linux is the best operating system? It's because it's got penguins and penguins are great! Do you know why penguins are great? I mean, can you think of a more iconic bird? That's why, that is why ... and Big Microsoft is out to destroy your hopes and dreams aren't they? Yes, yes they absolutely are, with their soulless Windows operating system that's manufactured by the flying spaghetti monster. Now obviously folks, only use Linux if you support freedom not the unholy flying spaghetti monster. The flying spaghetti monster will destroy America. It's its one true mission. Support freedom, support penguins, stop the flying spaghetti monster.
I think it's made a bunch of if antsy lol
I doubt this will affect much ... that's a lot more source code than I'd expect though, dang.
Presumably a lot of it is for internal operations (custom editing software or something of that ilk).
It sounds like it's not all source code, from the article.
Thats a lot of data but surly its not all their articles cos I'd very much like to train mixtral7x8b on it along with 4chan data and shir from the dark web. Surly there is a project where such a model is public and being trained on literally everything regardless of legality.
NY Times has a freaking great data visualisations, they are (were?) employing a wizard in this space, doing custom extensions on d3.js.
Critical support
270GB feels insane for the source code of a single organisation. Is there media assets or backups in there too?
EDIT: yep, multiple subsidiaries and slack Comms which could inflate it by a lot. we post a whole lot of uncompressed shit on our slack