The repo was on GitHub and mirrored on Gitlab for years. Then it got DCMA’d and went to codeberg and got DCMA’d again. Now it’s on gitflic because the Russians dgaf about American copyright law or IP law in general.
I’ve been using it for years. It works quite well. Sometimes it will break on a website until it gets an update. It gets updated fairly frequently though.
Because they’ve had takedown requests sent to Firefox, then Gitlab, then Github.
Give me a minute to find my post about this from before with sources to prove this as well as links to the internet archive to show it’s true. It continues to surprise me this is questioned in a piracy forum when the whole reason it got taken down was due to copyright related takedown requests.
It moved to gitflic.ru not because it’s sketchy, but because of copyright enforcement.
It’s kind of like sci-hub, in a way, it can only actually survive in a country that doesn’t respect the US copyright cabal.
That being said, I’ve never audited the code, but it’s open source (MIT-license) and signed by Mozilla as noted on its gitflic page:
PS although the add-on was removed from Mozilla’s add-on store (AMO) (because of DMCA Takedown Notice) it’s still signed and manually checked for security by Mozilla (hence the delay in signing).
Why did they decide to host it on a random Russian git service lol
The repo was on GitHub and mirrored on Gitlab for years. Then it got DCMA’d and went to codeberg and got DCMA’d again. Now it’s on gitflic because the Russians dgaf about American copyright law or IP law in general.
That should be first sentance in README so people know it works.
tor mirror when?
Because why not.
their repo got deleted from github and codeberg iirc
So it must work!
I’ve been using it for years. It works quite well. Sometimes it will break on a website until it gets an update. It gets updated fairly frequently though.
Because they’ve had takedown requests sent to Firefox, then Gitlab, then Github.
Give me a minute to find my post about this from before with sources to prove this as well as links to the internet archive to show it’s true. It continues to surprise me this is questioned in a piracy forum when the whole reason it got taken down was due to copyright related takedown requests.
EDIT: here it is: https://lemmy.blahaj.zone/post/26853791/14683087
Reproduced comment follows:
Magnolia’s Twitter Account: https://x.com/Magnolia1234B
Nitter Link: https://nitter.tiekoetter.com/Magnolia1234B
Wikipedia: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bypass_Paywalls_Clean
It used to be on the official Firefox Extensions repository until DMCA takedown notices made them take it down.
https://web.archive.org/web/20210429215917/https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/bypass-paywalls-clean/
It used to be on gitlab until DMCA takedown notices made them take it down.
https://web.archive.org/web/20220320090024/https://gitlab.com/magnolia1234/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean
It used to be on github until DMCA takedown notices made them take it down.
https://web.archive.org/web/20240611084455/https://github.com/bpc-clone/bypass-paywalls-firefox-clean
It moved to gitflic.ru not because it’s sketchy, but because of copyright enforcement.
It’s kind of like sci-hub, in a way, it can only actually survive in a country that doesn’t respect the US copyright cabal.
That being said, I’ve never audited the code, but it’s open source (MIT-license) and signed by Mozilla as noted on its gitflic page:
Maybe the developers are Russian + Github as a default from the “war crimes™”-country isn’t good either