The Wall Street Journal for FREE. Really. Google your story before paying 4 subscription.

At what point is it not OK to steal from a corporation. I mean I own a few million dollar corporation, is it fine to steal from my company? What if I was a new startup that was just a $500,000 corporation that I'd sunk my life savings into, no problem stealing from that? You gotta draw the line somewhere, what's the exact point where you say the value of the corporation negates my personal moral value that stealing is wrong? Not a moral judgement on you, genuinely curious how you backed into that belief system.
Well.... if it comes up on a Google search, the WSJ could easily have it shut down with a DMCA letter to Google if they really cared I think.
 
Well.... if it comes up on a Google search, the WSJ could easily have it shut down with a DMCA letter to Google if they really cared I think.
Surprised they don't. Along with FT they're about as serious as it comes with their paywall.
 
It's not my job to "not look at" something that's displayed in Google's search results.

Quit complaining. It's your job to get the site taken down. You have to go through the treaty process (if the website is hosted abroad), to remove the content in question, or whatever else may be required. Or contact your local Congressman's orifice.

You can't go around whining about something you've failed on.
 
It's not my job to "not look at" something that's displayed in Google's search results.

Quit complaining. It's your job to get the site taken down. You have to go through the treaty process (if the website is hosted abroad), to remove the content in question, or whatever else may be required. Or contact your local Congressman's orifice.

You can't go around whining about something you've failed on.
"At no point in your rambling, incoherent response were you even close to anything that could be considered a rational thought. Everyone in this room is now dumber for having listened to it. I award you no points, and may God have mercy on your soul."
 
Some experienced traders tell me "Don't read financial news. They are bad for your trading results". If that is the case, why pay money to read financial news and lose money later?

Anyway, for those who wants to read WSJ free of charge, WSJ has closed the loopholes. You can no longer read via Google or installing bypass paywalls software anymore.
 
Some experienced traders tell me "Don't read financial news. They are bad for your trading results". If that is the case, why pay money to read financial news and lose money later?

Anyway, for those who wants to read WSJ free of charge, WSJ has closed the loopholes. You can no longer read via Google or installing bypass paywalls software anymore.

Don't pay to read anything. You can still find most news stories on Google.
 
Don't pay to read anything. You can still find most news stories on Google.

You are right. The reason I stopped my subscription to WSJ, FT, Economist is that there are still good and free resources to read on financial news. Financial blogs, Bloomberg and Reuters, to name a few.
 
Some experienced traders tell me "Don't read financial news. They are bad for your trading results". If that is the case, why pay money to read financial news and lose money later?

Anyway, for those who wants to read WSJ free of charge, WSJ has closed the loopholes. You can no longer read via Google or installing bypass paywalls software anymore.

WSJ, Barron's, FT, Economist are excellent publications worth reading for enjoyment rather than for "trading results."
 
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You are right. The reason I stopped my subscription to WSJ, FT, Economist is that there are still good and free resources to read on financial news. Financial blogs, Bloomberg and Reuters, to name a few.

The guys who want to pay, can still pay. If you don't want to pay, don't.

It works out for everyone.
 
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