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858 points colesantiago | 5 comments | | HN request time: 0s | source
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supernova87a ◴[] No.45109304[source]
By the way, a pet peeve of mine right now is that reporters covering court cases (and we have so many of public interest lately) never seem to simply paste the link to the online PDF decision/ruling for us all to read, right in the story. (and another user here kindly did that for us below: https://storage.courtlistener.com/recap/gov.uscourts.dcd.223... )

It seems such a simple step (they must have been using the ruling PDF to write the story) yet why is it always such a hassle for them to feel that they should link the original content? I would rather be able to see the probably dozens of pages ruling with the full details rather than hear it secondhand from a reporter at this point. It feels like they want to be the gatekeepers of information, and poor ones at that.

I think it should be adopted as standard journalistic practice in fact -- reporting on court rulings must come with the PDF.

Aside from that, it will be interesting to see on what grounds the judge decided that this particular data sharing remedy was the solution. Can anyone now simply claim they're a competitor and get access to Google's tons of data?

I am not too familiar with antitrust precedent, but to what extent does the judge rule on how specific the data sharing need to be (what types of data, for what time span, how anonymized, etc. etc.) or appoint a special master? Why is that up to the judge versus the FTC or whoever to propose?

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1. Barbing ◴[] No.45109479[source]
Shoutout Ars Technica, where they never seem to sweat the… lost ad revenue? diminished time on page?… and give the PDF link.
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2. ninkendo ◴[] No.45110514[source]
Sure, after you dismiss the pop-up telling you to become an ars subscriber.

I’m only angry about this because I’ve been on ars since 2002, as a paid subscriber for most of that time, but I cancelled last year due to how much enshittification has begun to creep in. These popups remove any doubt about the decision at least.

(I cancelled because I bought a product they gave a positive review for, only to find out they had flat-out lied about its features, and it was painfully obvious in retrospect that the company paid Ars for a positive review. Or they’re so bad at their jobs they let clearly wrong information into their review… I’m not sure which is worse.)

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3. chneu ◴[] No.45111315[source]
Lol if you aren't blocking those popups by default. Lots of extensions will take care of that for ya.
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4. ninkendo ◴[] No.45111755{3}[source]
No, my policy is to just not go to websites that don’t respect me.

It basically means I don’t use the web very much, but it’s probably better for me in the long run anyway, at least that’s how I see it.

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5. baq ◴[] No.45112606{4}[source]
I started buying paper journals, dismissing ads by flipping pages is much better UX