Sci-hub
Alan Rockefeller
11 December 2017 · Oakland, CA, United States ·
Several sci-hub domains have been shut down because a court ruled against it on behalf of the American Chemical Society, but can still be accessed directly via it's IP address, which is:
http://80.82.77.83
In addition, http://sci-hub.tw is still working, but who knows for how long. It might be the case that TOR will be needed to access sci-hub in the near future.
Why one woman stole 50 million academic papers — and made them all free to read
VOX.COM
Sci-Hub is a "Pirate Bay" for paywalled science.
105Turk Meyers and 104 others
10 comments
49 shares
Damon Tighe
Thanks for sharing this
2
Free the knowledge.
Richard Sexton
If she uses a Teredo address and not a v4 or v6 addr then it will always work.
Also, they should put an A record into the Russian root for her, then the US can't tell other people's computers what to do.
2
Luca Pasquali
how could this could be a work around to the world whois servers with ICANN "serverHold" blacklisting which is the actual reason you can't see sci-hub domains? any part of tcp/ip(of any version) stack hasn't been touched by the blacklisting, that's why the ipv4 address works.
1
Patrick Harris
Get telegram and add @sci-hub bot. The bot will send you articles when you send it a DOI number.
1
Andrew Collier Reed
Dang, I didn't even know about this and it's already being shut down eh?
Naomi Most
Thank you!
Luca Pasquali
both my osx and GNU/Linux installations didn't like the ip address solution, from Italy I can get it working adding a sci-hub domain with the ip address you linked to /etc/hosts; I also do not like to use dns servers provided by sci-hub, so I already switched to tor for sci-hub, it is slow but works in the end.
1
Angela Bohanna
Thanks! This is great!
Angela Bohanna
I can't believe it. There are so many questions I ask that most cultivators can't answer. My big one is has anyone ever tried adding soil microbes to c. nuda as an additional nutrient source. I found an article titled "Microcolonies of bacteria as a nutrient source for lignicolous and other fungi" right off the bat. This is so great. Every time I get questions and find research papers they always wanted a lot of money to finish the article. Hopefully I can find more information on supplementing pleurotus species with yeast. I got interested when I got a culture from someone that contained yeast and looked up if it would have any issues and found out they don't just eat nematodes but yeast and bacteria. It saved me from wasting a bunch of time and money throwing things out and I got nice yields. I can't thank you enough! Sorry for the long post. I'm just super excited!