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Posted

When you know the headline of the article you want to read on WSJ or Barron's you type that in to a google search or google news search and when you click through you will get a "free pass" to read the article.  You have to access it through the search engine though.

 

I read both the WSJ and Barron's through the Google backdoor.

It's mostly skimming though, I wouldn't pay for this content, it's not worth it.

 

What's the google backdoor?

Posted

Subscribe to Twitter feed from WSJ so it gives headline of articles.  Then follow the method below.

 

When you know the headline of the article you want to read on WSJ or Barron's you type that in to a google search or google news search and when you click through you will get a "free pass" to read the article.  You have to access it through the search engine though.

 

I read both the WSJ and Barron's through the Google backdoor.

It's mostly skimming though, I wouldn't pay for this content, it's not worth it.

 

What's the google backdoor?

Posted

I read both the WSJ and Barron's through the Google backdoor.

It's mostly skimming though, I wouldn't pay for this content, it's not worth it.

 

What's the google backdoor?

 

As described above.

 

I bookmarked today's paper, http://www.wsj.com/itp

When I see an article that interests me I right click and "Search Google for -title of article here-"

Usually the first link in Google is the one to the WSJ article.

Click that and you've gone in the back door.  ;)

 

Works the same for Barron's.

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