Scribd is Giving Away 1 Month of Unlimited Access For Free (goodereader.com) 30
Reading subscription service Scribd is offering free access to its library of over one million ebooks, audiobooks, magazines and more for the next 30 days (no commitment or credit card information required). From a report: Scribd told Good e-Reader that "with the spread of COVID-19 and new regulations put into effect, we know many people are staying close to home, yet still looking for information, distractions and perhaps a mental escape. Scribd wants to support the community by giving people access to the world's largest library during this global health crisis, and do our small part in helping consumers through times of uncertainty."
I know, nothing but Free Advertising. BUT (Score:2)
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As someone that likes to read and usually either buys from Amazon or gets my books from the library. I am always looking for another source to get something to read from. I know that I have been looking for new release's from a couple different authors I read. Does anyone know if this site has new release's? Or should I just continue going to Amazon.
Go to scribd.com click on hamburger menu top left corner then use search function. You're welcome.
Smells like an ad but... (Score:2)
...when you're jailed up... Thanks! :)
They require a connection to a payment method. (Score:4, Informative)
Re:They require a connection to a payment method. (Score:4)
Exactly.
You cancel, but meanwhile yet another business has your payment method stored ready for breach.
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Re:They require a connection to a payment method. (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.scribd.com/readfree?utm_source=readfree
Free. Literally just signed up with my junk gmail account.
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I used the one in the summary. It didn't ask for any kind of payment information.
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No, if you follow the links appropriately, you get free access without any credit card.
https://www.scribd.com/readfre... [scribd.com]
Free. Literally just signed up with my junk gmail account.
Thanks! Signed up. I love audiobooks.
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Which is why you use Paypal because you can always break the automatic payment link at Paypal's side. So the business ends up with a useless token that is rejected if they try to charge your Paypal account.
I've used it many times - if they don't make it easy to cancel, you just cancel it from Paypal's side. The only downside is your account gets littered with a bunch of recurring payment accounts that say "Cancell
Casting out the devil by beelzebub. (Score:2)
Yeah, but then you'd be using PayPay. A poster child of evilness. Do I look like I'm insane?
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Also, too many paypal-side cancellations and they will just suspend your paypal account and seize all your funds.
Scribd is awesome! (Score:2)
Even if you are a member of a big city's library system, Scribd is still worthwhile because you don't have to wait
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All I ever recall scribd doing is mirroring random pdf files in a javascript viewer.
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What do you mean otherwise? (Score:2)
The PDF literally is inside your website/browser for the thing being able to display it! They could just link to the PDF directly instead, for your browser's built-in PDF reader, and not be walled garden assholes catering to the dumb, clueless and lazy.
Re: Scribd is awesome! (Score:2)
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Then there's the great Gutenberg.org, Librivox.org, Creativecommons.org, Archive.org, Wikibooks... There's lots of top quality sites just giving it all away. May not get today's top of the charts, but as they say, "It's all there in the classics."
Re: Scribd is awesome! (Score:2)
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Sounds like you live in a big city. Does your library offer a good selection technical books spanning more or less everything? Scribd offers titles even on topics as obscure as friction stir welding.
If Scribd does what you want it to, that's cool.
My library's offerings are mixed. Technical books - not so much. However, they've got something called "Interlibrary Loan". Lots of libraries do. My cousin checked out an extremely rare book from somewhere in Australia through his university's Interlibrary loan program. Call your library and ask if they participate, how it works, etc. You might get lucky.
BTW, I'm guessing that COVID-19 has put a lid on Interlibrary loans for now.
https://en.wikipedia. [wikipedia.org]
Typical come-on (Score:2)
"Try it for free! Unless you make it through our byzantine cancellation process, we'll charge you $9 a month for the rest of your life."
Anyway, it's not a terrible thing that they're giviing temporary free access, but I would never pay $9 a month for that service, and I'd be willing to bet it won't be easy to cancel.
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The corrected link to the actual free offer is higher up in the thread.
https://www.scribd.com/readfre... [scribd.com]
You mean that horrible abortion... (Score:3)
...that captures PDFs in a really really shitty UI in a website, instead of just letting you open it in your PDF reader, and wants to squeeze you into paying money for continially getting that privilege.
I hope their dicks fall off. [youtu.be]
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Holy crap. Thank you for the link. I've never seen that before. It is so funny because I feel like I am living that life right now.
Fuck those ass clowns. (Score:2)
Their whole model is:
>People upload cool PDFs for free.
>They lock them inside DRM bullshit and then charge people a monthly fee to to access these free shared resources.
>News articles link to these PDFs as "sources" but readers have to pay a fee to see the sources.
I also hope their dicks - and tits - fall off.
That's big of them (Score:2)
Given that most of their content is pirated and none of their charge goes to the creators.
Fuck them. Fuck them with a pneumatic drill.
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Reminds me of GrooveShark of days past.