Cloudflare is an access-restricted walled-garden that excludes various groups of people. The people who are allowed to enter the walled-garden are deceived (by a padlock) into thinking their traffic is protected end to end, when in fact Cloudflare has visibility on all that traffic. Cloudflare has taken ~25% of the web and sees all that traffic while abusing its power to exclude people. Since slrpnk.net is a open to the public, the links that are shared should also be open to the public.
By default, Cloudflare blocks access to the following groups of people:
users whose ISP uses CGNAT to distribute a limited range of IPv4 addresses (this generally impacts poor people in impoverished regions)
the Tor community
VPN users
users of public libraries, and generally networks where IP addresses are shared
privacy enthusiasts who will not disclose ~25% of their web traffic to one single corporation in a country without privacy safeguards
blind people who disable images in their browsers (which triggers false positives for robots, as scripts are generally not interested in images either)
the permacomputing community and people on limited internet connections, who also disable browser images to reduce bandwidth which makes them appear as bots
people who actually run bots – Cloudflare is outspokenly anti-robot and treats beneficial bots the same as malicious bots
When excluded people attempt to access a Cloudflare-jailed website, we get a page that simply says:
www.inhabitat.com
www.inhabitat.com needs to review the security of your connection before proceeding.
Please unblock challenges.cloudflare.comto proceed.
It just sits there in an endless loop of brokenness. We used to get CAPTCHAs which were usually broken. CF changed their CAPTCHA service from Google reCAPTCHA to hCAPTCHA (because CF profits from your labor when you solve an hCAPTCHA). But it seems hCAPTCHA was abandoned… probably much the crowd who is wise enough to find themselves in the excluded group are also wise enough to refuse to solve CAPTCHAs. I don’t imagine that many people would tolerate solving a CAPTCHA for ~25% of the sites they encounter.
Good options. But note the first link is a Cloudflare site and should be avoided. This link is more inclusive:
https://web.archive.org/web/20230925235958/https://inhabitat.com/how-to-choose-a-living-christmas-tree-for-a-green-holiday-season/
Why are you recommending to avoid cloudflare sites?
Cloudflare is an access-restricted walled-garden that excludes various groups of people. The people who are allowed to enter the walled-garden are deceived (by a padlock) into thinking their traffic is protected end to end, when in fact Cloudflare has visibility on all that traffic. Cloudflare has taken ~25% of the web and sees all that traffic while abusing its power to exclude people. Since slrpnk.net is a open to the public, the links that are shared should also be open to the public.
And almost invariably, whenever you check the NS records or otherwise see who’s hosting a neo-nazi website, it’s Cloudflare.
How does it exclude people? I don’t understand
By default, Cloudflare blocks access to the following groups of people:
When excluded people attempt to access a Cloudflare-jailed website, we get a page that simply says:
www.inhabitat.com www.inhabitat.com needs to review the security of your connection before proceeding. Please unblock challenges.cloudflare.com to proceed.
It just sits there in an endless loop of brokenness. We used to get CAPTCHAs which were usually broken. CF changed their CAPTCHA service from Google reCAPTCHA to hCAPTCHA (because CF profits from your labor when you solve an hCAPTCHA). But it seems hCAPTCHA was abandoned… probably much the crowd who is wise enough to find themselves in the excluded group are also wise enough to refuse to solve CAPTCHAs. I don’t imagine that many people would tolerate solving a CAPTCHA for ~25% of the sites they encounter.
Thank you for your perspective! I appreciate the insight