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BugMeNot is an Internet service that provides usernames and passwords allowing Internet users to bypass mandatory free registration on websites.It was started in August 2003 by an anonymous person, later revealed to be Guy King, [1] and allowed Internet users to access websites that have registration walls (for instance, that of The New York Times) with the requirement of compulsory registration.
BugMeNot is a service that allows users to share accounts; while it presently restricts accounts from being listed under Wikipedia.org they can still be found listed under aliases or other Wikimedia wikis. Bugmenot123123123 was likely neither created by the sockmaster nor their oldest account just the earliest known to have been extensively used.
RetailMeNot was founded in 2006 by Australian entrepreneurs Guy King and Bevan Clark. The two had previously collaborated on BugMeNot, a site that allowed users to share fake identities in order to avoid website registrations and content paywalls, and a content management system. [4] [5] The company was acquired by Whaleshark Media in 2010. [6]
Bugmenot does not provide any shared logins for Wikipedia. Nacon kantari e |t||c|m 01:06, 5 April 2006 (UTC) And besides, Wikipedia doesn't require any personal info, not even an e-mail address. --Happynoodleboy 11:49, 6 April 2006 (UTC) Bugmenot does not provide any shared logins for Wikipedia. They should.
In 2004 Matt Hines of CNET said Nearly Free Speech supported BugMeNot against take-down attempts. [13] Kevin Newcomb of clickz.com wrote that Texas-based NearlyFreeSpeech.net spokesman Jeff Wheelhouse said, "NearlyFreeSpeech.NET supports and defends the free expression rights of www.bugmenot.com and all our members to the very limit of its ...
Bug Me Not! (traditional Chinese: 蟲不知; simplified Chinese: 虫不知; Cantonese Yale: Chung bat ji), - "Bugs Don't Know," is a 2005 Hong Kong film directed by Law Chi-Leung.
Huang is of Chinese descent; [1] in 2019, she was living with her parents in the small town of Walnut, California. [2]Before turning to competitive eating, she attended UC Riverside, where she studied business.
EIZIE sponsors or issues the following publications: EIZIE: a website on Basque translation, available in Basque, Spanish, French and English.; Senez: a journal on the theory and practice of translation; it is published annually and the complete text is also available online.