I wish there was something like it for the publications I haven't read, which makes me think that maybe (a very few) others might find use for what I've done. If you have an idea of how to reach them or utilize it, I'd appreciate it. Please don't share it yourself.
I hadn't used FileTea before; it's perfect for many uses. Does the shared file expire at some point?
EDIT: I should add that it omits some sources that I subscribed to before I started the spreadsheet, including the leading think tanks (Brookings, CSIS, Rand, etc.), the Financial Times ... that's all I can think of off the top of my head.
It's my understanding that it doesn't store a file, it just sychronizes a transfer. You have to trust that this is the case, but you can look at the source code that it's based on (on Github).
So I think we both need to be online at the same time for it to work...
The documentation states: "FileTea does not store any file in the server. It just synchronizes and bridges an upload from the seeder with a download to the leacher."
I used my email client as a quick way to encode it and posted the whole MIME part, in case that's somehow useful. The link will expire in a day.
I wonder how Filetea works. Their server does act as intermediary but apparently doesn't cache the file; still, my computer was online with the Filetea tab showing the file still open (but in the background). They refer to leecher and seeder so at least they are inspired by P2P file sharing networks.
This should be easier. Technically, there's no reason typical end-users couldn't anonymously and easily share files on a one-to-one basis. Maybe there is an easier way; I just hardly ever have to do it.