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Finds accessible copies of paywalled, removed, or hard-to-find published material using Unpaywall, Semantic Scholar, CORE, and library databases. Useful for journalists and researchers needing open-access routes.
npx claudepluginhub ur-grue/autopunk-media-skills --plugin autopunk-media-skillsHow this skill is triggered — by the user, by Claude, or both
Slash command
/autopunk-media-skills:content-accessThe summary Claude sees in its skill listing — used to decide when to auto-load this skill
Locates accessible copies of paywalled, removed, or hard-to-find published material using Unpaywall, CORE, Semantic Scholar, library databases, and equivalent open-access routes — giving journalists and researchers a structured search path that stays within ethical and legal boundaries.
Uses Unpaywall API to find free full-text open access versions of paywalled academic papers by DOI. Useful when direct DOI resolution, publisher sites, or PMC fail.
Guides Claude through paywalled source retrieval: free version search, Unpaywall, CORE, Semantic Scholar. Prevents premature low-confidence judgments.
Searches academic literature via arXiv, Semantic Scholar, and open-access sources. Fetches and parses PDFs for abstracts, key findings, methodology, and citations. Use for research, literature reviews, or formal citations.
Share bugs, ideas, or general feedback.
Locates accessible copies of paywalled, removed, or hard-to-find published material using Unpaywall, CORE, Semantic Scholar, library databases, and equivalent open-access routes — giving journalists and researchers a structured search path that stays within ethical and legal boundaries.
Required: What you are looking for — a specific article (title, author, DOI, or URL), a type of document (government report, industry white paper, conference paper), or a description of the content you need Optional: Where you already looked and what you found (avoids duplicating effort); whether you have library access through an institution; the urgency (same-day need vs. background research); whether the material has been recently deleted (triggers archive-search steps)
Identifies the material type and selects the search path accordingly. Academic papers, government reports, industry publications, and news articles each have different open-access routes.
For academic papers and journal articles:
For government reports and policy documents:
For news articles behind paywalls:
For deleted or removed content of any type:
Ethical and legal framing. Every recommendation stays within legal boundaries. The skill does not guide users toward copyright infringement, credential sharing, or circumvention of access controls. It notes where the line is: using a preprint is legal; downloading a paper from an unauthorised repository is a different legal and ethical question. For news articles, accessing through a library database is fine; screen-scraping a paywall is not recommended.
A search path: numbered steps from most likely to succeed to least likely, tailored to the specific material type. Each step names the tool or resource, explains how to search it, and notes what to expect. Closes with a brief note on what to do if nothing is found. Total length: 300–600 words. Practical register — this is a search procedure, not a review of open-access infrastructure.
Looking for: "The effect of microplastic contamination on freshwater invertebrate populations: a meta-analysis" by Torres et al., published in Environmental Science & Technology, 2024. DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2024.xxxxx. I need the full text for a feature on microplastics in drinking water. My newsroom does not have a journal subscription. Same-day need.
Search path
Unpaywall (first stop). Go to unpaywall.org and search the DOI: 10.1021/acs.est.2024.xxxxx. Unpaywall will check whether the publisher has an open-access version, whether the authors deposited a copy in an institutional repository, or whether a preprint exists. If it finds an open-access PDF, you are done. Environmental Science & Technology is an ACS journal — ACS has some open-access articles, but most are paywalled. Likelihood: moderate.
Semantic Scholar. Search the title at semanticscholar.org. If an open-access PDF is indexed, there will be a green "PDF" button next to the result. Semantic Scholar also shows which papers cite this one and which papers it cites — useful if the meta-analysis references studies you also need. Likelihood: moderate.
CORE. Search core.ac.uk for the title or DOI. CORE aggregates from institutional repositories across Europe and beyond. If any of the Torres et al. co-authors are at a university that mandates open-access deposit, CORE may have their accepted manuscript. Likelihood: moderate for a multi-author international study.
PubMed Central. Search ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc for the title. If any author received US federal funding (NIH, NSF, EPA), the NIH public-access policy requires deposit in PMC within 12 months of publication. Environmental research often has federal funding. Likelihood: moderate to good if US co-authors are involved.
Author's institutional page. Search the lead author's name + university. Many environmental scientists post accepted manuscripts on their lab or department page. If you find a PDF labelled "accepted manuscript" or "postprint," this is the peer-reviewed version without the journal's formatting — legally shared by the author under most publisher agreements. Note that it may differ slightly from the typeset version.
Preprint servers. Check ChemRxiv (chemrxiv.org — the American Chemical Society's preprint server) and EarthArXiv for an earlier version. A preprint may differ from the final published meta-analysis — results or conclusions could have changed during peer review. If you cite a preprint, note that it is not the peer-reviewed version.
Public library. If none of the above produced the full text: check whether your local public library provides access to ACS journals through a database like ProQuest or EBSCO. Many public libraries in major cities offer free digital access to academic databases with a library card. This takes longer than steps 1–6 but almost always works.
If nothing is found: Contact the corresponding author directly by email. Most researchers will send a PDF of their own paper on request — this is common practice and not a copyright violation. A brief, professional email explaining that you are a journalist writing about microplastics and would appreciate a copy is usually enough.