• PelicanPersuader@beehaw.org
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    1 year ago

    In a fight between a corporation and a bunch of people very determined to get content for free, history shows the corporation always loses.

    • deaconblue@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      Information tech people say we have introduced new measures and methods to guarantee compliance with our policies. And pirates answer challenge accepted

    • Zorque@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      The only lose on their own terms. That meaning they don’t make quite as much money as they used to. It’s still money hand over fist.

    • JDPoZ@kbin.social
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      1 year ago

      It’s not even that people want stuff “for free.”

      I mean… well… who doesn’t love free stuff, but really if the legit product is priced fairly and buying it provides some actual useful service and isn’t inconvenient or comes packaged with scummy garbage hindering it, then people will pay for it.

      The problem is - that’s not what publicly-traded companies like to do. Valve’s Gabe Newell said it best (paraphrasing) - “Piracy is a problem with a service… not the customer.”

      Shitty services or actions businesses take to place a barrier of any kind between customer and the product they seek as a means to lazily extract more money from customers - especially that which is perceived as greedy will make more people seek alternative means of obtaining said product.

      Ask people who host Plex servers why they put movies on their server when they already have a Blu-Ray of it.

      It’s always “because the disc has un-skippable ads” or “they didn’t include Ben Affleck’s commentary track on it where he shits on Michael Bay for being a goddamn moron,” or “I don’t like seeing 14 different warnings before watching the movie I like” or “I don’t like seeing 10 min of ads every 5 min of watching my favorite show.”

      It’s hardly ever “I like being a thief” or “I couldn’t afford it…” and in the case of the latter, they weren’t going to buy it anyway.

      • thejml@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I have totally just purchased a few Anime seasons because I didn’t want to deal with ads when streaming it via Crunchyroll. Considering the speed I watch it at, I’d have had to pay for like 3 months of service to not get ads, or I can buy it and permanently own it for a little more.

        I won’t watch things with ads anymore if I can help it.

      • RedditExodus@kbin.social
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        1 year ago

        I run a plex server because I don’t want to subscribe to 15 different services with 15 different shitty UIs just to watch TV. FF and rewind always works the same on Plex and the pause button is always in the same spot.

        Every time I open Netflix or Hulu or Prime I am infuriated that it doesn’t immediately take me to the last show I was watching.

        Also I like to watch shows as they originally aired, not with missing episodes that Hulu pulled to keep advertisers happy (It’s Always Sunny In Philadelphia and Community come to mind).