[HN Gopher] Streaming services are driving viewers back to piracy
       ___________________________________________________________________
        
       Streaming services are driving viewers back to piracy
        
       Author : nemoniac
       Score  : 276 points
       Date   : 2025-08-14 16:56 UTC (6 hours ago)
        
 (HTM) web link (www.theguardian.com)
 (TXT) w3m dump (www.theguardian.com)
        
       | jbirer wrote:
       | My main issue is that they're now slowly testing the waters to
       | see if they can make you watch ads while still paying for the
       | subscription, and at that point, might as well take advantage of
       | Romania's lack of law enforcement and hit the torrent websites.
        
         | platevoltage wrote:
         | It's amazing how blurred the line is getting between streaming
         | and cable TV.
        
           | sunrunner wrote:
           | It really doesn't seem like it has to be that complicated,
           | yet somehow we've gone from channels with markedly anti-
           | consumer fixed bundles to a massively fragmented ecosystem
           | where it genuinely seems like the streaming services _don't_
           | actually want you to subscribe by the amount of the effort
           | that goes into making things hard to watch or doing
           | everything that could make the streaming experience worse
           | (region availability, paid tier ads, lower bitrate stream
           | quality, and so on).
        
           | squigz wrote:
           | It already came full circle some years ago when we started
           | seeing new streaming services every year, and those companies
           | pulling their content from other platforms to put on their
           | own. Then you had to start thinking about what servces you
           | need, whether you still want those services, etc. Just like
           | cable!
           | 
           | Absurd.
        
             | platevoltage wrote:
             | True, although I guess this is sort of understandable. It's
             | the "you're paying us, but here are some ads" that really
             | gets me.
             | 
             | Either way, 5 bucks a month to Emby, a really easy to get
             | membership to a large private torrent site, and a 16TB hard
             | drive solves these problems for me, and will continue to.
        
               | dborzov wrote:
               | Thanks for the tips! Could you explain how can one get
               | about "getting a membership to a large private torrent
               | site"? Also, why Emby rather than, say, Jellyfin or Plex?
        
               | squigz wrote:
               | The private trackers tend to be a pain in the butt to
               | remain active enough on to keep your account, as they
               | tend to require a certain amount of upload:download
               | ratio. This can be difficult to achieve since so many
               | members have high-speed seedboxes.
               | 
               | Just use https://1337x.to/ or any other public tracker.
               | You'll be able to find 99% of whatever you want.
        
         | nickthegreek wrote:
         | they are done testing the waters. its standard practice for the
         | majority.
        
         | rootsudo wrote:
         | Thats what they said about cable too, pay for it so no ads.
         | Then the ads came.
        
       | not_your_vase wrote:
       | About 10 years ago Netflix became available in the country where
       | I was living back then. I was very excited about it, I was on
       | their email list for years, waiting for the announcement. As I
       | got the email that they are available, after work literally the
       | first thing I did was to grab my credit card, and subscribe.
       | 
       | I found 4-6 movies I wanted to watch, but when I saw that they
       | had Godfather 1 and 3 without 2, I had a good laugh. Then I
       | watched all the Archer episodes they had, and tried to find
       | something interesting for 2 more days before I cancelled my
       | (still trial) account.
       | 
       | Though I stopped watching movies some years ago, until than I
       | used to watch them on the same old pre-netflix way.
       | 
       | Of course I have heard that they have spent many billions on
       | content since then, I'm sure they have some interesting stuff...
       | but that came way too late for me.
       | 
       | Maybe I'm getting old, lol
        
         | neves wrote:
         | If a movie has a Netflix label in it, it is a sure signal of a
         | bad movie with a boring script made based on data.
        
           | geoffpado wrote:
           | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_accolades_received_by_.
           | ..
        
             | margalabargala wrote:
             | This includes movies "streamed or distributed" by Netflix.
             | Like the parent mentioned, Netflix has streamed the
             | Godfather.
             | 
             | If you click through the movies on that list, you will find
             | that almost none of them were actually produced by Netflix.
             | 
             | Movies produced by Netflix are highly likely to be as
             | described, with a small handful of exceptions.
        
             | sunrunner wrote:
             | I mean when your company has enough money to essentially
             | bankroll the creation of a greater-than-average number of
             | productions and simply pay the individuals involved in the
             | production of these films whatever it takes to get them on
             | board, isn't it sort of inevitable that you end up
             | featuring in the list of awards a greater-than-average
             | number of times?
        
             | themafia wrote:
             | Some of those are other networks shows that just happen to
             | be distributed by Netflix. For example, Wallace & Gromit.
             | This is not a useful set of data to draw conclusions from.
             | Which is precisely the problem that Netflix has.
        
             | ZiiS wrote:
             | Yes, very damming considering their spend to not ever have
             | won a best picture/actor/actress/screenplay.
        
             | _0ffh wrote:
             | The _Academy Awards_? Who the heck cares for _those_?
             | 
             | The only thing they say is "the powers that be in Hollywood
             | chose to highlight your product", but surely the
             | information content regarding quality is as close to zero
             | as it is possible to get.
        
           | epolanski wrote:
           | Based on data (and Twitter) part is true of any studio since
           | a decade, in any case Netflix has produced or co-produced a
           | good bunch of movies.
           | 
           | Also, some excellent documentaries.
        
           | zo1 wrote:
           | We should coin a new term: "Straight to Netflix"
        
           | mvdtnz wrote:
           | I don't know why you're being downvoted because you're
           | absolutely right. I'd say for me Netflix movies have less
           | than a 5% hit rate. They're an excellent place to start if
           | you desire a suitably (and needlessly) racially and sexually
           | diverse cast, the most bland cinematography and grading
           | possible, and scripts explicitly designed for viewers who are
           | paying more attention to their phones than the show[1].
           | 
           | [1] https://comicbook.com/movies/news/netflix-reportedly-has-
           | biz...
        
           | LtWorf wrote:
           | That has been my experience as well. When I see that logo
           | it's a bad omen on how the film is going to be.
        
       | kjkjadksj wrote:
       | All of these streaming services have started cracking down on
       | family and friend account sharing to game their stock price.
       | Turns out kicking off the broke college students doesn't lead to
       | them signing up for ~$80/mo. smattering of streaming services.
        
         | kotaKat wrote:
         | It's also getting tiring of this massive fragmentation of
         | streaming services as a whole combined with a weird game of
         | rebundling various providers in either deals direct from the
         | streaming platforms/their overlords, or rebundling all of these
         | streaming services into "free" offers with other service
         | providers and THEIR offerings.
         | 
         | Even my goddamn cable company does this now offering me one of
         | the streaming services? with my Spectrum plan. I don't even
         | know which one(s).
         | 
         | Quite frankly, I'm tired of my Verizon plan trying to cram
         | Netflix and Hulu and Disney+ and crap down my throat, I'm tired
         | of Walmart trying to cram Paramount+ at me with Walmart+.
         | However, the market of 'average (dumb) people' seems to love
         | this concept as "little extras" that eventually cause scope
         | creep to their bill over time (and we all lose as a result).
        
           | rkomorn wrote:
           | There are services I already pay for that I'd likely save a
           | handful of dollars on per month if I bundled them with my
           | other services... but I can't bring myself to do it out of
           | stubborn principle.
        
           | datadrivenangel wrote:
           | It's on AppleTV+ but only if you also have the entity
           | formerly known as paramount+ or for 3.99 (14 to own).
           | 
           | Poob. Poob has it for you. [0]
           | 
           | 0 https://knowyourmeme.com/memes/poob-has-it-for-you
        
           | robotnikman wrote:
           | >I'm tired of my Verizon plan trying to cram Netflix and Hulu
           | and Disney+ and crap down my throat
           | 
           | And of course when they do its never the ad-free versions.
        
         | HDThoreaun wrote:
         | I mean netflix saw a pretty big jump in subscribers when they
         | started doing this so maybe it actually does work?
        
         | VanTheBrand wrote:
         | Except that so far results have shown that it does lead to a
         | net increase in signups:
         | 
         | https://www.marketwatch.com/story/netflix-subscriber-boom-th...
        
       | vhanda wrote:
       | All streaming services should have a pay per minute system as an
       | alternative to the fixed monthly subscription.
       | 
       | That way, I'd happily use any service to watch whatever cause it
       | would be convenient, instead of piracy.
       | 
       | And it would be a reason for them to really improve their
       | recommendation systems.
        
         | prasadjoglekar wrote:
         | A bundle of streaming services. That you can surf and choose
         | one from and just watch. And a TV guide that tells you what's
         | running where.
         | 
         | Gee...sounds a lot like Cable TV.
         | 
         | Sarcasm aside, the one problem folks had with Cable was the
         | inability to upgrade without getting locked into another 2 year
         | contract. Streaming solves that one problem while enshittifying
         | all the other good things.
        
           | rkomorn wrote:
           | I thought the main complaint was "I'm paying for channels I
           | don't watch!" while not realizing the channels they were
           | watching were actually what they were paying for, and the
           | rest of the stuff was just lumped in for nearly free to make
           | the lineups look bigger and more appealing.
        
             | sunrunner wrote:
             | For some reason I always saw it in reverse, that I had to
             | pay to subsidise a set of channels I'm _not_ interested in
             | for the one I am.
        
               | rkomorn wrote:
               | Chances are that's not what was happening unless you were
               | watching the channels nobody else watches.
               | 
               | I haven't looked into cable pricing for a while but i
               | remember a few of the contract disputes that caused some
               | big channels to drop off big cable providers in the
               | 2010s. The price-per-customer those channels were asking
               | the cable companies were significant chunks of what a
               | package would cost the customer (eg upwards for $1).
               | 
               | Meanwhile some of the less common ones were a few cents
               | per customer.
               | 
               | That means that unless you weren't watching any of the
               | $1+ ones, you were mostly actually "paying for what
               | you're watching".
        
             | nickthegreek wrote:
             | I assure you that there are many people who do not need nor
             | want ESPN and knew damn well they were directly paying it.
        
               | rkomorn wrote:
               | And those people were having part of their package
               | subsidized by the people who were watching ESPN but not
               | the other channels.
        
           | nickthegreek wrote:
           | > .. the one problem folks had with Cable was the i...
           | 
           | and hardware rental fees
           | 
           | ads on top of your service
           | 
           | bundling a bunch of channels you didnt ask for and increase
           | price
           | 
           | outages
           | 
           | the list goes on
        
           | thewebguyd wrote:
           | > Gee...sounds a lot like Cable TV.
           | 
           | Honestly, Cable companies could make a comeback by using
           | their relationships with producers to actually be a "one stop
           | shop" streaming services. There's definitely a pain point to
           | having to be subscribed to so many different services just to
           | cover the gamut of shows and movies
        
         | sunrunner wrote:
         | > pay per minute system
         | 
         | And/or pay-per-episode, pay-per-season or pay-per-show. So I
         | don't have to start thinking ahead too much about the _length_
         | of something and can just enjoy the thing itself based on some
         | pre-determined price.
        
           | Fire-Dragon-DoL wrote:
           | Pay per episode could be an ok granularity. Anything above
           | that I'm not ok, there is too much garbage
        
             | sunrunner wrote:
             | Perhaps pay-per-episode with a discounted price for an
             | entire series (and an option to buy the remainders taking
             | that into account). It seems fair to be able to dip your
             | toe into a series and try a few episodes before committing.
             | On the other hand, that seems just a bit _too_ consumer-
             | friendly...
        
               | Fire-Dragon-DoL wrote:
               | Would be fine with that. I want a demo before committing,
               | essentially
        
               | themafia wrote:
               | Isn't this precisely what Amazon already does?
        
               | sunrunner wrote:
               | For the subset of Amazon-available content that isn't
               | counted as Prime Video I think yes, but not for the rest
               | of it. Apple TV+ possibly too, though they also have what
               | feels like their own confusing model that shows some
               | things as being available with the caveat that it's
               | actually available through either a) a proxy with a
               | subscription to a third party or b) a one-time purchase
               | from them. I'd hate to be in the meetings where the
               | details of these licensing agreements get hashed out.
        
             | nicce wrote:
             | Some Disney series are already 20mins about the show and
             | 10mins credits/something else. Don't give them new ideas to
             | reduce the actual content...
        
               | vhanda wrote:
               | I was thinking along the lines of how much I actually
               | watch, if I only watched 10 minutes of your show, I only
               | pay for 10 minutes, not the entire thing.
               | 
               | You're also saving on bandwidth.
               | 
               | Paradoxically, I'd still want to pay per minute of
               | viewing time, if I'm watching the show on 2x the speed.
        
           | sosborn wrote:
           | Isn't this just renting, which is already offered by Amazon,
           | Apple, Google ...
        
         | duxup wrote:
         | I think they know how many dead / inactive subscriptions they
         | have.
        
         | mvdtnz wrote:
         | That would only suit a portion of their user base and
         | completely ream people who use Netflix to entertain/occupy
         | their kids, who use TV shows to fall asleep, etc. Not to
         | mention throwing away valuable subscriber dollars from idle
         | users like me who maintain a subscription but rarely watch
         | anything (mostly because there's nothing good on the entire
         | platform).
        
         | 5555624 wrote:
         | Sling TV now has a "day pass" option for $5. (A weekend for
         | $10.) https://www.cnet.com/tech/services-and-software/sling-tv-
         | off...
        
         | mystraline wrote:
         | What these companies would "sell" would be DRM crusty shit that
         | wouldn't work on my devices. And the 'Authorization servers'
         | would be decommissioned at some unstated future date. Hell,
         | even Microsoft couldn't manage to maintain these DRM servers.
         | 
         | If MS cant, why would I expect any company to properly maintain
         | them?
         | 
         | https://community.spiceworks.com/t/how-to-play-content-prote...
         | 
         | So, unless these are MP4's or MKV's with correct subtitling and
         | appropriate audio, I'm not going to pay a cent here.
        
           | nicce wrote:
           | Lets go back to old good CD/DVD era.
        
         | RandomBacon wrote:
         | That would incentivize services to make their shows longer.
         | Maybe they play them back at 95% speed, maybe they add their
         | own intro or credits to the end. maybe if they make their own
         | shows like Netfliz does, they stretch them out.
        
         | bawolff wrote:
         | Maybe the incentives would be better, but i also dont really
         | want to keep track of budgeting when watching TV. I'm here to
         | relax. I dont want to stress about how much i watched this
         | month and if im going to blow my entertainment budget.
        
         | barbazoo wrote:
         | For movies at least it's usually no problem to find them for
         | "rent", i.e. 48h for an absurd amount of money.
        
         | testing22321 wrote:
         | Idea for a service.
         | 
         | The service effectively rebroadcasts all the streaming services
         | to provide exactly what you suggest. It's still paying the
         | streaming services, and users pay it.
         | 
         | Better not set it up in the US .
        
           | interestica wrote:
           | This is like cable with extra steps ;)
           | 
           | I think we are already seeing some packaged stream services
           | and we will probably see more. It's a lot of overhead to
           | maintain a separate service to do the exact same thing (with
           | only a different library and branding).
           | 
           | I think the NHL uses the streaming backend developed by MLB
           | Advanced Media (they adapted it in 2015, not sure if still
           | the case).
           | 
           | https://www.sportsnet.ca/hockey/nhl/a-closer-look-at-nhls-
           | pa...
        
             | testing22321 wrote:
             | Na, not like cable. It's all on demand so you can watch
             | what you want when you want. You don't pay a cent for stuff
             | you don't watch.
             | 
             | You can pay by minute, or episode, or season or whatever.
             | 
             | Like Netflix but with the catalog of every streaming
             | service in existence, better per-use pricing, no ads.
        
       | neves wrote:
       | For me worse than the can't pay is the lack of options. In the
       | VHS time I had more good movie options than in the current
       | streaming services. I remember when I bing watched Kurozawa or
       | Mario Monicelli's movies. Now it's very hard to find non American
       | cinema. The tech is there, but the System fail us.
        
         | weeznerps wrote:
         | Criterion Channel and Kanopy are very good (not perfect) for
         | international films.
        
         | epolanski wrote:
         | Even many American movies are no shows on most streaming
         | platforms. Sometimes I'm like: "Let's take the top 30 movies
         | that critics loved the most in US in year X".
         | 
         | As soon as it's earlier than 2005 you're gonna find less than
         | half available across most streaming platforms, unless for
         | renting/buying.
        
         | whobre wrote:
         | Yep. I swear I liked the old Netflix with DVDs better. I could
         | rent pretty much any movie I wanted.
        
           | rgblambda wrote:
           | Netflix found that while it was a nice advertising tool to
           | boast about the broadness of its catalogue, most customers
           | rarely ordered the more niche stuff so it wasn't particularly
           | profitable.
        
             | 0cf8612b2e1e wrote:
             | That's what happens when you have a big library. The usage
             | is going to be some 80:20 rule. A small slice drives the
             | numbers. Yet it is nice to be able to consume some long
             | tail content. Without the DVD catalog, access to the long
             | tail has disappeared from mainstream providers.
        
             | devilbunny wrote:
             | > most customers rarely ordered the more niche stuff
             | 
             | I'm sure that's true, but the flip side is that the niche
             | stuff is what pulls in the hardcore film buffs. And guess
             | who those of us who aren't big film buffs turn to when
             | picking films and services? The hardcore film buffs we
             | know.
             | 
             | They may not generate a ton of revenue if you look only at
             | "how many people request obscure movie X", but _having_
             | those movies pulls in the people who will, in turn,
             | influence others.
        
             | layer8 wrote:
             | We don't have that problem with books for the most part,
             | why do we have it with TV shows and movies?
        
           | thewebguyd wrote:
           | Even after the DVDs, Netflix had a much bigger catalog before
           | everyone else decided they needed to copy Netflix and launch
           | their own service, then IP rights got restricted and
           | redistributed.
           | 
           | Streaming was great when I only needed to subscribe to a
           | single service to watch most everything I wanted. It's not so
           | great when I need to subscribe to 5+ services and still not
           | have everything I want to watch.
           | 
           | Yeah, monopolies are bad but the way IP is distributed right
           | now across so many different services just ends up being
           | worse for consumers.
        
         | piva00 wrote:
         | MUBI is a good option for the more high cinema stuff, one of
         | the few subscriptions I'd feel sad canceling.
        
       | crooked-v wrote:
       | To really sum it all up in one place, check out the absurdity of
       | the official guide on where to watch the Pokemon cartoon:
       | https://www.pokemon.com/us/animation/where-to-watch-pokemon-...
       | 
       | And that doesn't even actually list the movies, which are even
       | more fragmented.
        
         | 0cf8612b2e1e wrote:
         | I have seen this before, but I never realized that was an
         | official product! Thought that started as a joke by a
         | disgruntled fan.
        
         | seatac76 wrote:
         | Thanks for sharing OP, that is just ridiculous, makes cable
         | looks like a sane option.
        
           | 6thbit wrote:
           | With cable you didn't get this fragmentation cause you also
           | didn't get many options.
           | 
           | Watch at 8am or at 6pm, whatever episode airs that day,
           | probably a rerun or a skipped.
        
         | godzillabrennus wrote:
         | Wow. It's like an advertisement for torrent sites... I had no
         | idea it was that bad out there...
        
         | devjab wrote:
         | I wonder if they will eventually go the LEGO route and host
         | their shows on youtube while also letting streaming services
         | have them.
        
         | sunrunner wrote:
         | And I thought the problem was (just) limited to fragmentation
         | of complete IPs between services. I'd love for someone in the
         | know to explain how you get to this stage.
         | 
         | It it some kind of hedging strategy by The Pokemon Company to
         | account for the number of different streaming services (thereby
         | actually making the problem worse)? Was there some kind of
         | timed exclusivity deal that's forced them to put different
         | things in different places? Did one of the streaming services
         | come along at a later time to try to undercut the earlier ones
         | but the earlier licencing deals haven't expired? Anything else?
        
         | mxfh wrote:
         | What's the problem with that exactly? Legacy catalogs having
         | some incomplete coverage? That the Pokemon Company can't make a
         | good list if pressed? These are all not new or streaming
         | Problems
         | 
         | The gist is here, that the complete first four season are on
         | YouTube for free and the 5th is being added as we speak? (200+
         | episodes)
         | 
         | https://www.youtube.com/@OfficialPoke%CC%81monTV/playlists
         | 
         | There was nether the expectation with streaming that third
         | party content doesn't rotate.
         | 
         | If you want a bit more persistent access you can buy them on
         | Apple TV (Season 1-5 and 10-25)
         | 
         | Oh Boy, Pokemon is really not the example I would bring up
         | here, when the aim is completeness on official channels:
         | 
         | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pok%C3%A9mon_episodes_removed_...
        
           | Gud wrote:
           | It's pretty obvious that no one wants to subscribe and look
           | for some content on 5 different platforms.
           | 
           | While the pirate goes to his or her favourite torrent site
           | and downloads it all, with the added bonus of having offline,
           | permanent access.
        
             | mxfh wrote:
             | The pirate redownloads the same show in Divx, mp4, DVD-ISO
             | and any remastered formats grabbed from streaming services
             | any time a new release comes out. But never watches them.
             | There is rarely such a thing as a definitive version for a
             | show like Pokemon, even for pirates. They are limited by
             | what's being released to the public too. The grass is not
             | really greener over there, just more confusing and more
             | FOMO. Then still needs to watch it in a convenient and
             | organizable way. So you would need to run a server, which
             | is not free either. Looking into 5 different platform seems
             | to be the easier choice here at some point.
        
           | gjvc wrote:
           | with a sample size of one, there is no obvious problem.
           | 
           | presumably any given household wants to watch more than just
           | pokemon, though and this is where things become unstuck.
           | suddenly, to satisfy the demand for the range of things
           | people in the household want to watch they are forced to make
           | subscriptions to multiple services, perhaps sometimes for
           | one-offs.
           | 
           | scale this up, and you have a population forced to make
           | multiple subscriptions to multiple streaming providers to
           | satisfy their demand for content.
           | 
           | or people just choose a couple of them and that's that.
           | either way it seems that there is a symbiotic relationship
           | between the content authors and the streaming companies.
           | 
           | but wait, read the page carefully, multiple seasons of the
           | same thing spread across different streamers forcing
           | consumers to subscribe to multiple streamers .... and now we
           | are into Phoebus cartel territory.
        
             | mxfh wrote:
             | That's not how streaming worked, ever. You had to deal with
             | what Netflix had to offer and that was it. These were the
             | happy monopoly days. It was simply the lack of choice and
             | nobody felt left out at watercooler talks.
             | 
             | The paradox now, is that if you're FOMO inclined you feel
             | the need to subscribe to multiple ones at all times to
             | satify all needs in a household. You don't have to. You can
             | keep baseline Disney if you really have to, but everything
             | else can be easily rotated or just cought up on for a month
             | or three on the usual discounted offers. The social
             | pressure was not some invention of the streaming companies.
             | 
             | Also pirating has a hardware and energy cost, that's not
             | trivial and mostly subsidized by parents. On a ROI basis of
             | adults with disposable income "buying" (aka personal
             | licenses, ideally shareable with some other accounts what
             | some might call a family) 4-5 movies for like 5 dollars on
             | platforms like Apple TV each a month is actually cheaper
             | than pirating. Streaming is not everything. And don`t kid
             | yourself that your DVD or Bluray collection is worth
             | something or usable in 20+ years. That's a niche hobby. Go
             | visit a flea market. People are that lazy when it comes to
             | couch and home entertainment stuff.
        
               | thaumasiotes wrote:
               | You think pirating videos will raise your electric bill
               | by $25 / month?
        
         | barbazoo wrote:
         | And it doesn't even reflect availability outside the US it
         | seems as my Netflix catalog does't have some of the seasons
         | that list says it should.
        
         | aucisson_masque wrote:
         | Holy mother of God, that's insanity. How could someone come up
         | with that and get it approved is beyond human understanding.
        
         | SllX wrote:
         | The problem with Pokemon isn't that it's fragmented across
         | streaming services, it's the anime itself where by Advanced
         | you're getting enough of the same formulaic bullshit it can
         | drive even a kid crazy. I was that kid.
         | 
         | Except for some slight deviations, such as the beginning of
         | Best Wishes (Black & White), you can put on a sequence of any
         | 10 episodes from any season and it doesn't matter what
         | streaming service it's on. By the end of the episode, Team
         | Rocket is blasting off again.
        
         | kmac_ wrote:
         | Well, "Gotta Subscribe 'Em All!"
        
         | charcircuit wrote:
         | >More fragmented Prime Video has it all which doesn't sound
         | fragmented to me. It seems Prime Video is for old seasons and
         | other services are fine for watching the current iteration of
         | the show.
        
       | jihadjihad wrote:
       | My thing is that we are expected to pay in perpetuity for the
       | privilege of accessing content. It's rent, and it is just
       | tiresome.
       | 
       | Yes I understand that we have content available on far more
       | devices than 30 years ago, when all we had was the TV in the
       | living room. But should I have to pay in perpetuity to show my
       | kids Moana?
        
         | massysett wrote:
         | No. Go buy a Moana DVD. USD 9.99.
         | 
         | https://www.amazon.com/Moana-Ron-Clements/dp/B01MAZGH7Z/ref=...
        
           | masfuerte wrote:
           | In the UK you can get it second-hand, including postage, for
           | PS2.07. And it's been expertly refurbished!
           | 
           | https://www.ebay.co.uk/itm/292095014239
        
           | system2 wrote:
           | It is easier to download from a torrent or illegally stream.
        
             | massysett wrote:
             | What a surprise, it's easier to steal than to pay content
             | creators. (I know, someone will now chime in and say it
             | isn't really stealing, etc etc.)
             | 
             | Actually I disagree though. Software and UX for torrenting
             | is a pain. It's easier to buy a $10 DVD.
        
               | alt227 wrote:
               | > What a surprise, it's easier to steal than to pay
               | content creators.
               | 
               | They make it this way.
               | 
               | Buying a second hand DVD does not give any money to
               | content creators, and I still get to watch the movie.
        
               | tick_tock_tick wrote:
               | > Actually I disagree though. Software and UX for
               | torrenting is a pain. It's easier to buy a $10 DVD.
               | 
               | You probably haven't checked back in in the last 5-10
               | year then. Honestly the UX is almost too good.
        
         | beoberha wrote:
         | Almost every digital movie provider has a rental option. Moana
         | on Prime Video is 3.99 to rent.
        
       | sunrunner wrote:
       | "Piracy is almost always a service problem and not a pricing
       | problem" -- Gabe Newell [1]
       | 
       | And I think he was largely correct, although the term _service_
       | seems like it now has to do a lot of heavy lifting as it now
       | encompasses:
       | 
       | - Availability by Company
       | 
       | - Availability by Global Region
       | 
       | - Stream Quality
       | 
       | - Advert Policy (why does the lowest tier need to be ad
       | supported? What am I paying for aside from being upsold?)
       | 
       | - Quality and availability of captions, audio description and any
       | other media accessibility options
       | 
       | [1] https://www.escapistmagazine.com/valves-gabe-newell-says-
       | pir...
        
         | hungmung wrote:
         | It's almost like the corporate culture of being a bunch of
         | greedy control freaks will push customers away when they have
         | an alternative.
        
         | kashunstva wrote:
         | > service problem and not a pricing problem
         | 
         | Indeed. Recently we purchased season 1 of a reasonably popular
         | U.S. produced show via Apple TV. When played, it is available
         | only in dubbed French in our region (Canada.) None of the info
         | available beforehand said anything about this. Guess where I
         | obtained the subsequent seasons? I will pay for content but not
         | if you lie, or make me jump through ridiculous hoops.
        
           | netsharc wrote:
           | That reminds me of some passengers I sat on a flight next to
           | once.. they tried to watch something on their iPad, but
           | because we were about to depart from a country foreign to
           | theirs, it got region-blocked...
           | 
           | Not that I pitied them, they were obnoxiously late and
           | boarded with 5 bags (the stiff rectangular bags boutique
           | stores have) of shopping...
        
           | interestica wrote:
           | In a weird quirk that must be a bug, you can watch the first
           | season of the Good Place in French in the USA but not in
           | Canada.
        
         | mvdtnz wrote:
         | That quote is literally in the article you didn't read.
        
         | mattbee wrote:
         | Absolutely right!
         | 
         | A week ago I downloaded a couple of movies and shows from
         | Netflix for my 6yo daughter, to watch on a 3hr flight. Worked
         | nicely!
         | 
         | Today we made the return flight. She opens Netflix, and  2/3
         | of the films have now "expired" with no notice and she can't
         | watch the one she wanted.
         | 
         | For the next flight I'll remember to pirate!
        
           | do_not_redeem wrote:
           | Getting 'em started early. You arr a great dad!
        
           | snailmailman wrote:
           | I tried to download something from Netflix recently. The
           | download wouldn't process. It got stuck partway. Not an
           | issue, I'll just delete it and redownload.
           | 
           | Nope. There's a limit to the number of downloads on some
           | content. I wasted mine trying to get the download to even
           | work.
        
           | pi-rat wrote:
           | I remember a few years ago when our niece came to visit. One
           | evening, we started watching a movie on Netflix together.
           | 
           | We only made it halfway before bedtime, but since she was
           | coming back in two weeks, we decided to save the rest for her
           | next visit.
           | 
           | Two weeks later, she returned, bouncing with excitement to
           | finally see how the story ended. We opened Netflix, ready to
           | hit play - and lo and behold... the movie had vanished from
           | the catalog.
           | 
           | Be a cool uncle, be a pirate.
        
         | Ferret7446 wrote:
         | Why make it complicated? Service means the user experience. If
         | the user needs to do anything other than click pay click play,
         | you done goofed, simple as that.
        
         | ta1243 wrote:
         | I cancelled prime when they told me they were putting adverts
         | on
         | 
         | Went to resubscribe, no option given for no adverts, no money
         | from me.
        
           | WD-42 wrote:
           | This is what did it for me too. Why would I pay for a crappy
           | UX and ads? But all these companies need numbers to keep
           | going up, so they keep tightening the screws.
        
         | 6thbit wrote:
         | Love how this same quote was used in celebration of streaming
         | back in Netflix's early days as the solution, and now to show
         | the new industry found on those very same ideas as the problem.
        
         | HDThoreaun wrote:
         | Service problems are usually pricing problems. Advert policy is
         | because people refuse to pay more so to make more money they
         | put in ads. Fragmentation by content/region is also because
         | each service is trying to spend as little as possible on
         | content. If you want to watch unlock video content youd have to
         | pay $100+ a month and people refuse to do that.
        
         | cchance wrote:
         | Yes but price has also become a huge part of it netflix raised
         | prices like 5 times in 1 year lol
        
         | JamesSwift wrote:
         | Ehh, while I agree its 70% about having a way more user-
         | friendly experience, theres still 30% which is that the content
         | needs to justify the price. And HBO and Netflix have missed
         | that mark in my opinion.
         | 
         | I cancelled HBO after their price increase a year or two ago
         | after being pretty happy with their service for a long time
         | (though also the service quality had gotten worse). Too many
         | people share my netflix for me to cancel it.
        
         | nlawalker wrote:
         | _> "Piracy is almost always a service problem and not a pricing
         | problem"_
         | 
         | Maybe so, but if media companies invested in fixing the service
         | problems, the pricing problems would remain, and those keep
         | people away just as effectively, so they're not going to do it.
         | 
         | People don't want to pay what the media companies want to
         | charge, at any level of service.
        
           | area51org wrote:
           | Not necessarily true, as the success of streaming shows. The
           | problem comes when the unbounded greed of the billionaires in
           | charge leads them to inflate prices beyond their customers'
           | ability and willingness to pay.
        
       | duxup wrote:
       | I think a lot of the services competed themselves into a pricing
       | corner with low subscription costs.
       | 
       | Now the audience is used to that pricing and doesn't like pricing
       | relative to the price of the content.
        
       | crinkly wrote:
       | Screw streaming. I bought a smart TV a few years back. Services
       | discontinued within 3 years. No external commercial streaming
       | boxes work because of HDCP issues. Back to piracy until the TV
       | gives up. Streamers and smart TV people, you had your chance and
       | you blew it. I'm not paying through the nose any more.
        
       | ModernMech wrote:
       | Yeah, because you pay for the thing and you _still_ can 't watch
       | it!
       | 
       | Last year they brought Andor to Hulu and every time I played it
       | on my brand new LG TV, the video would be completely green while
       | I could hear the audio underneath. It only happened to Andor
       | because apparently they had some super special DRM, which
       | ostensibly would restrict people who weren't authorized from
       | viewing it, but had the effect of also preventing authorized
       | people from viewing as well. So in the end, they can't even
       | satisfy willing customers who have their wallets open. Of course
       | they're going to turn to piracy.
       | 
       | Of course, the rights holders got my money and as far as they're
       | concerned, their DRM move was great for the bottom line.
        
         | y-curious wrote:
         | Fwiw the LG operating system kind of sucks. I got an Apple TV
         | and it's been infinitely better. Paramount Plus was wholly
         | unusable on the TV
        
           | Marsymars wrote:
           | I haven't bothered checking, but I assume the hardware sucks
           | too - I'd expect the Apple TV SOC to be like an order of
           | magnitude faster than any smart TV.
        
       | buyucu wrote:
       | Having multiple streaming accounts just to watch a couple of
       | shows I like is such an unnecessary hassle. It's much more easier
       | just to pirate.
        
       | godzillabrennus wrote:
       | I started buying Blu-ray discs and ripping them to my computer,
       | where I run Plex. Why? I had a long-time subscription to HBO Max,
       | but a few years ago, I went to watch Westworld, and it was gone
       | from HBO. I ended up buying a season on Apple for the price of a
       | monthly subscription to HBO. I cancelled my HBO subscription. I
       | realized that second-hand Blu-ray discs of shows were selling for
       | dirt cheap. I spent $40 to buy the rest of the seasons of
       | Westworld on Blu-ray.
       | 
       | Clearly, new shows aren't getting Blu-ray releases, so this won't
       | work for you if you care about new shows. My wife and I are so
       | over the dystopian view from modern science fiction that we
       | started focusing on shows from the late 1900s (80s/90s) to get
       | more of a positive outlook from our entertainment. We are now
       | going through Stargate SG-1.
        
         | themafia wrote:
         | Are you over 40?
         | 
         | I ask because I'm over 40 and I've had enough of this too.
         | 
         | Also check out cafedvd.com.
        
           | turnsout wrote:
           | Same. I'm 45 and lately I've been thinking about picking up a
           | Blu-ray player. Not a drive to rip discs--a player to hook up
           | to my TV. It's definitely an elder millennial thing, but I
           | just want to own a physical copy of the movie and not have to
           | worry about where it's streaming or whether the one I
           | "bought" on iTunes has been quietly swapped for another
           | version.
           | 
           | The sad thing is, I don't think Blu-ray is long for this
           | world. But I at least want plastic copies of the classic
           | movies I know I'll go back to.
        
         | zten wrote:
         | Sucks that the Blu-ray experience is dreadful for 4K content.
         | You've gotta find specific Blu-ray drives with specific
         | firmware versions to do rips, or watch on a PlayStation or
         | similar locked-down console. There isn't even a non-pirate way
         | to watch on a laptop or desktop anymore since Intel SGX is
         | dead.
        
         | rubyn00bie wrote:
         | There are quite a few devices these days that'll allow you to
         | capture streams by stripping HDCP so you can at least record it
         | instead of having the service put it in "the vault," to appease
         | some bozo in a suit.
         | 
         | I have been trying to put my data hoarding data days behind me,
         | but like the article, I'm being pushed back that direction.
         | Doubly so since I use Linux and they restrict quality to 1080p.
         | The only thing preventing me from it right now is a lack of a
         | computer/server with ECC support (so I can run ZFS). Though
         | encrypting a bunch of data and archiving it into Amazon Glacier
         | seems more and more reasonable as time goes on.
        
         | NitpickLawyer wrote:
         | > I went to watch Westworld, and it was gone from HBO.
         | 
         | Wait, isn't that their own IP? I get shows not running on 3rd
         | party streaming services due to IP rights and stuff, but
         | how/why would they be in a position to not stream their own
         | IP?! That's like going to Netflix and not being able to see
         | Stranger Things. It's insane!
        
       | o0banky0o wrote:
       | A useful distinction is that upload is piracy and download is
       | not.
        
         | AndyKelley wrote:
         | True pirates maintain > 1.0 ratio
        
         | bee_rider wrote:
         | Neither is piracy, it is just unauthorized copying and sharing.
        
           | IshKebab wrote:
           | > unauthorized copying and sharing
           | 
           | Which is known in English as "piracy".
        
       | aggregator-ios wrote:
       | The streaming landscape is now terrible and no different than the
       | incumbent CATV providers that it sought to replace. In 2011,
       | streaming services were the hotness because CATV subscriptions
       | were expensive. In 2011, people were subscribing to 1-2 or 2-3
       | services because they were all less than $10USD/month. That was
       | still 10x cheaper than the alternative.
       | 
       | However, 15 years later, those numbers exceed or are the same as
       | CATV costs combined with all the streaming/smart device
       | headaches.
       | 
       | All we did was change the pipe. The providers didn't change
       | except for consolidation and erosion of policy, both of which
       | lead to worse outcomes for consumers.
        
       | monster_truck wrote:
       | I was trying to watch The Big Short the other night, after
       | checking 7 streaming websites I came to my senses and downloaded
       | the 4k rip off the pirate bay
       | 
       | I was trying to put on a show for background noise this morning.
       | Just two nights ago I was able to sign in with my cable provider
       | and watch it. Now it's telling me there's a network (as in the
       | channel the network is on) authorization error, customer support
       | can't tell me why it doesn't work and they are not authorized to
       | issue me a credit.
       | 
       | So I pirated that too.
       | 
       | And what the fuck is up with Netflix? Why do I have to install a
       | browser extension to hide the games? I don't want games I want to
       | watch The Big Short.
        
         | theoreticalmal wrote:
         | Fantastic movie by the way. Worth rewatching a couple of times
        
         | barbazoo wrote:
         | They are innovating where no innovation is necessary. And in
         | the process they are making everything more shitty. Why change
         | the UI every couple of months. It's fine, it's a UI for a media
         | catalog, it's not rocket science. Why not work with other
         | companies to collaborate and create a unified way to search
         | catalogs but no that would be good for the consumer. Greed is
         | an ugly thing.
        
       | maxglute wrote:
       | I spent last few days chasing down a Bravo/peacock show from
       | outside the US trying to watch legally, only to find it on
       | watchseries and realize how good the experience has gotten. It's
       | not even released on torrents or nzb. Watchseries UI is kind of
       | peak now. Nuts. Does anyone know how Watchseries manage to stay
       | up?
        
         | Yokolos wrote:
         | It's been taken down plenty of times. They just host a mirror
         | somewhere else under a new TLD.
        
       | taraindara wrote:
       | I still have streaming services, mostly because my family uses
       | them. I'm slowly getting back into the self hosted ways. But it's
       | also pushing me to just stop watching altogether. I'm finding
       | better ways to spend my time than in front of a tv. Or rather, I
       | guess I'm spending it more behind a computer screen. Haha
        
       | dilDDoS wrote:
       | I actually think pirating encourages a healthier approach to
       | watching TV/movies. I've fully made the switch to pirating
       | instead of subscribing to any streaming services, and it's led to
       | me thinking more critically about what I want to spend time
       | downloading and watching rather than just flipping mindlessly
       | through endless amounts of readily available garbage on a
       | streaming service.
       | 
       | I do still have Kanopy though, which is great for me but
       | obviously depends on your library.
        
         | bhaney wrote:
         | Not always. Now I just flip mindlessly through endless amounts
         | of readily available garbage on my jellyfin server instead.
        
         | galleywest200 wrote:
         | Why not purchase the discs and copy them yourself? At least
         | artists can get paid that way.
        
           | yunwal wrote:
           | Most shows don't get a dvd release anymore.
        
             | tstrimple wrote:
             | And then sometimes you have to deal with a bunch of
             | bullshit changes because of music licensing or something.
        
         | tick_tock_tick wrote:
         | Ehh sounds like an automation issue. Buy another hard-drive and
         | just have everything new auto download.
        
         | Akronymus wrote:
         | For me, I only seek out media I plan to actually watch. Rather
         | than flipping through what is available and choosing from
         | there. Currently it is stargate sg1/atlantis what I am
         | watching.
         | 
         | Also, a lot of movies/series are only available dubbed here. (I
         | really effing hate "Sie" in dubbed media. So much so, that it's
         | one of the major reasons I go for subbed in english, at most)
        
       | bawolff wrote:
       | Black markets are usually the result of failed markets, and i
       | think its no different here. Copyright is a monopoly so there is
       | no competition. Sure different streaming services compete with
       | each other, but they essentially sell different products. It'd be
       | like if only one resturant was allowed to sell hamburgers. There
       | might be other resturants but they arent really in direct
       | competition.
        
         | RajT88 wrote:
         | The streaming services are relying on enforcement to preserve
         | their business model.
         | 
         | This only works as long as there's no other nations with
         | significant digital infrastructure that can be used for VPN
         | egress points who don't care a whole lot about US copyright
         | enforcement (or copyright enforcement in general).
         | 
         | Our government just pissed off a lot of other governments.
         | Enforcement is good within the US, but not outside, even
         | nations which the US has a lot of control over.
        
       | lackoftactics wrote:
       | It's no longer as convenient with dozens of streaming services;
       | the streaming bitrate is also subpar, and audio is compressed to
       | the point it feels flat. If you want to be mindful about what you
       | are watching, it will be really hard with Netflix, Prime, and
       | Disney compared to your own media server. When I had a streaming
       | subscription, I was constantly shocked by what was popular in
       | Poland and what people were watching. It took me some time to
       | accept that I am not their target audience.
        
         | eastbound wrote:
         | The quality of shows is also subpar. And there aren't many
         | shows on Netflix at a given time: Probably 80 things to watch,
         | all categories included (with 70% of overlap in content).
        
       | pmdr wrote:
       | Is it? NFLX is at an all-time high right now.
        
       | YesBox wrote:
       | Tip: Watch Cartoons Online (search it)
       | 
       | Great place to stream cartoons and anime for free, no account. It
       | feels like they have almost everything, as I found anime as far
       | back as the 1970s on there.
       | 
       | When I discovered Food Wars was split between two streaming
       | platforms, I hoisted the sails.
        
       | dabber21 wrote:
       | Instead of making their shows exclusive they should make them
       | time exclusive (1 year?) then sell a license
        
       | codedokode wrote:
       | When billion dollar companies, which are praised and supported by
       | governments, download pirated material and do not pay, why should
       | ordinary people restrain themselves and pay? I cannot see how one
       | can make moral arguments against piracy now. It makes no sense to
       | pay if others are not paying and not punished for it. People also
       | have a right to train their real neural network for free without
       | paying.
        
         | RajT88 wrote:
         | The film and music industries really shot themselves in the
         | foot when they got a tax on recordable media introduced in
         | Canada.
         | 
         | OK, CD-R's and flash memory cost a bunch more now. Streaming is
         | legal, because customers already paid the record companies for
         | their music they downloaded and put on that media.
         | 
         | At least, someone explained this was the current state of
         | Canadian law ~10 years back when I first visited.
        
           | codedokode wrote:
           | Tax on recordable media is unfair because honest people who
           | don't pirate anything also have to pay. As with the case
           | above, honest people get screwed the most.
        
             | Gud wrote:
             | Nothing dishonest with pirating. You wouldn't download a
             | car? Well I would.
        
               | wubrr wrote:
               | I can't believe people still fall for the 'piracy bad'
               | propaganda in 2025
        
           | Levitz wrote:
           | This is basically the case right now in Spain.
           | 
           | We pay a tax on every piece of recordable media (don't think
           | it's only SD cards or hard drives, it applies to phones,
           | laptops, mp3 players, ebooks, even smartwatches). In
           | exchange, sharing media for personal use is legal, and P2P is
           | sharing media.
           | 
           | Doesn't stop corporations from trying to scare people off and
           | complaining about piracy though of course.
        
         | imglorp wrote:
         | Plus the idea that if you pay someone to "purchase" and "own"
         | (their terms!!) content, then it's yours forever. Unless, of
         | course, they renegotiate something upstream and subsequently
         | remove the content from your "library" or your device. Or
         | perhaps they lock you out of those things altogether. This
         | means it wasn't ownership, it was subscription.
         | 
         | So as they say, "if buying isn't owning, pirating isn't
         | stealing."
         | 
         | https://doctorow.medium.com/https-pluralistic-net-2023-12-08...
        
           | bsimpson wrote:
           | Stealing is when you take something from him, and he no
           | longer has the thing you took.
           | 
           | Piracy is when you see something for free that everyone else
           | paid money for. You watching doesn't prevent anyone else from
           | watching.
           | 
           | Piracy isn't stealing: piracy only deals in intangibles.
           | Stealing is for finite goods.
           | 
           | There's a whole "how do we pay to make stuff if people can
           | watch for free" argument around piracy, but it's
           | fundamentally a different thing than stealing.
        
         | wubrr wrote:
         | There were never any good moral arguments against digital
         | 'piracy' to begin with.
        
           | nh23423fefe wrote:
           | Your ignorance and weak dismissals aren't evidence of
           | absence.
        
         | bsimpson wrote:
         | I was in film school in the 00s, when the media companies were
         | in the news for trying to bankrupt the families of high
         | schoolers to make a point that piracy is bad. This was the "you
         | wouldn't download a car" era, when they tried to redefine
         | "stealing" to include piracy.
         | 
         | The executives of these companies would come speak to our class
         | in the evenings. I didn't even bother counting the number of
         | times one of them would be making elated chitchat before/after
         | class about how he had just been on some flight and watched
         | some series on his iPod. On the one hand, everyone is just
         | people. The people at the heads of film studios are also out of
         | touch grandparents whose grandkids show them how to use modern
         | tech over the holidays.
         | 
         | But it was pretty disgusting to see the people in charge of the
         | companies that were trying to ruin people's lives over
         | widespread behavior, themselves participating in that behavior,
         | and with no sense of irony or remorse. It never occurred to
         | them that the thing they were doing in their personal lives is
         | the same thing they were vilifying in their professional ones.
        
       | parpfish wrote:
       | i wish we could go back to a pre-streaming version of netflix.
       | 
       | the near-infinite library and lack of algorithmic nudging
       | resulted in an era where i had healthy view habits. reasonable
       | levels of screentime and VERY diverse content.
       | 
       | i add so many movies to my queue with the best intentions of
       | watching them someday, but always put them off because something
       | about staring at that endless scroll of options makes me crave
       | something light and simple.
       | 
       | the disk-in-the-mail era was "remember that three-hour subtitled
       | classic film you always said you should watch but haven't? well,
       | today's the day you're watching it." and i always ended up being
       | glad i did.
       | 
       | the streaming era is "ugh, i don't have the mental bandwidth to
       | watch that three hour thing that's been on my queue forever. lets
       | just rewatch some background content to zone out" and i always
       | lament wasting hours of my life in front of the screen.
        
         | shoelessone wrote:
         | I relate to this. Also, I am not the best person in the world,
         | but recently this hit the point where I decided because of
         | these very same thoughts + nudging from my much better partner
         | to donate to NPR, to cancel Netflix and move that money to NPR.
         | Now no more Netflix, which is sort of a relief in ways, and I
         | have to be more intentional about what I download / consume.
        
         | bkettle wrote:
         | I was wondering recently whether someone could conceivably
         | start a disk-in-the-mail Netflix again, now that streaming
         | sucks so much and every publisher seems to want their own
         | streaming service. My understanding (possibly wrong, I'm not an
         | expert) is that it's perfectly legal to lend out physical media
         | without any special permission from the publisher under the
         | first-sale doctrine, so it seems like the only way to build a
         | library that has content from many different publishers.
         | 
         | (of course, this could only work as long as publishers keep
         | producing physical media)
        
           | piffey wrote:
           | Scarecrow Video does this in Seattle. Their library is
           | amazing.
           | 
           | https://scarecrowvideo.org/rent-by-mail
        
       | Animats wrote:
       | We need to shorten copyright just so that the classics stay
       | available online.
       | 
       | 50 years from first publication. No more.
        
         | loughnane wrote:
         | I agree no more. If I had to pick a perfect number I'd probably
         | go to 25 or 30
        
         | interestica wrote:
         | I think we have it backwards by attaching it to the life/death
         | of the _creator_ (or the works' creation). People should be
         | alive to experience the works they _consumed_ in new and open
         | ways. Creation doesn't happen in a vacuum. It builds on the
         | collective works. There's no point in a work becoming public
         | domain if no one is alive from the time when it first had an
         | impact on culture. Seniors should be freely able to listen to
         | access the culture of their youth and experience it in new
         | modified ways without restriction.
         | 
         | 15 years or less from the date of first public consumption.
        
       | _0ffh wrote:
       | It's nice to see some good news now and then.
        
       | singingwolfboy wrote:
       | https://archive.ph/Q9lvm
        
       | system2 wrote:
       | Luckily search engines like Yandex.com provide the easiest way to
       | find unusual streaming sites. Using AdBlock saves us from the
       | pop-ups and weird ads. If Netflix goes back to $9 per month with
       | every show in existence, I will reconsider them. Until then,
       | these streaming sites will continue to exist and thrive.
        
       | billy99k wrote:
       | I suppose you can't really complain when big tech pirates your IP
       | to be used with AI.
        
       | hk1337 wrote:
       | As with most things, I think we leaned in too hard to streaming
       | services.
       | 
       | Part of the appeal of streaming services back then was being able
       | to cherry pick what you wanted so you only paid for what you
       | actually wanted to watched.
       | 
       | Because of how fragmented all the shows are, people sign up for
       | multiple streaming services just to watch the shows the want to
       | watch, and then wish for everything to be bundled
       | together...again. Also, each streaming service charges a hefty
       | premium compared to what you're actually getting, so it's not as
       | worth the money.
        
       | slybot wrote:
       | Recently, I also switched to Jellyfin. I still have access to
       | Netflix and Disney through family plan. The service problem was
       | the quality issue. I have the Ultra plan's while Netflix keep
       | pushing SD (due to Widevine certificates). Simply cannot stand
       | watching 480p on WQHD+ screen. For the content I have legitimate
       | access, but cannot get good service, I don't consider it
       | pirating.
        
       | tlogan wrote:
       | I just want to give one more example. I wanted to watch "Just
       | Beyond" (2021 Disney), but it's impossible to find anywhere. So
       | what am I supposed to do?
        
       | bee_rider wrote:
       | I know this is pedantic but it is so annoying: downloading shows
       | is not piracy. It is totally nuts to conflate unauthorized
       | copying and sharing with the violent act of going on somebody's
       | boat and killing/threatening them until you loot their stuff.
       | 
       | Calling it piracy was funny during the early Internet when it was
       | all pirate and ninja memes. But really letting them conflate this
       | very minor crime with violence was a big propaganda loss.
        
         | wrasee wrote:
         | Some words are overload with more than one meaning. That's
         | like, a thing in many languages.
        
         | layer8 wrote:
         | You are a couple of centuries late:
         | https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copyright_infringement#%22Pira...
        
         | IshKebab wrote:
         | You're not being pedantic, you're being wrong.
        
         | opan wrote:
         | Agreed. I do my part to avoid using the word at least since
         | seeing it on gnu's words-to-avoid page several years ago.
         | 
         | https://www.gnu.org/philosophy/words-to-avoid.html#Piracy
         | 
         | I don't usually get too many weird looks with "unauthorized
         | copying".
        
       | ratelimitsteve wrote:
       | I pay for a pirate streaming site. It's nice, it has everything,
       | it works, nothing ever gets memory-holed, I don't ever have to
       | sign up for a different service to watch something because it got
       | swapped in the middle of my binge, what I can watch doesn't
       | depend on where they guess I am, I can access over a VPN, they
       | have a support staff that actually listens to me and implements
       | features users ask for, and I can download things to watch later
       | drm-free. This isn't a money problem, as evidenced by the fact
       | that I pay to steal. It's a product problem. I pay for this
       | because their product is better and I want it to continue to
       | exist.
        
       | WrongOnInternet wrote:
       | I've always chosen piracy for the privacy. I don't need a bunch
       | of services building a profile on my viewing habits and tastes,
       | then sharing that data with other businesses and governments. If
       | I want a recommendation, I'll ask a friend, not an algorithm.
        
         | loughnane wrote:
         | This to me is the biggest feature I'd love to see in paid
         | services. It skeeves me out to know that everything I watch or
         | listen to is recorded.
         | 
         | That and owning the media.
        
       | seany wrote:
       | Back?
        
       | ryandrake wrote:
       | Piracy offers:
       | 
       | 1. Unrestricted access to an absolutely huge library of movies,
       | music and TV shows, nearly unlimited. Certainly not limited by
       | opaque "licensing deals" between various companies.
       | 
       | 2. Highest resolution/bitrate/quality that was available at the
       | time of the work's original release.
       | 
       | 3. No arbitrary device/OS limitations.
       | 
       | 4. Can watch/listen/download from any location on earth with
       | sufficient bandwidth.
       | 
       | I didn't even mention that it's free or that there are no ads,
       | because that's pretty much the least important attribute to me.
       | If any company came out with a service that offered those four
       | points, I'd probably be willing to pay a lot for it. How much?
       | Who knows, we don't know how much this is worth because nobody is
       | even trying to offer it.
        
         | galleywest200 wrote:
         | Physical media offers the first three, but not option four.
         | 
         | I, too, would pay per show/movie to download and save DRM-free
         | videos to my own drives.
        
           | yunwal wrote:
           | Physical media has arbitrary device limitations.
        
             | black_puppydog wrote:
             | and arent' there retro-active device blocklists on bluray?
             | I seem to recall sth of the sort. Sure, they can be
             | circumvented, but then why bother buying in the first place
             | if you're gonna be the bad guy anyhow?
        
           | noselasd wrote:
           | It fails on all of them if it's not available to purchase,
           | and none of them are of relevance if I want it right now vs
           | having to wait 1-7 days to get hold of that physical copy and
           | there's an easier alternative where I can have it right now.
        
             | MrGilbert wrote:
             | The elder might remember a time where you could drive to a
             | place and rent physical copies of a movie.
             | 
             | But of course, these places dried out a long time ago.
        
               | wingworks wrote:
               | In NZ we have aliceinvideoland.co.nz which overnights you
               | x DVDs. They have a pretty extensive library and a lot of
               | lesser known and local content.
               | 
               | I used them for a few years, they are great and I'm happy
               | to see they're still around.
        
         | wrasee wrote:
         | Supply and demand might argue that if there was real demand for
         | something like this that people were actually willing to pay a
         | lot of money for, then the market would be all too happy to
         | provide.
         | 
         | I think the inconvenient truth here is that when anyone has got
         | close to doing such a thing the price has been high enough that
         | it turns out nobody actually turns up to pay for it, not at
         | least outside a small niche.
        
           | franciscop wrote:
           | IMHO not really, supply here is the limiting factor since the
           | constrain is in licensing the work. The goal of the right
           | holders is not to maximize access to the work or those stated
           | by OP, but to maximize profit for the company, which when at
           | odds with those other goals still prevails.
           | 
           | e.g. someone calculated/believes that having a big catalog
           | from Disney at X/month is more worth more for Disney than
           | sublicensing to Netflix at Y/month.
        
             | phkahler wrote:
             | >> having a big catalog from Disney at X/month is more
             | worth more for Disney than sublicensing to Netflix at
             | Y/month.
             | 
             | But sometimes that leads to really stupid things. At one
             | time all Star Trek TV shows were on Paramount while all the
             | movies were only on Max. I believe they're all owned by
             | Paramount, but apparently the shoes are the big draw (the
             | new series "Picard" was exclusively on Paramount) and they
             | could get more profit by putting the movies elsewhere and
             | collecting a bit more than if it were all on their service.
             | GAK!
        
             | l72 wrote:
             | I really wish we had laws that producers of content cannot
             | also be distributors. That just creates perverse incentives
             | to use content to lock people into their distribution
             | platform.
             | 
             | If they had to be separate, that gives content producers
             | the ability to cross license and those licenses to be
             | better deals. We'd actually have competition in
             | distribution companies as distribution providers would then
             | be competing on price, quality, convenience, and other
             | things that matter, not locking content away.
        
               | thaumasiotes wrote:
               | > I really wish we had laws that producers of content
               | cannot also be distributors.
               | 
               | We have laws like that for beer and cars, and they're
               | disasters in both cases.
               | 
               | Why would we want to implement an incredibly stupid idea
               | a third time?
        
             | wrasee wrote:
             | Yes I considered the same but decided to keep the point
             | simple.
             | 
             | And I still can't help but think that if there really was a
             | large market of people willing to pay a premium for a more
             | permissive access model then we might already see trends in
             | this direction. My hunch is the most folk don't really care
             | and price remains the dominant factor.
             | 
             | The essential point of the article was that it's higher
             | prices that's pushing people towards piracy (either through
             | price rises or fragmented subscriptions). It wasn't that it
             | is the restrictive streaming model that is pushing people
             | towards piracy.
             | 
             | I'm fact it was precisely this restrictive streaming model
             | that was the one to finally beat piracy. At low prices,
             | that's already been proven and it's higher prices that is
             | brining piracy back.
        
               | wrasee wrote:
               | Unpopular opinion here but I wonder how much of the
               | justification for piracy in this thread, broadly around
               | what is perceived to be unfair business practices ("if
               | only the terms were fairer and I would pay"), would
               | actually stand up if the terms were actually fairer but
               | the prices higher.
               | 
               | Or how much is really just the simple rational economic
               | idea that piracy is better value for money.
        
               | cyberax wrote:
               | I personally buy physical media (BluRays and/or DVDs).
               | But I often feel too lazy to deal with the content
               | ripping, so I just download it.
               | 
               | I like Youtube Premium and I'm gladly paying for it,
               | although I'm considering switching to an alternative
               | YouTube client because the official YT App is crap. But
               | then the creators will lose income from my subscription.
               | 
               | Sigh. I wish content providers just gave us API to get
               | the content in exchange for payment.
        
           | sneak wrote:
           | Nah; copyright is a monopoly on specific media/titles. It
           | breaks all of the "market willing to provide" mechanics
           | because there is no free market for Star Wars, it's Disney or
           | FOAD.
           | 
           | Pray they do not alter it further.
        
             | CivBase wrote:
             | Bingo. When distributors get exclusive rights to media,
             | there is no competition anymore. You either do whatever the
             | publisher wants, pirate, or go without.
        
               | area51org wrote:
               | The aggravating part about this: that was not the
               | intention of the copyright clause. "To promote the
               | Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for
               | limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive
               | Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries."
               | 
               | Authors and inventors. Authors and inventors.
               | 
               | Not companies. Not entities, or even individuals, who
               | purchased the "rights" and now "own" works. That has
               | nothing to do with the intent here, which was to
               | encourage actual authors and inventors to make more
               | stuff. Walt Disney has been gone for more than half a
               | century; he's not going to be able to come up with
               | another Mickey Mouse.
               | 
               | "Intellectual property" is an oxymoron. Pray, tell me,
               | which part of my brain does Disney own? Do they own the
               | part that knows what Mickey Mouse looks like?
        
           | l72 wrote:
           | You have to have real options or people can't make informed
           | decisions.
           | 
           | I have a background in city planning, and in the US, you'll
           | constantly hear about how trying to make cities more friendly
           | to pedestrians, bicycles, or public transit is a waste
           | because no one uses it. But the truth is, most people will
           | end up using the system you design. If you build a system
           | just for cars, people will use cars. If you build a city
           | around public transportation, people will happily use it. If
           | you build a walkable city, people will walk.
        
             | brailsafe wrote:
             | Great analogy. I'm visiting a particularly car-centric city
             | atm, and from the car driver's perspective, "nobody uses
             | the bike lanes, I never see them, so why build them, it
             | constrains traffic". Well ya, there's so much car traffic
             | because it's car-first, and nobody wants to be around tons
             | of cars, not even people in cars. It's like arguing that
             | you never see cyclists on the freeway, therefore nobody
             | likes biking and we should discourage it.
        
             | cyberax wrote:
             | > If you build a walkable city, people will walk.
             | 
             | No, they won't. If you build a walkable city and then make
             | it impossible to do anything else, then people will walk.
             | 
             | It's a subtle difference, but it's there.
        
           | hxtk wrote:
           | Streaming services were great back when they were separate
           | from content producers and IP holders.
           | 
           | Once every media company became a streaming company and
           | started using anticompetitive licensing practices in an
           | attempt to drive viewership to their own platforms, the
           | market fractured too much for it to be profitable.
           | 
           | Something smells "prisoner's dilemma" about it: the best move
           | for any individual streaming service is to have exclusive
           | content (and the best-positioned players to do that are the
           | studios), but when everyone does that, it decreases the
           | overall profit available in the market more than it increases
           | their slice of the pie.
        
             | jacobgkau wrote:
             | > more than it increases their slice of the pie.
             | 
             | That's the part that might not be true, unfortunately. If
             | each individual content producer sees more return on their
             | own streaming service than they did sharing revenue from
             | one of the independent services, then that's better for
             | them, even if the total pie got smaller. If that wasn't the
             | case, you'd think we'd see some of them shut their services
             | down and go back to independent services once their income
             | drops.
             | 
             | Sacrificing a wide audience to extract more from the most
             | dedicated portion of the fanbase isn't an entirely new
             | concept, and it financially makes sense short-term (until
             | you start losing some of those dedicated fans over time and
             | don't have the mindshare outside your bubble to attract new
             | ones).
        
           | Levitz wrote:
           | Supply and demand rules go out the window when the product is
           | infinitely replicable.
        
         | 8fingerlouie wrote:
         | >I didn't even mention that it's free or that there are no ads
         | 
         | It's free in the same way shoplifting is free, until you get
         | caught. You are very much in violation of copyright laws if you
         | pirate.
        
           | kaliqt wrote:
           | Only consequences, physically speaking the two are not the
           | same at all.
           | 
           | Copying of anything digital is not actual theft, nor will it
           | ever be.
        
             | ryandrake wrote:
             | "You wouldn't download a car!"
             | 
             | Wait, I absolutely would download a car if I could... or
             | food... or clothing... I'd download the shit out of
             | physical goods if the technology existed. Who wouldn't? You
             | could solve scarcity. If we had Star Trek Replicators, we'd
             | be living in a literal utopia.
        
               | jiggawatts wrote:
               | Thanks to 3D printing this is starting to become reality
               | and not just science fiction.
        
               | cammikebrown wrote:
               | The "download" catchphrase is a joke, it was originally
               | "You wouldn't steal a car", which I'd argue is true for
               | most people.
        
             | robertoandred wrote:
             | Do you sneak into concerts or hop turnstiles too?
        
             | nh23423fefe wrote:
             | no true scotsman
             | 
             | wordsmithing on theft is the only defense thieves have
        
           | hbn wrote:
           | If buying things at the store was as painful as watching
           | stuff on streaming services, and shoplifting was as low risk
           | as torrenting, and my stealing an item didn't make that item
           | disappear from the store, I'd probably do it there too.
        
           | xyproto wrote:
           | It's not comparable, because copying a bread with a bread
           | copying machine should be completely fine.
        
             | ted_bunny wrote:
             | Thank god they overturned Butter Krust v. Jesus Christ!
        
           | Levitz wrote:
           | I can name at least one country in the European Union in
           | which torrenting copyright content for personal use is legal,
           | people still do very much use spotify and netflix.
           | 
           | Gabe Newell got it right from the very start, piracy is a
           | service problem.
        
         | DHRicoF wrote:
         | Netflix and to some level spotify drowned piracy for a time.
         | But then a lot of companies tried to rap the same "winings"
         | splitting the ecosystem and trashing the user experience.
         | 
         | - ?could we watch x movie? - let me see. no, it in this other
         | service beside the 3 we are paying.
        
           | phkahler wrote:
           | At some point I'm willing to just pay a few dollars for a
           | movie. But even then you cant get them all in one place! And
           | they like to charge a premium for some. Im not paying a
           | premium for anything I've already seen a while back.
        
           | at-fates-hands wrote:
           | In the beginning, Netflix was great. Then they became a media
           | company and suddenly EVERYTHING they push on you is THEIR
           | stuff. Gone are the days where you could remember a cool
           | movie and pull it up on Netflix like Fandango or Corvette
           | Summer. I remember going back and watching several seasons of
           | the original Miami Vice back when nobody knew who Michael
           | Mann was.
           | 
           | Not its exactly as you say, you want to watch something but
           | its not on any of the streaming services you're already
           | paying for. I've started to just think of a movie I want to
           | watch, go out to Pirate Bay, download it and then stream it.
           | When I'm done? Delete it.
           | 
           | Its good to know I'm not the only one who has gone back to
           | downloading movies.
        
         | hbn wrote:
         | Don't forget censorship-free
         | 
         | I swore off streaming services when they started pulling
         | episodes of comedy shows and editing out scenes because they
         | were worried someone might be offended
        
           | ethersteeds wrote:
           | Fair to be upset. Just noting that has been happening for
           | about the whole history of televised comedy:
           | 
           | https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Smothers_Brothers_Comedy.
           | ..
        
           | l72 wrote:
           | They also often time have versions of old movies and shows
           | that have been modified due to silly things like license
           | agreements on music expiring! I have felt gaslighted when I
           | rewatch and old movie and some scene isn't how I remember.
        
             | macNchz wrote:
             | I was so surprised and bummed when I discovered this was a
             | thing. My wife and I started watching the original Beverly
             | Hills 90210--a sort of ridiculous snapshot of American pop
             | culture in the early 1990s--on some streaming service, and
             | after a few episodes I noticed the music was just...super
             | wrong.
             | 
             | Reading online, I learned that a lot of the original music
             | had been licensed only for the original run of the show, so
             | even when it went to DVD in the early 2000s they had to
             | remove a whole bunch of the original music. It's terrible
             | on two fronts: one, the show is an awesome snapshot of 90s
             | music, with tons of great stuff featured both as background
             | music and in extended live performances, but they cut whole
             | scenes and entire episodes that had too much of it, and
             | two, whoever managed the process of picking replacement
             | music clearly did not care at all, and used awful generic
             | music that sounds like it came from a file called
             | "BeachRiff.aiff" on a $29.95 CD library of royalty-free 60
             | second stock music samples.
             | 
             | I admit to finding a source of video files patched together
             | from various sources with the original soundtracks intact,
             | and it's simply MUCH more enjoyable. It seems, though, that
             | some episodes of live performances are lost to time--or at
             | least lost to the corporate owners who'd rather sit on the
             | tapes in a warehouse somewhere than make them available.
        
           | nosioptar wrote:
           | That's a problem that predates streaming.
           | 
           | There's at least one ALF ('86-90)episode that you can only
           | get the uncensored version via piracy.
           | 
           | (Episode in question is Try to Remember. ALF originally got
           | an electric shock. It quickly got censored in reruns to have
           | ALF slip and hit his head because the network worried kids
           | would get shocked emulating ALF.)
        
         | chongli wrote:
         | _2. Highest resolution /bitrate/quality that was available at
         | the time of the work's original release._
         | 
         | Arguably higher. For example, fans of Star Wars have scanned
         | the original 1977 theatrical release with very high quality
         | film scanners and created a 4K release complete with film grain
         | and the original scenes intact which is not available through
         | approved channels.
        
           | greazy wrote:
           | Wow. I thought it was impossible to watch the original
           | release of star wars. I need to hunt this down.
        
             | amgutier wrote:
             | "4k77" should get you to the right places
        
               | jnaina wrote:
               | Yup. Team Negative One are doing some very important work
               | in terms of film preservation/digital archeology.
        
             | nosioptar wrote:
             | There's also a DVD release of the theatrical versions.
             | Usually goes for $50-75 for OG trilogy.
        
         | thaumasiotes wrote:
         | > Who knows, we don't know how much this is worth because
         | nobody is even trying to offer it.
         | 
         | Note that this was the original concept of Netflix's streaming
         | service. The service got steadily dismantled as copyright
         | holders demanded higher fees.
         | 
         | Which means that we _do_ have a good idea how much it 's worth;
         | it should lie between the range of what Netflix was able to
         | sell successfully and what they weren't.
        
         | jfghi wrote:
         | Also doesn't track user and send a bunch of telemetry
        
           | vgb2k18 wrote:
           | Except for our ip address, timestamp and torrent metadata
           | 
           | https://iknowwhatyoudownload.com
        
             | wiredpancake wrote:
             | All of which could be solved via a VPN of Seedbox.
             | 
             | The point being, my movements around the homepage aren't
             | tracked and used for pushing more ads. My microphone isn't
             | being recorded for AI training or recommendations
             | algorithms. The intricate ways I use the platform isn't
             | being sold to some third party data company. I just open
             | the film, and it works..
             | 
             | Your IP address being logged in a bittorrent swarm is far
             | less concerning to me than the 100 page privacy policy
             | which explains how they will take rectal scans and sell
             | them to cancer research agencies or something.
        
         | marak830 wrote:
         | Subtitles is a big one for me. I can stream something in Japan,
         | that I have seen other places has english subs, but due to
         | licensing I cannot see them.
         | 
         | I know I could vpn around this, but why should I pay even more
         | just for subtitles?
         | 
         | In the end I'm paying for Netflix, Disney and Amazon. My son
         | uses those as he is bilingual, I just pirate what I want to
         | watch personally.
        
         | wingworks wrote:
         | This is kinda what netflix was for many peak for a brief moment
         | in time. It wasn't perfect, but it was pretty great, it had
         | most of what you wanted to see. Then EVERY studio wanted their
         | own meh streaming system, and fragmented the system again.
        
         | molszanski wrote:
         | Also in any language. I am so tired of reading a list of
         | audio/subtitles languages available, only to find out that they
         | don't work after purchase. Am all platforms. Good lord. Just
         | tired of that bs
        
         | pluc wrote:
         | What gets to me is exclusivity deals. Wanna watch this?
         | Subscribe to that. Wanna watch that? Well itnisnt available on
         | this so you'd have to subscibe to that. New streaming service
         | launches with promotional exclusivity of something you like?
         | Gotta get on that too. And don't get me started on sports!
         | 
         | Streaming was OK when it was fighting cable, because it was
         | cheaper and on-demand. With the constant greed, we're back to
         | paying more than we used to pay for cable, it doesn't make
         | sense anymore.
        
       | aussieguy1234 wrote:
       | In the end, people will use what is easiest to use.
       | 
       | The entertainment industries are going to need to come up with a
       | solution fast.
       | 
       | If they can't find a way to make it so that you can sign up once
       | and get all the content you need, they are screwed.
       | 
       | I cancelled Netflix years ago when they started blocking VPNs,
       | limiting me to their extremely limited Australian library.
        
       | wltr wrote:
       | Oh, I have a question to all of the people who pirate but live in
       | a country where that's illegal and punished (with huge fines, I
       | assume). I'm very interested in listening to some stories of how
       | it's technically done (vpn, a seedbox, or you just keep things
       | simple and don't care). E.g. I've been trying sophisticated
       | backlists of IPs, but I have no idea whether they work. But even
       | more I am interested in a legal aspect, meaning how serious these
       | copyright claims are. Do you know anyone personally, who was
       | punished for downloading a TV show? Which country? Personally, I
       | know many folks who do, but none who was fined.
        
         | tstrimple wrote:
         | With torrents you'll want a VPN. Usenet is generally safe just
         | thanks to TLS unless you're uploading content. For that I'd use
         | a VPN. But unlike torrent, Usenet isn't P2P so I can just
         | download at my full internet bandwidth and don't need to hope
         | there are enough seeders out there maintaining it or that I
         | maintain some magic upload / download ratio.
        
       | can16358p wrote:
       | I rarely watch something off Netflix. And when I watch something
       | I love watching in highest quality (4K HDR if available). If
       | they'd let me pay-as-I-watch I'd be happy to do so, but I don't
       | want to pay every month for a service I rarely use, and sometimes
       | never for a few months.
       | 
       | Another reason is availability. Apple TV+, for some reason, isn't
       | available in my country. I've heard great thing about Severance
       | which is available only there. I can't legally watch it even if I
       | were to pay it. I'd _have to_ pirate it if I want to watch it.
        
       | Alex_L_Wood wrote:
       | My pet peeve is when streaming services only allow me to watch
       | something in the language of the country I live in. I'm sorry,
       | but why? Why would I want to watch a 1988 movie with horrible
       | German dub?
        
       | tkz1312 wrote:
       | is buying isn't owning, piracy isn't stealing :)
        
       | DyslexicAtheist wrote:
       | i for I, ... quit Netflix and Prime (and deleted AirBNB and UBER)
       | because they are US companies, and second ... all of what
       | ryandrake said https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=44906021
        
       | easwee wrote:
       | Driving back???
        
       | downrightmike wrote:
       | All streaming services should just interoperate, Give me access
       | to everything, and just charge based on title to who ever has it.
        
       | l72 wrote:
       | If they were willing to sell movies and tv shows WITHOUT DRM, I'd
       | happily buy what I want and put on my Jellyfin server. I don't
       | pirate music because I can buy what I want on Bandcamp (and even
       | mainstream music on apple and Amazon without drm).
       | 
       | But since I can't (and you can't even find physical media for a
       | lot of things), I feel like I am left with no options.
       | 
       | I am not even trying to get stuff that is recent, as I prefer to
       | wait, especially for tv shows, to finish its run before I decide
       | if it is worth investing my time in.
       | 
       | I mostly go to the library every week and pick up movies and tv
       | shows on Blu-ray and rip them so I can watch them on my schedule.
       | I often delete them afterwards if I feel like they don't have
       | replay value.
       | 
       | I think Jellyfin also provides a much better interface than any
       | of the streaming apps, and I like to be able to know if I am
       | going to watch them on my theatrical version or some extended
       | version.
        
       | panarchy wrote:
       | Streaming services surprised that customers left them like they
       | left cable TV for them once they turned into cable TV.
        
       | revlolz wrote:
       | Pay a bunch of money to Disney+ to watch any popular release and
       | get terrible streaming quality and functionality. It makes
       | complete sense to me why consumers would toss their hands up and
       | find better and more accessible options.
        
       | wslh wrote:
       | One friend, who is a film enthusiast, told me that he doesn't
       | understand why there aren't more titles on the streaming services
       | vs. the scale of albums on Spotify. He often download old and new
       | movies via Torrent.
        
       | zamadatix wrote:
       | This mirrors my experience as well. I used to pirate everything,
       | it was relatively inconvenient to get the exact thing you wanted
       | on physical media. Then streaming, Steam, and app stores came
       | about. I pivoted 100%, it was sooo much more convenient than
       | trying to find legitimate and quality copies of content and
       | managing a set up to do so.
       | 
       | Then the streaming side started to fragment a bit, but I just
       | grabbed all of the subscriptions (HBO, Hulu, YouTube, Netflix,
       | etc). It was getting a bit iffy on value, but at least it was
       | still convenient. Now it's just ridiculously _in_convenient.
       | Search around to see which service might have the thing you're
       | actually trying to watch and use this device with this app to get
       | a decent quality version of the content delivered, all while
       | hoping it doesn't force automatic quality "for your benefit".
       | With Steam it's a bit less severe, but it did reach the "and the
       | games you want are split across 5 services in exclusivity" and
       | "DRM is getting to be an extreme pain on some of these" stages.
        
       | Waterluvian wrote:
       | Now more than ever before, for me, it's exclusively because of UX
       | and not price.
       | 
       | The most recent example: every Star Trek (TNG, Voyager, etc) on
       | Netflix simply _doesn't work_ on my Chromecast.
       | 
       | After a minute the video goes all screwy, split 1/3 across the
       | screen and loses half its colour. But this doesn't happen with
       | Plex.
        
       | jimt1234 wrote:
       | Thank God for VLC, the greatest app ever created!
       | 
       | https://www.videolan.org/vlc/
        
       | djfobbz wrote:
       | Oh, this one's spicy! Looks like the industry goons are back out
       | with their swords.
        
       | stargrazer wrote:
       | I wouldn't have minded the newly inserted ads in Netflix or Prime
       | Video. But they just throw the ads in during mid-sentence. Are
       | they putting ads in using a random number generator? What
       | happened to the accepted practice of putting in ads where they
       | natural break occurs? It really throws out the flow of the
       | moment. Major irritation. You know, how TV and Cable typically
       | have done it.
        
       | privatelypublic wrote:
       | My decision on this matter was made when MGM kept running the
       | "ok, who wants SG-1 exclusivity this year?" Gauntlet.
       | 
       | I have to wonder if Amazon bought them just to stop playing the
       | game. (I doubt it)
        
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