It’s not just a pricing issue. It’s an ownership issue.
Too many of the things we buy are not ours.
Yesterday I saw the article about VW cars which need a subscription to use the built-in capabilities. The car you bought doesn’t belong to you.
“Piracy is not a pricing issue,” Gabe Newell, the co-founder of Valve, the company behind the world’s largest PC gaming platform, Steam, observed in 2011. “It’s a service issue.” Today, the crisis in streaming makes this clearer than ever. With titles scattered, prices on the rise, and bitrates throttled depending on your browser, it is little wonder some viewers are raising the jolly roger again. Studios carve out fiefdoms, build walls and levy tolls for those who wish to visit. The result is artificial scarcity in a digital world that promised abundance.
This hits the nail on the head…
I wonder if these greedy fuckers know this but don’t give a shit in favor of short term profits,or if they’re actually so dense and holed up in their own world disconnected from reality that they don’t see it?
They know it, but refuse to belive it, because they’ve built an empire on a faulty premise and can’t conceive that they may be wrong.
Source: two decades in the industry. But I got
betterout.The problem is mostly that the C-suite is only capable of thinking a quarter at a time, which is a side effect of the desire for perpetual growth.
It doesn’t matter if a policy can net them huge profits in a year if it makes this quarter look worse than last quarter.
I don’t know that I’d say they refuse to believe it, it’s more that there are short term goals and milestones to hit because literally every single industry is held to the standards and timelines of speculative investors rather than actual investors.
Everybody understands you should be servicing your audience and keeping them happy, and everybody is happy with you doing that… as long as it’s within the constraints of hitting quarterly goals. In a world where content routinely takes 3-5 years to make that is not a great fit.
Newell doesn’t have any investors to answer to so he gets to say those things when he’s in billionaire club. Everybody else just goes “no shit, Gabe” and keeps working on squeezing something out to keep pretending to have done better year on year.
It’s a remarkable example of the aggregation of incentives going against every single individual person involved, including those setting the incentives.
They don’t care. They know they’ll lose subscribers but they’ll make more money overall on the suckers that stick out the monopoly pricing. Same thing is happening in the auto industry where they sell less cars but are more profitable.
99% of the general public will not pirate anything because they lack the ability to do so. Of the 1% left, 99% of them use public trackers with variable results regarding quality and shady website shenanigans. The most common form of piracy going forward will probably be like those hacked fire sticks that would stream pirated content, because it’s easy and low barrier, like the hacked cable box cards/chips from the 90s.
If you count using shady free streaming websites, I think the number is waaaay bigger than 1%
I don’t even think most people own a PC at this point, just tablets and phones.
You think people don’t have laptops? Everyone I know does. 22 yo
You don’t need a PC to use a shady streaming website though
Then there’s me running multiple servers from my home.
In 2011. It’s been 14 years and for streaming portal things just got worse and worse.
The problem is that all the competitors are enshittifying the same way at the same pace. If there was a holdout in a position to grow their platform we may at least go back to the days of “Netflix is all you need”.
As it is, it makes more sense to go back to physical media purchases, and I blame absolutely nobody if their disposable income and lack of box fetishes makes them think downloading the content is perfectly equivalent. The Plex server where I store all my physical media backups is by far the best streaming library I have access to, at least if you discount novelty as a factor.
You don’t need physical media. You can buy and download flac files. It’s the ownable asset part that is important, not the physical part.
This is true. The thing is, all data needs a medium.
It doesn’t matter if you own a file sitting in a hard drive or a disc sitting in a box. Discs are nicer because you get a thing you can put on a shelf to act as a backup of the file you dump from it. Plus they often come with nice extras. If you don’t think things on shelves are nice your priorities may be different.
These articles are great but I believe there are also people like me. Folks who don’t pay for any streaming services and don’t pirate. So if somehow they stamped out piracy folks like me won’t be coming back and I think many of the pirates would still opt out which would lead to basically the shows becoming even more irrelevant as much of the talk around a show and reviews and such are from pirates.
Like the article says, im someone whos been out of the game for a while, but definitely interested in how this has been going
One commonly used app is legal but can, through community add-ons, channel illicit streams.
Anyone care to enlighten me? DM is fine if youd prefer
“Community Add-ons” leads me to think this is probably Kodi. You can generally do IPTV streaming through it, or torrent streaming even.
I don’t know, but i use stremio plus real debrid. I had to grab the torrentio add on to do it so it kind of fits the bill.
I know daddy Gabe said it is a service issue which is a fair point
But I am beyond that point. Hollywood and music industry are full of pedophiles. They regime whore for the owner class and shill propaganda to plebs to accept their deteriorating conditions.
These people are the enemy and this is the class war.
Don’t be a dummy, don’t fund your oppressor.