take a bigger bite out of overall corporate profits.
Don't co-adopt Corporate gaslighting. They can call it "opportunity cost", "expected return" or other bullshit. But it's all castles in the air dreamed up by profiteers.
It's never their money to begin with. It only becomes so because they want everyone to believe that making a copy of software deprives others from using it like physical goods.
The truth is that if somebody was going to pirate software, then they were never going to buy it in the first place and it's greedy and mentally ill to think otherwise.
Sorry to say, you've mistakenly made one hell of a generalisation on that last sentence. Other than that one stinky turd, the rest is spot-on.
The truth is that if somebody was going to pirate software, then they were never going to buy it in the first place and it’s greedy and mentally ill to think otherwise..
I've been on the piracy scene since 2001 and was a moderator for one of the largest dreamcast piracy forums once upon a time. The core members of that forum are still together on Discord and we all buy things wherever possible. Gabe Newell is correct in that piracy is a service problem.
Steam cut my games piracy down to zero for the longest time (501 games, 414 DLC) because it was more convenient and had frequent sales. Other companies that decided to pull away from Steam and conspire with publishers regarding timed exclusives on a platform that doesn't want me as a customer (Epic). As a result, anything that is an Epic exclusive is pirated indiscriminately and seeded for several weeks. I don't even play any of them. Download, seed for a week, delete, rinse and repeat on the next exclusive. The same goes for anything with Denuvo DRM.
GOG has DRM free games, there's a site where they are all available for download, and I've discovered quite a few gems that way. Those gems got purchased on Steam because GOG also doesn't want me as a customer, even though I had decent library and bought several games at launch on there. I'm refusing to use a third party launcher to install games from there because once again, its a service problem.
Netflix cut my video piracy to zero between 2011 and 2020. When I moved across the world, I brought only my clothes, laptop, and storage drives. Everything I wanted to watch was available on Netflix or YouTube. Once Netflix started losing shows like Futurama, Parks & Rec, and even Sons of Anarchy, I went straight back to piracy and haven't looked back. Netflix only continued to get my money because my partner insisted on doing things legally. By the time she had enough in October 2023, we were paying for Netflix, Amazon, Disney, Ziggo, YouTube, Curiosity Stream, and HBO. At the moment, only Curiosity remains.
Adding up the 3 "services" we consume content from the most (not including the ones we watch one show here and there on) added up to €497 per year. My piracy costs €472 per year not including electricity, which is used anyway since the server also hosts a boat load of microservices like NextCloud which replaces yet another subscription storage. It's costing me €72 to rent a seedbox, and €400 at the upper-end for a large NAS drive one time per year.
It's a service problem and I don't think those who refuse to contribute to the broken service problem are mentally ill. The "managers" in charge are.
I dunno, I'm fine with adopting it, among other language like getting their necks under a guillotine if they don't like it. If I voice that I want their "corporate profits" to collapse, that's rather alarming to them when people state that their goal is to deprive them of wealth in whatever terms they'll understand.
I agree with you, all castles in the air dreamed up. That's really well said.
Depending on the hardware you're running. I'll definitely never break even, at least in a reasonable amount of time. Doing a very rough estimation of $23/month of just Netflix, versus the 5 grand I've spent on my server over the years, it would take EIGHTEEN YEARS to break even.
I pirate because I like having everything in one place with no restrictions, not because it's cheaper and easier.
And here I am this morning sipping on coffee watching Tubi. I've been done paying more for less for a while now.
Don't need to pirate. If this gradual enshittification has done anything to me, it's been to make me lose any and all interest in keeping up with the latest shows. It's turned my TV into mere background noise while I do other things.
Maybe Tubi and Pluto and Freevee will eventually go away. Maybe then I'll just stop staring at a screen altogether.
I read a six hundred page physical paper book last weekend, cover to cover. I'd completely forgotten how pleasurable that is, and I can buy paperbacks by the pallet for next to nothing these days or attempt to borrow from the library before they become completely illegal.
I also remembered that it's entirely ok to read a book that isn't some centuries old work of ethereal literature. Run of the mill pulp fiction can be mighty entertaining even if you don't get to brag that you read the unabridged version of Beowulf in the original language at your next craft cocktail party
Even if I wanted to stare at a screen: there's hardly anything worth watching coming out of the streaming world. Everything is just cheap, cliche ridden garbage, printed out of the exact same molds again and again.
Same! Pluto TV, Tubi, and live tv on Plex are all ‘good enough’ replacements for me. They’re even quickly becoming my replacement for the hours of YouTube I used to watch a week. It may be a bit ironic but YT seems to plop commercials in the middle of someone speaking and then you’re stuck. At least with Pluto, you can flip over to another channel during a commercial. It’s just like actual broadcast television, but for free; which is kind of nice. I’m at the point with YouTube where I’m unable to watch more than a third of a video.
General rule - I'll give you money or I'll watch ads. I won't do both. And as I've implied, I find myself actively watching shows less and less. So the giving money part becomes less attractive. I'm also entirely underwhelmed with Netflix offerings in present day. It's like they gave up after the success of Making a Murderer and decided that everything would just be cheap to produce true crime dramas. The actual shows categorically get cancelled when it comes time to pay the actors for their success so we never get closure. Looking at you, Santa Clarita Diet.
My only problem with big physical books like that is they're a pain in the ass to bring with you anywhere and they get tiring really quickly when holding them at eye level.
With streaming services clamping down on password sharing, I’ve found that I actually don’t even care enough about the shows to pirate them. There’s great discussion on streaming services succeeding because of ease, and the resulting rise of piracy rates, but I wonder how many others like me just stopped watching TV.
It’s not even about the money for me— one of my credit cards has a monthly credit for streaming services. I chose to lose Disney+ instead of giving them Amex’s money at no cost to myself, cause fuck them.
I wonder how many others like me just stopped watching TV.
Not enough, sadly. Netflix reported an increase in both profits and subscribers since they started their crackdown. Had more subscribers punished Netflix by cancelling, then you wouldn't see other streaming services copying them.
I run a huge server for myself, my friends and my family. Even I don't watch half of the shit I have downloaded. I currently have a backlog of about 6-7 episodes from long running shows I regularly watch, I haven't really picked up any new shows. Like half of my movie collection is unwatched.
It's not because of a lack of time either, I'm currently unemployed.
Yeah pretty much. I thought I would pirate the stuff I did lose (Invincible S2 because it now has ads) but turns out I’m just not that interested. TV is great when the barrier to entry is on the floor as it was with streaming services but any minor obstacle is apparently enough. I take it a bit further by preferring to watch things on only high quality screens with high quality audio, nixing my phone as an option.
It’s not for lack of time on my end either, I have plenty of free time. But there’s only so many hours in the day and usually I’d prefer to be doing something else.
Basic cable prices were the absolute most people were willing to pay for home entertainment and streaming will eventually end up at the same price for the same reason.
Jellyfin and the *arr stack are amazing and much simpler to set-up than I anticipated (if you already know your way around self hosting, docker compose and the like).
I've been a Netflix user since like 2004. I'm also well aware of that community and reference it often. I recently setup Stremio and my next step will be setting up *arr.
I'm perfectly fine paying for content as long as the trade offs are worth it. Netflix limits PC streaming to 720p unless you use their app which is bullshit. I'll likely be canceling Hulu/Disney soon too. That one is for several reasons: not a fan of monopolistic tactics, Disney Plus' interface is garbage, and Disney Plus is rolling out ads. I already canceled Amazon Prime because of ads.
Just don't consume that shite anymore. Discover graphic novels for example. Thousands of stunning ones out there. Ever heard of the "Metabaron" series? Or build your own little wood workshop and enjoy Japanese hand tools. Read or hear some Lovecraft. Get a 3D printer. Anything.
i live in a based country where netflix doesn't have any edge providers because the government here is too based. the internet connection just isn't consistent enough to watch a movie without it randomly switching to 480p or whatever. if i care at all about the film, it's completely fucked. since there's no option to pre-download a movie, it's just better to make friends with a private torrent tracker community.
And here I was, fretting about the actual cost benefit of my NAS when it likely chews up at least $10 a month in electricity and likely needs $10-15 a year in replacement components, and then I need a VPN subscription to fill it with content, and Netflix just goes and raises their prices like this and settles all my doubts for me.
Neat. I'll continue to watch everything they have on the high seas. I cancelled over the last price increase but really it's because anytime they make a show that is great, they cancel it after one season. Hard pass.
I hope they enjoy the extra money they make off me buying Netflix for a single month every other year, when they use to get me subscribed all the time.
Seems like a stable business decision that's absolutely not the first sign of a bubble bursting.
Same, I generally only watch stuff in 4K or 1080p on my 65" flat screen. I think I was hoarding it all because I was bored and the weather largely sucked where I used to live (NE US) but then I moved down to Florida back in October and suddenly I don't have to be stuck inside for half the year because it's no longer freezing cold (although it is starting to get pretty hot out already), and I actually want to go outside and do stuff haha