Here's what happened last week. I walked down to my neighborhood McDonalds and bought my morning coffee and a bag of chicken nuggets. On my way out, I met my friend, and offered him a few nuggets, and I saw a homeless person sitting outside, and offered him some more.
Later that afternoon, I visited a nearby Barnes & Noble, and bought a paperback fiction by my favorite author. My brother asked if I can lend him that book for a couple of days to read, because he also is a big fan of the author as I am.
I did, and he brought back the book later as promised. He said he enjoyed the book immensely, and that storyline will stay with him forever. Speaking of ardent literature fans, my brother is definitely one.
But now I am sitting in my room, waiting for legal letters from McD and B&M, incriminating me of piracy. /s
This person seems to be living in a fantasy world where people don’t need to make a living with content that they’re making. In an ideal world where people don’t need money to survive, this position is also ideal. In the real world, it’s completely unsustainable.
You seem to be under the impression that the folk making the thing are also the ones seeing direct compensation from sales and that largely is not true
this was the most popular response when this was posted on lemmy or kbin a couple months ago. seems the author is pushing a new wave with bots or alts? we'll never know but some of the response seem identical to me.