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[-] Zementid@feddit.nl 2 points 16 hours ago

2007... that guy was late to the game. And before this we had burned CDs and Zip Drives

[-] tacosanonymous@lemm.ee 1 points 16 hours ago

I’m doing my part 🫡

[-] Ginja@lemmy.world 22 points 1 day ago
[-] LandedGentry@lemmy.zip 8 points 1 day ago

Definitely my reaction lol try 2001

[-] hightrix@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

Hell, we were on Napster in 99.

[-] Perhapsjustsniffit@lemmy.ca 3 points 15 hours ago

Usenet early/mid 90's. A huge stack of floppy disks and a few weeks of all night downloads so dad didn't lose his shit over the telephone screaming at him.

[-] Sam_Bass@lemmy.world 3 points 14 hours ago

I miss that most of all

[-] aceshigh@lemmy.world 5 points 1 day ago

Dling metallica…

[-] frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe 4 points 1 day ago

Bootlegs in the 80s

[-] LandedGentry@lemmy.zip 3 points 1 day ago

Yeah I think I was using Morpheus then Kazaa…2000/2001?

[-] frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

These fucking dumbass kids. Whyyyyy won't they just open up a book-shaped website and read the actual history?

Of course I say that in a country that literally forgot what happened just four years ago so...nvmd, back to "human race deserves itself" mode.

[-] CAVOK@lemmy.world 13 points 1 day ago

Gentle reminder that i2p exists where torrents can be downloaded anonymously.

https://lemmy.world/c/i2p

[-] frayedpickles@lemmy.cafe 3 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

I2p is great , definitely the future

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[-] brotundspiele@sh.itjust.works 77 points 1 day ago

Anon: 2007
The music industry ca. 1981: https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Home_Taping_Is_Killing_Music

[-] Lennny@lemmy.world 8 points 1 day ago

So we left side b blank so you can help!

[-] nossaquesapao@lemmy.eco.br 26 points 1 day ago

Also the book piracy that existed in universities through photocopying and sharing pages.

[-] Smoogs@lemmy.world 6 points 1 day ago* (last edited 1 day ago)

This is making a comeback with scanning.

Amazon was the place to buy manuals(art,hobby, do it yourself etc.). Now authors have pulled their books from print and expecting people to sign a subscription on patreon. Now there are sharks overpricing any remaining physical print second hand by 2000%.

pirates have scanned these books and selling access to uploaded jpgs for a fraction of what the manual would have cost had it just stayed in print.

[-] lurklurk@lemmy.world 57 points 1 day ago

Kinda inverts inverted the causality of Netflix starting their own production and other companies pulling their licences. Netflix started their own production to survive the licences getting pulled, which was inevitable as soon as Netflix looked profitable.

They didn't get greedy, they probably started out greedy, ran a good service to grab market share, then had to make moves to defend against the predictable greed of the incumbents.

It's greedy turtles all the way down

[-] Drivebyhaiku@lemmy.world 2 points 11 hours ago

This is basically it except the trick was Netflix wasn't actually all that profitable based strictly off of customers to start. It was a long con. It was ostensibly funded by people placing a bet. They offered a service that wasn't just disruptive, it was operating at a loss. People piled into the service so licences started to get dicey. Netflix started producing and filming, initially at independent rates amd sweetheart deals in my union territory because everybody looked at as being a little baby studio that needed nurturing and to be fair working a Netflix show back when it started had perks. They placed bets on creators who wanted to make something different. Not nessisarily great but different giving their production teams a lot of creative freedom. Paid lunches, cell allowance, sometimes better hours and crew gifts when a number of studios like Disney were pulling penny pinching bullshit and trying to pretend they were an independent studio to get lower rates while letting their producers act like skeeze.

Thing was it was a cuckoo all along.

They flushed the market with a business model sustained by outside money so everybody else started doing the same thing. It destroyed all the union and contract protections syndicated television once had particularly erasing residuals. That was the main thing. Creators used to make money off of the amalgamation of their lifetime work by being owed a small amount everytime a rerun was aired... But streaming didn't do that. They had those sweetheart deals that made streaming services exempt from on demand access counting as replays. So you cut off the career curve of creators from building security and only paid them for stuff they made once turning them effectively gig worker.

Once everyone was playing by the same rules the funding at the top cut out because they got what they wanted out of it they started jacking prices, removing titles, selling advertising because what the hell were you going to do, go back to cable? Now the boom is over and our local Industry is a bloody dust bowl. My seniority has jumped up more in the past year than it has in the full ten years before as folk have been retiring or dropping from the union to find new careers.

[-] Hadriscus@lemm.ee 33 points 1 day ago

2007 ? Everybody around me was pirating every single piece of media in 2000 and we were late to the party

[-] bilb@lem.monster 15 points 1 day ago

Napster was a household name and made mp3 piracy mainstream in 1999!

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[-] HawlSera@lemm.ee 33 points 1 day ago

I really wish I was a consultant for these fucking jokers.

Back when Disney+ was just "Rumor has it Disney wants to launch their own Netflix-like streaming service.", I called this shit. I said "Well that's just going to cause this whole thing to fall apart, no one's going to juggle 50 different streaming services just to be able to find something to watch."

And I was fucking right.

The only ethical streaming service is Tubi as it doesn't charge relying on ads alone, and it's a neat little bonus that Tubi has actively aided in the restoration of lost media.

If it aint on Tubi, then I'm going to yo-ho-ho with a bottle of fuck you.

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[-] LaLuzDelSol@lemmy.world 78 points 2 days ago* (last edited 2 days ago)

I feel like people are ignoring that Netflix was bleeding money during their "golden age". They only switched to being profitable a couple years back. A lot of times what people describe as enshittification is just unprofitable companies having to come up with an actual business model as venture capital dries up.

Also, merry Christmas:)

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[-] phoenixz@lemmy.ca 50 points 2 days ago

Exactly this and more.

I'm not even pirating because it's cheaper, or easier. I have near 100TB in storage, and it takes hours per week to search material, have it downloaded, checked, etc. I just am done with the marketing, the branding, the advertising, the bullshit rules. I just want to watch what I want to watch and media companies made this impossible so I'm forced to sail the high seas

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this post was submitted on 25 Dec 2024
1397 points (98.3% liked)

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