That was not directed at me, but I'll reply nevertheless.Atlatnesiti wrote: Mon Jan 10, 2022 12:14 amSo you don’t watch movies or listen to music? Apple Music, Spotify, Netflix, etc;…
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I prefer to buy music as DRM-free files (such as on iTunes and Beatport) and keep local backups. That way, once I own [technically, a license to the content of] the file and media it's stored on, no-one can ever take it from me. Provided that I have maintained the devices needed, I can listen to anything I've bought, anywhere, anytime.
Also I still buy physical Blu-Rays, preferably 4K ones, but only because they don't sell them as DRM-free files. I'd much rather buy the files - but then again, the physical discs work as a good backup, for a fair number of years until disc rot happens.
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For what it's worth: as an arguably "old" person, I see a risk in younger generations getting hooked on subscriptions, especially as long as parents still pay their bills. Same goes for acceptance of so-called "Digital Rights Management", which is a veiled term for treating potential buyers as potential thieves by default, and only "manages" to increase the rights of sellers to control usage of digital products by buyers.
On business (seller) side, the general strategy is to get people to feel that subscription is essential to them, and prioritize it in their life enough to countinue paying the bill - which is likely to increase, little by little, as years go by, to the point at which it makes most profit (possibly while dropping customers whose ability to pay is below that point).
On technical side, subscriptions - and to larger extent, DRM - leverage the knowledge and capability disparity between sellers and buyers of digital goods.
Recently some developments in our world have gone into direction of trying to make "non-technical" people comfortable with ideas of artificial digital scarcity, which in my opinion is outright scam-like and regressive.
Bluntly speaking, in large scale it looks like an attempt to raise a generation of obedient, hard-working bill-payers who don't question too much and don't know too much about technical sides of things.
Whether that is good or bad for society, in the long run, I'm not sure. But I know that I'd rather not make myself reliant on any digital vendor's continued benevolence.
TL;DR: Master Blaster runs Bartertown
EDIT: fixed typo
