Tried to support the industry by buying a movie a watch a lot. Well, no more. If I need a pihole just to watch a movie I own, that’s ridiculous.

  • Lka1988
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    12725 days ago

    Yeah I just straight up pirate movies now, I don’t even try to hide it from people anynore. It’s clear to me at this point that all these companies care about is getting richer by the minute off the backs of the common man, and their excuses for doing so are getting more and more pathetic.

    • @[email protected]
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      1725 days ago

      What capitalists are doing is intentionally sharpening the contradiction, probably with the goal of a revolution or reform in their favor (as can be seen in the USA right now). The neat thing about sharpened contradictions is that it will inevitably lead to change, the bad thing is that this is a massively organized effort with tons of planning and coordination, and The People:tm: are not ready for it.

      Pirating movies is pretty good though. Mainstream media always manages to exploit labor incredibly harshly, to the point of suicide, and that behavior should not be rewarded IMO. Of course there is no ethical consumption under capitalism, but one can dream. As an aside, pirated media is also incredibly convenient. There is a great community spirit in the piracy community.

    • @[email protected]
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      4325 days ago

      I have friends who work in the film industry and they pirate movies and TV shows all the time.

      • @[email protected]
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        2125 days ago

        Me too. By the time a movie or TV show actually makes it to distribution, most people who worked on it have already made their paycheck and moved on to the next project.

  • @[email protected]
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    16525 days ago

    “It also enables the delivery of advertising content”

    They already paid for the product! Double-dipping assholes

      • Nate Cox
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        2925 days ago

        No, I am 100% certain they know that the vast majority of people don’t care and some people really really hate it, but nobody actually enjoys it.

        • @[email protected]
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          3125 days ago

          Someone I know who is currently on a pseudoscience and conspiracy theory arc genuinely believes that personalized ads are good because then you can easily buy things you know you’ll like

          • @[email protected]
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            217 days ago

            I’ve bought things from personalized ads before. But mostly they’re annoying. And creepy.

            • @[email protected]
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              317 days ago

              the idea of “just browse the web normally with someone looking over your shoulder taking notes on what you like to then sell you shit - or even better, it infers what you like using magic and can even tell when you’re pregnant before you know it yourself” can be nice in some ways I guess, but yeah I agree. no thanks.

    • @[email protected]
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      3024 days ago

      No no, you see. You didn’t pay for the product but the license for the product. Now it makes sense, right?

  • Twitches
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    1225 days ago

    What happens of you hit skip. Does it not let you play the disk?

  • @[email protected]
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    1024 days ago

    I legitimately cannot remember the last time I paid for a movie or TV show, or music.

    Digitally, or physically.

    Even if you count streaming services, its been over 5 years since I laid for Spotify… stopped paying for any kind of on demand videos before even that.

    Friends wanna watch a movie at my place? Oh, I have a 10 TB library.

    Oh, at your place? Does your TV have a USB port? Tell me its model number and I can figure out what codecs it can actually read.

  • Faceman🇦🇺
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    2724 days ago

    can we find a way to spoof this so that they think legit physical disk usage is going up?

    • Draconic NEO
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      224 days ago

      I don’t think it’s a good metric since most people using Blurays don’t have their players connected to the Internet anyway. Connecting Bluray players online is a very niche use-case. It might be more popular if they had built-in Streaming Apps or NAS playback but many don’t and are just Bluray players.

      • Dizzy Devil Ducky
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        124 days ago

        The only reason I had my bluray player connected to the internet was because the yahoo who dropped it off at the thrift store didn’t bother signing out of their pandora account, so I could listen to ad free music. Otherwise I would never connect to the internet since all the old applications ( including a blockbuster app of all things ) probably wouldn’t even work.

        Knowing this could happen, I will definitely be sure to completely disconnect from the internet the next time I turn that thing on since last time I tried using pandora it wasn’t working.

        • Draconic NEO
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          124 days ago

          I’m not really sure if they’re they’re the biggest userbase of Bluray movies. I know lots of them do but also many don’t, especially with the promotion of Digital-Only Game Systems and Also Streaming services. Most people I know who buy and use Blurays just have a basic Bluray player and aren’t really gamers.

    • @[email protected]
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      124 days ago

      I mean it makes sense to have them network connected like to use a receiver and networked speakers.

    • Melllvar
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      425 days ago

      Mine can because it also has Netflix, Hulu, etc. built in.

      • Draconic NEO
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        224 days ago

        Do the apps still work? The biggest issues I’ve found with Bluray players like that is that the Streaming Apps on them tend to become Obsolete and broken fairly quickly.

        • Melllvar
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          224 days ago

          Some have stopped working, like SteamLink, but others still work. I know it’s just a matter of time.

    • Pika
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      25 days ago

      Most if not all 4k players are network enabled due to the DRM that is on the 4k medium. From my experiences, they usually need to connect to the internet to download the keys at least once before anything 4k works. DVD and BD usually work without issue though.

      • LiveLM
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        1225 days ago

        How goofy.
        Like, I understand almost everyone has WiFi at home but come on, I thought a big point of Physical Media was not needing the damn internet to work!

        • XiaCobolt [she/her]
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          25 days ago

          You can take the debate bro out of Reddit but not the Reddit out of the debate bro, huh.

        • Nakoichi [they/them]
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          325 days ago

          fucking everything connects to the internet these days dude. You fridge, you tv, hell probably even your toothbrush what the hell comment is this? “what you are driving at” is a world that no longer exists, this smart tech shit is being shoved down all our throats as we speak.

            • Nakoichi [they/them]
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              425 days ago

              Which is why I am incredulous at the idea that a Blu-ray player needs to connect to the internet

              Is it really that hard to imagine a future where DRM encroaches further and further on us? Your fuckin blue ray player might not connect to the internet but it is still region locked.

            • @[email protected]OP
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              424 days ago

              A 1080p player does not require internet connectivity but 4K/UHD discs need to phone home in order to get decryption keys on a per disc basis. There is a lot of discussion about this in the MakeMKV forums if you want to do a deeper dive.

              • @[email protected]
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                224 days ago

                4K/UHD discs need to phone home in order to get decryption keys on a per disc basis

                Is that true for hardware players? I’ve only seen people talking about software players like Power DVD having to get keys from the Internet.

    • Draconic NEO
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      224 days ago

      They can, many have Ethernet ports and even Wifi in some cases but there’s no practical reason to do so unless they have streaming features you want to use but most don’t, and the ones that do often aren’t updated so you’ll find the Streaming Apps on them usually don’t work anymore.

    • mendiCAN [none/use name]
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      25 days ago

      my quick search for “Blu Ray players” brought up a list. 4 of the first 5 i saw were also “streaming boxes” with wi-fi. the 5th had an Ethernet port. didn’t really check further but looks like it’s pretty common now.

        • @[email protected]
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          424 days ago

          Maybe sorta to update keys? But I think they will also do that if you pop in a newer disc. It’s been known to cause an issue with playback of older disks, I think.

          The whole process of buying media is broken.

        • bananamuffinsurprise
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          925 days ago

          How else would Sony track you while you watch a legitimate BD playing on your personal, paid-for hardware, silly goose?

        • Draconic NEO
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          224 days ago

          They don’t really, out of all the complaints I’ve heard people make about Bluray players (Disc Recognition, Region Locking) I’ve never heard them complain that it needed to be connected to the internet. It’s an optional feature, not a requirement.

        • mendiCAN [none/use name]
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          25 days ago

          good question, but i dunno, sorry. my guess would be probably not, based on the smart tv i never connected to the web that works just fine… but I’m an avowed and avid pirate and don’t remember the last time i paid to watch something at home :D yarrrr

    • @[email protected]
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      1225 days ago

      PS3 was one of the first affordable blu ray players right off the bat with internet connectivity

        • @[email protected]
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          524 days ago

          BD-live was a thing going way back then. BD players had network connectivity because stuff like that was a selling point.

          But it seems like you’re adjusting the question to be more “do BD players REQUIRE internet connections”. No probably not.

          And off track, for some people the primary function of the PS3 might have been to play movies. BD players were several thousand dollars, a ps3 was like $700-800. There was definitely chatter along the lines of it being a Sony product would be best in class for BD playback as well.

          When I first started dating my partner I asked why she had a PS2 with no games. She said it was her mum’s that she just uses for dvd.

  • madjo
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    1723 days ago

    I’m still getting justified in my boycott of anything Sony that started in 2005, when they bricked my PC for daring to put a Sony CD in my computer’s CD player! Fucking rootkit.

    Yes I’m still holding that grudge and I will not relent, for as long as I live.

    Any movie I watch I make sure it’s not a Sony product, any music I listen to, I make doubly sure it’s not from a Sony studio. Any electronics I buy, I make triply sure it doesn’t contain any Sony product. Sony is not getting a dime from me ever again!

    Fuck Sony!

    • @[email protected]
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      523 days ago

      Yes! I’ve never met anyone else who’s been boycotting Sony since the rootkit! Maybe there are dozens of us? Either way: fuck Sony!

    • DFX4509B
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      623 days ago

      That rootkit thing failed miserably, thankfully, and audio CDs have been DRM-free ever since.

      • madjo
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        823 days ago

        Sure, but I’m not touching anything Sony with a 10 foot pole.

        • DFX4509B
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          222 days ago

          Sure, but I’m not touching anything Sony with a 10 foot pole.

          That’s going to discount most of the camera market if not the entire camera market then because Sony makes basically everyone’s imaging sensors, plus a large portion of the anime genre given that company bought out Funimation.

          • @[email protected]
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            117 days ago

            The problem is every company is a Sony now.

            So you have to buy from your least hated Sony. You can’t just boycott Sony.

            • DFX4509B
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              16 days ago

              And even if you do boycott Sony, that’ll discount entire market segments and almost entire content niches as I just mentioned.

  • @[email protected]
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    1424 days ago

    The fact that they don’t give you the option to “refuse” but rather to “skip” annoys me to such an extent. Leave us alone, you never needed to do this.

  • @[email protected]
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    23 days ago

    This isn’t a EULA in that it still allows you to use the product even if you decline…

    This option is available with most modern games these days. They often ask you to click “approve” twice, knowing you won’t read either and knowing that you believe that you need to accept both to proceed. When in reality, the second one is almost always optional (perhaps even by law because of laws in the EU).

    Still gross. And definitely a major dark pattern, but if people just took an extra 3 seconds to double check, they’d stop sending all of their data to these companies.

  • IngeniousRocks (They/She)
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    24 days ago

    My Blu Ray player has never been connected to the web, its region free, but doesn’t do 4k-BD. My Linux HTPC is configured with an ASUS libredrive, and has MakeMKV installed. The Linux variant of MakeMKV is borked right now, in a good way! The 30 day trial period doesn’t expire!

    If I wanna watch a 4k bluray I have to rip it and watch it on my PC, because I’d rather do that than get a BD player that needs internet