Posted on 12/21/2013 12:40:45 PM PST by grundle
I buy physical product. I don’t want corporations tracking my reading/viewing habits and subsequently censoring the editions I am offered of previously purchased titles.
My guess is if you’re on FR, there’s nothing the regime don’t know about you....
It isn’t about the government regime.
It is about Big Media that decides this week to digitally airbrush out cigarettes from old Disney cartoons and next week to omit any details of Democrat opposition to the 1964 Civil Rights Bill or involvement in the KKK.
They aren’t PAYING me to track me. I’ll buy used product, they won’t see a dime of my money, and I’m “off the grid”.
So much for people who think they “own” what they paid for.
And this is exactly why anything I really like I make sure I own it physically. The stream is nice for one shot stuff, but your access to it is at the whim of 2 companies, either of which can be capricious or spiteful at any time. And note this is NOT Amazon pulling content, this is Disney pulling content.
Sounds like this is simply an attempt to justify/rationalize illegal activity.
One pays for leases and rent.
That’s what this is.
And this is why despite the fact I would like to have an e-reader it will never be a Kindle.
Looking at the comment string from reviewers, it appears that this show was unavailable for one day, December 16th, when it aired on ABC.
Now reading the original article, I was ready to fire off a blistering viewpoint on it. But is it a deep impact to block the show on the day that it is broadcasting on television? I personally think that is something I wouldn't support, and am critical of Amazon to sell a product, then block use of the product on the day it is broadcast on network TV.
But the other half of me figures, gosh, a one day blackout JUST on the day that it is broadcast on TV? Maybe not something to throw a massive fit over.
The movies I purchased from Amazon Instant Video say, "You own this movie".
They lie. Since they only lease the movie from the distributor they can’t sell it to you, you only “own” it in so far as for as long as they’re allowed to store it on their servers they can show it to you. But the minute they aren’t allowed to have it on their servers you get nothing.
I bought five dart guns from Amazon. I wanted four more. I was told that I had met my maximum. So I went to the locally owned (not Toys R Us) toy store and bought them.
I bought Heavy Metal (1981) a couple of months ago. Amazon has since removed it for rent or purchase due to contract issues. I still own and can play the movie.
What does the fine print say?
In reality, consumers never own a movie they buy. It makes no sense for Amazon to say that.
If we buy a DVD of a movie, we own the physical disc. And we own rights to watch the movie as often as we want using the physical media we purchased.
But we sure don’t own the movie.
I read books from my Kindle iPad app and stream Amazom Prime movies on it as well as my tv. The Disney issue is not a Kindle issue.
It’ll depend on the contracts and what their current dispute is, but eventually you won’t be able to watch it if they don’t get settled. Guarantee it, video rental companies lost this argument in the 80s, Amazon lost this argument with the Kindle a few years ago, this article is about them losing it again earlier this week. In the end they don’t own the content, they only lease the right to distribute, and that can be lost.
So do I. I like having real books, CDs, vinyl records, DVDs. For me, there's something more satisfying about that.
It's amazing that a large percentage of people's budgets is spent on nothing that's real. JMHO
I buy physical product. I dont want corporations tracking my reading/viewing habits and subsequently censoring the editions I am offered of previously purchased titles.
That won’t last forever. You will have to buy electronic books and movies eventually. Probably sooner then later.
Bootlegging CDs and DVDs is a completely justified act of civil disobedience.
If a musician wants me to pay him a reasonable sum for his CD, okay. If a record company wants me to pay an exorbitant sum to buy cocaine and whores for record-company executives, they can bite my man-sized ass.
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