this post was submitted on 13 Aug 2023
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Technology

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[–] dinckelman@lemmy.world 169 points 2 years ago (33 children)

To be completely fair, it's been over for a while. Even if you completely forget about infrastructure, between the endless wars for licenses, endless removals of content from platforms, shitty inconvenient apps, and regional locks, it's already a dying market.

On top of all of that, they're implementing the "don't you have 5 extra dollars" strategy, with skyrocketing monthly prices for each of these. If it was 15$ a month to watch anything, i would still pay. but it's 15$ for each of them, and they still serve you ads, and sell your data

[–] jonne 53 points 2 years ago (3 children)

And the writer's strike shows that the artists don't get paid anyway if you pay for content, so they can't even play that card either.

[–] Whirlybird@aussie.zone 1 points 2 years ago (1 children)

They get paid, they just don’t get residuals for life from every job they were paid to do.

[–] CmdrShepard@lemmy.one 1 points 2 years ago

Just read an article stating that the writers of a show were only paid a combined $3000 after the show was streamed over 16 million hours on Netflix. These companies try to crack down on piracy by claiming artists/writers/actors don't get paid if we pirate but they're clearly not getting paid anything outside their normal wages when we don't pirate either.

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