DaButt
Thursday 19th January 2012 3:12pm
14,722 posts
Quote: Renegade Carpark @ January 19 2012, 12:53 PM GMT
They've practically put a gun to our heads and forced us to illegally download everything for free.
It's not that cut and dried. Take American television shows, for example. They are broadcast free to any American with a television set but the availability online is a muddled and confusing mess. Some shows can be watched online, others can't. Some shows are available the next day, some within the next 7 days. Most "expire" and are removed after a few weeks. (This also brings up the relatively new moneymaker: the often expensive DVD release of shows that originally aired for free.)
On the other hand, my computer automatically downloads the shows that I watch, without any effort on my part. The shows are in HD, typically available within 30 minutes of the end of the broadcast and all the commercials have been edited out. No time limit for viewing them, either. I pay a small monthly fee for the ability to download the shows and I'd gladly put it in the networks' pockets if I could get the same features for the same monthly price.
As usual, the entertainment corporations are lagging behind the curve. There are ways to make lots of money from their product but they have to change the way they do things.