Fundamentally stupid

Iโ€™ve seen several people in the past arguing that the media companyโ€™s responses to online piracy โ€“ suing their best customers and making content harder to access โ€“is rational.Freemedia160

Another of those strange definitions of rationality.

This article isnโ€™t one of those types luckily, but it does go too much for the typical journalism โ€œfair and balancedโ€ sophistry.

โ€œIt is difficult to compete with free,โ€ he added.

No, itโ€™s actually really really easy to compete with free.

Offer a service with no DRM, no monitoring, and not tied to a single device with โ€“ most importantly โ€“ all the content there is and people will sign up for it in droves. In absolute fucking droves.

And pay for it. Hell, Iโ€™d pay quite a lot for that. Probably $100 a month if it included music, movies and TV shows. Iโ€™d rather pay less, but there you go.

Someone in the article to which I linked though really gets at what drives piracy.

There is another obstacle to stopping illegal downloads, said Andre Swanston, the chief executive of Tru Optik, the media analytics firm. People want access to everything, anytime, and there is little to stop them from having it. โ€œEven if you added Netflix, Hulu Plus, Amazon Prime, Sony Crackle and everything else combined, that is still less content available legally than illegally,โ€ he said. โ€œThe popularity of piracy has nothing to do with cost โ€” it is all about access.โ€

censurachina-e1320181202666Hard to buy something if ainโ€™t nobody selling it! If you pirate something, you can almost always find it. And itโ€™s more convenient and just works. Quite the opposite when you look for something โ€œlegal.โ€ Then itโ€™s a nightmare of DRM, streaming woes and unavailability.

Itโ€™s as I said actually really easy to compete with free. Just these companies donโ€™t want to do it.

Whatโ€™s puzzling is that they could make money hand over fist, far more than they make now, just by making a few rational decisions (not the โ€œrationalโ€ ones where they sue their own customers). But they choose not to. Why? I understand the profit motive. But I donโ€™t understand this.

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