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Study finds piracy withering against legal alternatives

19 points| DanielRibeiro | 14 years ago |theregister.co.uk | reply

6 comments

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[+] nagash|14 years ago|reply
I bought Game of Thrones on iTunes the other day after reading a bunch of comments here on HN recommending it. It really bugs me that with all the connectivity I have already, it's still not enough to get it on my TV.

My Denon receiver has AirPlay, but audio only. My PS3 can steam DLNA, but that doesn't work because of the DRM.

So basically, I have to either go buy long cables to hook up my PC (10m+), short cables to hook up my Air (which would only ever be used for DRM'd iTunes content), or an Apple TV. Not very convenient when I could just pirate it.

[+] ZoltonVonMises|14 years ago|reply
I would agree with this. I have "friends" that used to pirate everything, and now they use Spotify, Netflix, etc.
[+] leak|14 years ago|reply
I would say it probably has something to do with the devices. It used to be you pirate songs and videos to play them on your computer. These days, however, it's smart phones and ipads/tablets. Not as easy to get that content on those devices. Much easier to stream than copy over.
[+] Zirro|14 years ago|reply
Piracy has never been about the money. At least not for me. It's about not being able to pay for what I want in easy way. Some things I would love to pay for, because they're good and I want to see more like them, are not even for sale.
[+] michaelcampbell|14 years ago|reply
There's that, and the "legal" ways of consuming content even once you get it is just so painful. Usenet provided movies have, generally, ... the movie. When you get a DVD, it's a half dozen un-skippable ads, warnings, and other crap I'm forced to pay for and watch that I DO NOT WANT.
[+] chrischen|14 years ago|reply
Isn't Netflix adoption much much greater than all the streaming music services combined?