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  • @echo64@lemmy.world
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    482 years ago

    Yeah that’ll happen for anything streamed and licensed.

    If you want to own something, you need to own it physically. Buy an actual disk. People won’t and I’ll be surprised if they are still making blurays at all in ten years but that’s the only way you can actually buy media now.

    • BraveSirZaphod
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      202 years ago

      I’m actually still kinda surprised about this. My understanding is that the licenses from rights holders to streaming platforms generally included an indefinite right to stream to people who’d purchased content, even if they may not offer it for continued purchase or as part of the general included streaming library.

      • TheEntity
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        112 years ago

        That’s definitely how it works with games on Steam or GOG.

        • BolexForSoup
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          72 years ago

          Unless you bought after-market keys like on G2A and it turned out to be stolen/keygen’d. Valve will remove your game if your key is found to be stolen (whether you knew it or not). I imagine you know this but just felt it bore mentioning.

          • TheEntity
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            22 years ago

            Good point, yes, that’s an exception. A justified one if you’d ask me but I guess YMMV.

      • @echo64@lemmy.world
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        32 years ago

        Streaming isn’t the same as downloading. It has different rights and with movies it’s especially complicated. The rights to a movie can literally be so complicated that no one knows who owns it.

    • BolexForSoup
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      02 years ago

      If you want to own something, you need to own it physically.

      Minor sticking point: it’s still a “limited license.” You don’t really “own” anything and if that physical copy is damaged or destroyed you’re just SOL.

      Streaming, digital, physical, everything has a drawback! Backups are your friend.

      • @echo64@lemmy.world
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        102 years ago

        Yes, you don’t own the copyright. You do own the physical disk, and you also have a right to backup a personal copy.

        It’s not a sticking point, it’s a feature. Take care of your shit just like all your other shit. No one says it’s a sticking point to say that a kettle you buy could break, that’s just normal part of ownership of a thing.

        • BolexForSoup
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          2 years ago

          Feature, sticking point, call it what you want. I’m just saying there’s nuance to it.