this post was submitted on 29 Jun 2024
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When was the last time you walked into any store and bought a feature length film or tv show on hard drive or SSD?
What is your plan when the licence agreement for your favorite series expires on your chosen streaming service and no other streaming service picks up the show?
No one is arguing this. You're making the strawman arguement. The not-so-subtle undertone of the article is clear.
Quoting the article:
You will not be allowed to legally own tv shows or films and you should learn to like it. As I can tell from many of the other comments here, not many of us are fans of that idea.
This isn't a hill I care enough to die on.
I've never bought a series in any format. It's always been piracy and for at least the last 5 years catch and release.
What I mean is, I don't want to keep series in any case.
That said, now I think about it, if I didn't pirate everything then keeping copies of what I'd paid for world feel important
Watch the other millions of hours of media that's been released in the last 100 years
You are very much missing the point for the sake of a pedantic argument.
Someone else already perfectly illustrated the point in a comment below, so I guess I'm spared the effort.
It physically lives encrypted in your RAM and only temporarily. Remember TPM exists.
I guess. Technically. I don't usually count encrypted without the ability to decrypt as useful, but, I'll give you the up arrow because technically correct is the best kind of correct.
No, the data is not physical, it is either magnetic or electric.
Since most people still store their media on hard drives most media is purely magnetic.
In a solid state drive storage chip the data is stored electronicly.
Turn off the PC and see how well that no-matter-what applies...
What's the point of having inaccessible data?