• @Schal330
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    599 months ago

    The key difference is that you don’t have to be subscribed to all of those services at the same time. You can rotate through them.

    Watch what you want on Netflix, unsub > sub to Disney and watch what you want, unsub > …

    Sure in an ideal world it would be better if everything was on a single cheap service, but sadly that won’t happen.

    • @[email protected]
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      269 months ago

      you don’t have to be subscribed to all of those services at the same time.

      so far. cable in my area also didnt force me to subscribe to all channels until it did.

    • @Maalus
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      229 months ago

      Or just sail the 7 seas since it’s not convenient to rotate stuff like that, track which service you have etc.

      • @GooseFinger
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        69 months ago

        Agreed!

        And if you weren’t already convinced, those streaming services will kneecap the service you paid for by only giving lower bitrates, max quality 1080p, etc., unless you use their app. Why would anyone want to avoid using their apps? Because they have malware baked into them that spies on you.

        For how shitty cable TV was, at least they couldn’t use that service to eavesdrop on your private conversations, track what you watch, etc. If they find your personal data so profitable and worth taking from you, they should at least offer their service for free and get real consent from you before you use it. Big, bold letters next to the download button that say this service is monetarily free but we will spy on you very hard in exchange for its use.

        Until their services stop being shitty, expensive, and crammed full of malware, it’s the 7 seas for me, baby 🏴‍☠️⛵🏴‍☠️

    • @takeheart
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      139 months ago

      This subscribe-and-binge-for-1-month approach seems to be exactly what a lot of people are doing. Vox just did a short video on it.

    • @dejected_warp_core
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      79 months ago

      This is the way.

      The current model tries to fight back against this by having a release or “broadcast” schedule so the latest season of a show isn’t binge-able. I also think the whole mess relies pretty heavily on FOMO with the current fandom and the desire for a spoiler-free experience. Otherwise, it’s much cheaper to permanently stay a year or two behind everyone else well after full seasons are released (and the reviews are in).

      If I’m right, we’ll eventually see more draconian policies to “lock in” subscribers somehow. (I’ll leave it at that - please don’t give them ideas)

    • @T00l_shed
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      69 months ago

      I think soon it will be yearly contracts or cancelation fees.

    • FiveMacs
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      39 months ago

      Or…don’t be subscribed to any of them and watch their content anyways…

  • @psmgx
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    289 months ago

    Yaaaarrrrrrrrrrrr matey

    • @samus12345
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      49 months ago

      You are now banned from lemmy.world

  • @Jimmycakes
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    edit-2
    9 months ago

    As long as there’s no ads I don’t really care about the price. I’ll never watch ad TV as long as I live. Even though I have prime I pirate those shows now.

    • @[email protected]
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      129 months ago

      Yup. It seems crazy to me now that I used to pay for cable and 8-9 minutes of a 30 minute TV show was ads.

      • @dejected_warp_core
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        89 months ago

        What kills me is that cable was actively promoted as “TV without ads” when it was new (see: HBO).

      • @Ginger666
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        79 months ago

        People are finally waking up and realizing you are paying to waste a 3rd of your life

  • @[email protected]
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    179 months ago

    The difference is that it is now much easier for people to capture video from streaming services, which means torrents are always available a few hours after the film/show goes online.

    • @[email protected]
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      149 months ago

      I’ve been pirating media for the last 2 decades or more, and shows have always been available within minutes of when they were released. Copying a stream might be easier than setting up a capture card and recording a broadcast, but the wait time hasn’t really changed all that much.

      • @[email protected]
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        39 months ago

        Maybe not for shows, but for film, I think it has. More films are released simultaneously to theaters and a streaming service, or available for streaming shortly after the theater release. I don’t watch nearly asany cam rips as I used to.

  • @[email protected]
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    139 months ago

    Yeah but you can at least choose exactly which episode you’d like rather than flipping channels or watching the guide channel to figure out what’s on and even then it may be something you’re not in the mood for. Not that I don’t agree it’s expensive again if you pay for them all but we do have better options even when subscribing to only one or two.

  • @randon31415
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    69 months ago

    I got Disney plus through some bundle somewhere, and when I try to cancel it, it just says “this is being paid by the Disney+ bundle, you have to cancel it there.” I don’t know where there is!

    • @T00l_shed
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      49 months ago

      Call the credit card company and stop payment that way.

  • @Ginger666
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    49 months ago

    Came here to say arrrrrrrgh you glad there arggggggggh other options ye skallywag?

      • @yuriy
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        29 months ago

        It’s not, I promise. Try movie-web.us, just search whatever and it should do the rest.

  • Lladra
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    29 months ago

    Who still watches TV?

    • @Persen
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      04 months ago

      We, on the balkans because we’re forced to have cable with internet.