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Half of Young Norwegians Say Online Piracy Is an Acceptable Way to Save Money * TorrentFreak

47 comments
  • Oldie but goodie:

    We think there is a fundamental misconception about piracy. Piracy is almost always a service problem and not a pricing problem, - Gabe Newell

    • He gets it. No wonder why I pay for every game I play, but I refuse to sign up to streaming services again.

      If I can get better quality in almost every aspect for free, your service is really crappy.

    • Why can't it be both?

      • I don't know about you, but I'd be willing to pay a lot of money for a streaming service that guaranteed a good amount of shows I'd want to watch without ever taking any shows or features away

        Sadly, no streaming service does this basic feature. It's all enshitification and fragmentation of good shows across multiple services

    • I'm pretty sure it can be both. If there's AmazingService that allows streaming everything there is on torrent and then some, but it costs thousands of dollars per month, no one would be able to afford it and it won't have any meaningful impact on piracy.

    • But but but rational actors supply and demand something something invisible hand of the market.

      Orthodox economics can't be wrong. That's why you have an orthodoxy, to make sure everybody knows it's right! That's how science works!

  • Instead of focusing on external threats and concerns, legal streaming platforms themselves could make the most progress by changing their pricing.

    Among all self-proclaimed Norwegian pirates, the most common reasons to stop were more affordable legal streaming services (41%) and the availability of a broader range of content per service (35%).

    It's almost like people don't like paying more and more for streaming services with less and less shows on them, when the pirates will offer you everything in one much smaller subscription (if not for free).

47 comments