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Twitch’s new storage limits will purge huge swaths of Internet gaming history

arstechnica.com

Twitch’s new storage limits will purge huge swaths of Internet gaming history

Anti-Corporate Movement @lemmy.giftedmc.com

Twitch’s new storage limits will purge huge swaths of Internet gaming history

Hacker News @lemmy.bestiver.se

Twitch's new storage limits will purge swaths of Internet gaming history

Gaming @beehaw.org

Twitch’s new storage limits will purge huge swaths of Internet gaming history

87 comments
  • The people complaining about this in the article are largely hysterical and delusional.

    Perfect embodiment of 'always online' brain.

    They genuinely believe Twitch is some kind of public good, some kind of default level of infrastructure like plumbing, that just works, forever, with no problems, because magic.

    Hosting videos almost no one watches is a waste of money, and deleting them is among the least worst things Twitch can do to keep the lights on.

    Twitch is a massive loss leader in a hyperprofit oriented conglomerate megacorp, in a shit-tier economy thats primed to become a burning-dumpster-of-shit-tier economy very soon.

    Amazon is giving people months of warning.

    But people are freaking out.

    ....

    If you want to save some videos... go buy a 1 or 2 or 4 TB HDD, internal or external, and start saving shit to it. 4 TB HDDs look like they're going for between roughly $80 to $150, or about 4 to 8 chipotle burritos delivered via personal chauffeur.

    The vast majority of Twitch streams and thus highlights are in 1080p, 60fps, 6K bitrate.

    Thats roughly 4.5 GB per hour, and thats rounding up.

    These people complaining about 'oh it'd be a full time job to save 5,000 of footage'...

    Come on.

    Thats 6 of those 4 TB HDDs, for 5000 hours.

    https://github.com/ihabunek/twitch-dl

    This has been around since 2018, and there are batch downloader clis that people have built off of it.

    You wanna save 5000 hours of your shit?

    Buy some HDDs, learn how to run some python.

    ...

    The level of entitlement is ... just comical, basically.

    The alternatives Twitch would be looking at, instead of reducing cost by axing tons of videos almost no one watches, would be things like:

    Making watching streaming in higher resolutions/frame rates a premium tier cost for viewers,

    Dramatically amping up the presence of unskippable advertisements,

    Dramatically altering the revenue splits from ad revenue and how much of a streamer subscribers payment actually goes to the streamer,

    Or keeping that split the same but jacking up viewer subscription/bit costs.

  • A hot and uneducated take: nothing of value will be lost. Nobody will ever go searching through a defunct twitch account's 142 hours of Minecraft speedrun attempts. If it's valuable, back it up locally

    • I think this can be true for large swaths of the information that will be lost, but there's also a lot that will be lost that nobody is currently backing up. For instance:

      1. Recordings people think are backed up simply because they're misinformed, only to realize all their old, say, childhood gaming videos are now lost forever
      2. Clips that show damning behavior about a popular public figure that weren't caught before, but could become evidence in a future investigation
      3. Clips previously thought to not be relevant, that then become relevant later on for some kind of general historical context (e.g. Campaigns started trying to figure out if something was in a game at a given time in a game with very little actual software backed up, devlog streams that contained lost features that could explain why a game then developed the way it is today, etc)
    • nothing of value will be lost

      I'd argue the opposite: there's actually a lot of stuff out there that's actually interesting: old-school lets-players who'd have done actual informative playthroughs of games. It's kind of a dying art, but it's also exactly the kind of content that's going to get purged by this kind of action.

      It's interesting to spend, say, 10 hours watching some guy play Sierra games and actually talk through shit about the game and whatnot, and it'd be a shame to have that vanish.

      But not entirely unexpected since that's not profitable content in the way that the current morons babbling about bullshit reaction videos, totally-not-camgirls totally not showing their tits, and whatever other brainrot nonsense most of twitch is. (Also alt-right propaganda, but eh.)

  • It sucks but I understand the reasons. Anything of true importance to someone should have been downloaded and/or upload somewhere else as it happens.

87 comments