this post was submitted on 11 Jul 2024
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Why would I want dvds when I can own digital media?
Because the current trend is to ensure the consumer owns less and less and just pays monthly for access rights.
No, the current trend is piracy.
The current user trend may be piracy, the current corporate trend is You don't own anything, pay a subscription.
I've started buying DVDs and Blu-ray again after years of not doing so because there have been multiple instances of me purchasing a movie on some streaming platform and then it no longer being available. Also, there have been even more instances where it's less expensive to buy the physical product and then rip it than it is to buy the digital copy.
We'll since they are killing Blu Ray you better hope your hardware lasts forever.
They’re not killing Blu-Ray. They’re killing consumer writeable Blu-Rays. Tell me you only read headlines without telling me you only read headlines.
And even only SONY is stopping production, other manufactures aren't.
No they're not.
Rip your own DVDs and you can have both, with redundancy
Or store them on a portable hdd and have redundancy without hoarding shiny plastic discs.
I store the discs because while ripping is of questional legallity by having the discs I have the morals right.
I find this to be an odd choice. No one is coming to your home to check. You KNOW you paid for the media. I'd throw the disks I know I would never use out, or sell them.
If you throw away perfectly fine physical copies, you are just contributing to the ever-increasing plastic waste poisoning our ecosystems, and if you sell them then your digital copies are now illegal. Just put them in a disc binder and stick 'em in a closet for fuck sake!
I don't get the point of having them then. No one will check, they're just filling space...
If you're going to sell the disks, just pirate instead, it's the same in a legal sense (you have something you don't have a legal claim to).
If you're worried about space, get a disk binder or something. Disks aren't that big, cases are, so ditch the case and keep the disk. I keep the disks too, but I have a ton of storage space.
I mean, that's just what I do. With some of my games, I have bought them on Steam (because I did want the devs to get paid) and have a pirated version for the sake of ownership, which imo is fair. If I was insistent on paying, I would rather buy a digital copy and download a DRMless one, if there is no DRMless purchase outright.
so are you. they're all going to end up in a landfill one way or another.
you mean throw the plastic case away?
Nobody today is not coming to my house. However the world has not always changed in ways I like. If the media companies want to make an example of somebody they might randomly pick me. If I have physical media they will not be able to convince the general public I'm a dishonest thief and so even though I might be legally in the wrong for ripping DVDs they will stay away: they are going to look for someone who they can make look like a dishonest thief in the court of public opinion. They are not looking to take me to court and win whatever damaged they are owned from my activity (it will cost them about 100 times as much $$$ in lawyers fees - they would probably win but it isn't worth it), what they would be looking for is to make an example in the news about how much someone loses and if I have physical media they instead look like jerks for enforcing a law on something that the generally public wouldn't even call a crime.
extras, commentaries, it's nice seeing your favorite films on a shelf
I really don't understand why they don't include this stuff on streaming services.
Physical media cannot be altered afterwards. That's a thing Disney likes to do, for example.
Plus maximum video and audio quality. Some people don't watch movies on phones or laptops, you know.
Nobody is altering the movie file on my computer except me.
Digital rips likewise can be lossless, so there’s no quality differences.
All of that can be achieved with digital media.
Because the discs will safely store that data for decades longer than any of your hard drives will likely work.