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#8421 | |
Special Member
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So now when it streams it does not have the original theme song. But owners of the DVD can still listen to it as it was intended. https://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/...n_1683506.html |
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#8422 | |
Blu-ray King
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#8423 | |
Banned
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You guys can’t list where paid content has been removed from accounts, just that it “may be removed” based on an EULA. Studios, marketing firms, etc don’t care about your fears on things that they haven’t done yet and I’m certainty not going to sit around worried that in 20 yrs a title may disappear from my library. I am not holding film preservation standards to some monstrous degree when there’s millions of hours of content made monthly now. You need to read up on cases surrounding these issues. Federal Courts have already found that disposal and selling of your digital copies directly is covered under the first sale doctrine and they are currently reviewing the secondary copy market right now in the Second Circuit. Courts already found your license as a valid purchase, no difference from the disc itself being the license, and they cannot remove purchases without returning your money to some extent. This is just making a mountain out of a, in this case, nonexistent molehill. |
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#8424 | |
Blu-ray Count
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These EULAs may never use the rights they give themselves, but those terms are there and they can be applied anytime they so choose. These clauses are included because there is a real possibility they will want to use them. The only justification for agreeing to such unfair terms is blind faith that the benevolence of the provider will prevail. The providers list in great detail all the ways they could screw you over, but you simply trust they would never do it. The threats are right there and their customers just do the ostrich maneuver and insert their collective heads in to the ground. I really want everyone to get what they pay for when they purchase their content, be it on disc or via digital. I hope these EULA terms remain a dormant risk. I am never happy to see someone get ripped off. Nobody can take my discs away from me, excepting an armed intruder. Somebody can delete titles from your digital library, the EULAs expressly allow for it. |
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (04-24-2018) |
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#8425 | ||
Banned
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“We can’t even fix up old cars without bondo because parts aren’t made anymore but by god my copy of season 1 of KUWK better stay in my digital library until I’m dead and gone!” |
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#8426 | |
Banned
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#8427 | |
Blu-ray Count
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#8428 | |
Blu-ray Prince
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Web MD - How Does Marijuana Effect You? Changes to Mind and Mood Most people use marijuana because the high makes them feel happy, relaxed, or detached from reality. Smoking pot can also have less-pleasant effects on your mind and mood, too. You might have:
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#8429 | |
Blu-ray King
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#8430 | |
Blu-ray Count
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There are already so many blu-ray players in existence that the used market would flourish for many years if new players were no longer manufactured. Plus, they are incredibly durable. I have no worries about the hardware disappearing. I can still buy laserdisc players! |
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#8431 | |
Blu-ray Samurai
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I think occam would say they did not go though with the drm internet requirement because they saw the past pr nightmares from similar projects like the xboxone. The move gets you nothing but scorn from the physical community as microsoft proved. It was also probably shut down because if a minority of studios did go though with it on some titles they would see a massive number of returns. imagine 10k returns because this movie wont play on my player every time they did try this move. The occam razor for this is this is a really stupid idea lets not do it while it gets us nothing but our potential customers enmity. |
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Thanks given by: | Steedeel (04-24-2018) |
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#8432 |
Blu-ray Count
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All I have found regarding digital files and the First Sales Doctrine is this Nov.13, 2017 article where Capital Records sued ReDigi, Inc.
" In Capitol Records, LLC v. ReDigi, Inc., this wrinkle has torn open the question: do consumers of digital works have the right “to sell or otherwise dispose of” the digital files they possess in the same way they do physical media? In that case, Capitol Records took offense to ReDigi’s attempts to create a viable resale market for iTunes files (and arguably other digital files, such as ebooks and video games, to name a few). " ReDigi "would effectively delete the digital file from the original owner’s computer, place the file in a private “cloud” service, then eventually transfer the file to the new owner." The court ruled in favor of Capital Records: "Judge Sullivan followed this logic. Although he conceded that ReDigi was trying to operate like a “used record store,” it was impossible for the digital file to “migrate” from one location to another without the file being reproduced (even though the original file may no longer exist). By limiting the interpretation of the first-sale doctrine to “material items, like records, that the copyright owner puts into the stream of commerce,” he held that the fist-sale doctrine could not apply because ReDigi violated Capitol Records’ exclusive right of reproduction." ReDigi is appealing that ruling, but I have not found any results of that appeal. https://abovethelaw.com/2017/11/a-di...doctrine/?rf=1 |
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#8433 | |
Banned
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I recommend reading: Brief of Copyright Law Scholars as Amici Curiae in Support of Defendants-Appellants and Reversal in Capitol Records et al. v. ReDigi et al., 16-2321 (2nd Cir. 2017) For a full citation of cases supporting digital licenses (most refer to Microsoft type and iTunes) and the ownership of the licenses. Also: Kirtsaeng (Supreme Court) as applied to ninth circuit cases and digital media. You can search on google scholar. And Disney getting slammed over the Redbox Code sales: https://www.google.com/amp/s/www.the...ital-downloads |
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#8434 | |
Special Member
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Those that purchased the DVD's for season 1 and 2 can enjoy the show in it's original form. Those that rely on digital are stuck with an altered version. |
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#8435 | |
Blu-ray King
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Thanks given by: | octagon (04-24-2018) |
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#8436 | |
Banned
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But hey, what do I know? I just deal with licensing and IPs for a living. |
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#8437 | |
Blu-ray Count
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The appeal before the Second Circuit Court looks to be ongoing. One of the three judges of the Second Circuit Court said he expected the case to reach the Supreme Court. The outcome will be interesting. "Why is this not like a used CD store?" asked circuit court judge Rosemary Pooler. "It's not possible to transfer without making a reproduction," answered Mandel. "For all practical purposes, if we affirm, we're saying the first-sale doctrine doesn't apply to digital works, right?" asked Newman.(One of the three judges) Responded Mandel, "I think that's correct." https://www.hollywoodreporter.com/th...-songs-1031629 Last edited by Vilya; 04-24-2018 at 05:50 PM. |
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#8438 | |
Special Member
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![]() I am arguing that when you purchase movies digitally you are at the mercy of the content holder to alter or remove the product you paid for. |
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Thanks given by: | dublinbluray108 (04-27-2018), Dynamo of Eternia (04-24-2018) |
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#8439 | |
Banned
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#8440 | |||||
Blu-ray Knight
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The reason people were concerned about this issue with 4K discs is because it is part of the spec, and it would essentially put the same potential issue and restrictions on discs that ALREADY exists with digital distribution. So this is different than the 4K disc issue in the sense that we KNOW that these EULAs already apply to digitally distributed content and we are ALREADY dependent upon the service provider for ongoing access to it. We just didn't want the same thing to apply to 4K discs. Quote:
Traditionally captialism involves exchanging money for physical goods or services. With a physical good, unless it is something that is perishable and/or consumable (i.e. food, gasonline), you otherwise have it perpetually upon purchasing it until when and if you decide to get rid of it or whatever. With services, you are either exchanging cash for a limited service, say for the car maintenance that you need right now, to have a new roof put on your house, etc. in which once the service is completed, the transaction is done. Even for ongoing services like phone, internet, cable TV, even Netflix, you are typically paying a monthly fee for ongoing service (until when/if the consumer decides to no longer use them, or stops paying for them). And short of these companies going out of business or being bought out, they will continue to offer these services going forward, as they are continuing to make money doing so. The problem with digital distribution of purchased entertainment content is that for each movie purchased, it is essentially like either paying for a physical good or limited one time service in the sense that you pay for it once, but then you are still dependent forever on the service provider to access it. If it was DRM free, and we could back it up ourselves and use it without needing to re-authenticate later, that would be better, but of course then you have the issue of people being able to easily make unauthorized copies. This has nothing to do with being against change in general or against capitalism. It has everything to do with us essentially paying for something that was previously a physical good, now no longer is, and that we only have very vague rights to access it and it can be taken away at any time as per the EULA. And we are not making mountains out of molehills, especially not non-existent ones. There have been cases of content disappearing and being removed. They do tend to be the exception and not the rule, but it has happened. I will look up some specific examples later (I don't have time right now). And honestly even if they give us our money back upon removing a purchase, while that's better than it being removed and not getting a refund, it what the person who paid for it wants to watch that movie, and if it happens to not be currently available through any other provider, then the refund does little to rectify that. From a certain perspective, it would be like saying it would be okay if I were to walk into your house and take your personal physical belongings without your permission as long as I left cash there for their approximate value. At any rate, you can keep doing things the way you do them. That's otherwise fine. But you went from starting out simply stating how you do things and your lack of concern, and when others expressed why they feel differently, your responses have gotten more obnoxious in tone, and you are calling people hoarders, acting like you are essentially the sole arbiter of what content has "merit" of being accessible on an ongoing basis, acting like some content should be fine to remove just because you don't like it, and so on. Even when I expressed why attitudes like yours are concerning to us, it wasn't meant in a malicious way. It was just stating that we have concerns, and here is why. And it's expressed in general terms of the overall concern, not in a way that is passing judgement on the content someone enjoys watching. If you can't have a civil discussion about this, then maybe you should just leave. Quote:
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But movie and TV content is not necessarily interchangeable. While I may still have access to other content that I like, if a particular movie that I really like is rendered inaccessible to me, then there isn't really any substitute for it other than another copy of the same movie. |
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