this post was submitted on 12 Feb 2025
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FellowKids
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YAASSS content:
• Ads/media where 'the man' tries to appeal to young people using their vernacular in a lame, pandering way
• Ads/media that tries to appeal to young people but is self-aware and/or well executed
Ratchet content:
• Children's media and commercials for children's products that don't involve inter-generational pandering (this isn't a place to collect all advertising and media that's aimed at kids) Nickelodeon/Cartoon Network/Disney/etc.
• Text messages, emails, PMs, or other forms of interpersonal communication not sent as an advertisement
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For me, piracy isn’t about the cost. I’ve spent 1000’s of dollars on home servers, Apple TVs, NAS, hard drives, Usenet/VPN subscriptions, and indexer subscriptions. Not to mention all the extra time it takes to set up and keep everything running.
I do it because I get a higher quality product. The last time I did the math, for the size of my collection and the cost of everything I’d spent would be the equivalent to having paid $10/Blue-ray for what I have.
I also do have many streaming services through different bundles, but the low bitrates and constant switching of services means it’s harder to find and lower quality to watch than just adding something in Radarr and playing it in Plex.
On the other hand I legally stream music all the time and am very happy with the product. You pick one provider of your choice, pay a reasonable price, get access to nearly all the world’s music, modern and historical, and the audio quality is more than reasonable.
It’s on the movie and TV industry to fix their piracy problem. The music industry has even provided them a template.
For me its not so much quality as it is control. I set things up exactly the way I want with exactly the content I want and I know it's not going to suddenly change tomorrow. This is why I dont go for streaming unless it's from a server I control.
In the early days of streaming it wasn't quite as bad. A few licenses did expire, but it wasn't like most things were just going to disappear overnight. And Netflix started out with strong original programming, so there was still always value.
Now, though even though I've spent a lot of money on my server and a lot of time futzing with it, it's worth it to me compared to futzing around figuring out which streaming service has the license this week for the show I want to watch.
Plus, unless I totally lose my Plex/Jellyfin database (has happened before as I've tinkered around learning things), my watch history stays with me. I can pick up a show where I left off, even years later. Not true if a show moves to another streaming service.
I view it kinda like the trade-off paying for anything vs DIY. Sometimes it's worth paying a premium to hire someone, especially if it's way outside your skill set. Other times you interview contractors, and either the price is way high, or you get the sense they have no clue what they're doing and will wreck your project. If you DIY then there's a learning curve and you won't always get everything right, but you have total control.