this post was submitted on 09 Dec 2023
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Because the issue at hand is more like if you bought tickets to the circus, but when you went to go see it you were told the circus isn't there anymore and you don't get a refund.
That I would definately call stealing, and if I wanted to see the circus the next time it was in town I would absolutely sneak in.
This is where the analogy breaks down, because the circus requires people and an area to operate in. Digital movies and TV shows should just require my device to watch it on.
To strain the metaphor further: The Circus leaving the venue isn't leaving town, they're just moving across the street. But your tickets are only valid for the old venue. Do you expect people to purchase new tickets or just sneak in?
There's also the people who purchased a lifetime membership to the circus and then were told the next day "The circus will no longer be going to that venue anymore after the end of the month."
The expectation is that I purchased this media and can watch it as much as I want, whenever I want, for the rest of my life. When companies say "Lol, no. Fine print" reasonable people aren't going to shrug their shoulders and say "You got me, I guess I'll purchase more things." They'll say "screw that, I can get it for free and keep it forever, what service are you providing that's better?"
A more honest analogy for the situation was that there are very few incidents of circuses doing that and now people demand it's morally justified to get free entrance to every circus, concert, fair, museum, ....
"Fool me once, shame on you, fool me twice, shame on me" though, right?
It's not just a few circusses. Every major circus company seems to consistently pull this trick.
But people aren't just sharing media that is affected. They pirate everything, even when there are ways to buy and own it.
"Some people speed on roads, so all roads are bad."
This conversation is about media you can't buy and own.