this post was submitted on 12 May 2025
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One might wonder about the ratio of Nintendo's legal budget to actual piracy losses.

Having been a college student back in the days of Napster (and ignoring the complete dearth at the time in physical stores of the sorts of music I was getting into), $20 CDs with one good track were not a value proposition. So when I downloaded a track, there was zero actual financial hit to whatever label or the RIAA ... it's a sale that never would have happened. You didn't lose money; you gained exposure.

My last console was an SNES, so I have no horse in this race. But being actively hostile to your customers generally ends poorly.

As a grown-ass adult, I've spent more than $2,000 on music on Beatport, mostly $1.29 at a time replacing the stuff I pirated for better-quality versions.

When you have to take away rights that used to be guaranteed by the first-sale doctrine, it's likely a sign there's something wrong with your business model moreso than users causing so much chaos (and profit loss) that you have no choice.

This isn't some fly-by-night AI toaster company that'll shut down services in a year and leave you fucked. It's Nintendo. They're going to survive just fine.

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[–] Powderhorn@beehaw.org 1 points 4 hours ago* (last edited 4 hours ago)

I never quite got the idea of music streaming. Maybe I'm just too old (yells at cloud), but I listened to radio shows (online) to discover new music, then downloaded it. In the era of mobile data, this seems to have been a solid choice.

I struggle to hit my 5GB data limit by a large margin ... adding a streaming service and then having to upgrade my plan because of it sounds like throwing money away when I spend less a month on new tracks than Spotify costs.

There's been some weird conditioning going on over the years with younger generations that it totally makes sense to just throw a lot of money every month at things that have cheaper, easily accessible one-time solutions. Just because you can't buy a house doesn't mean you should rent everything else.

Hell ... I was born in the '70s, and the last time I had cable was when I lived with my parents. "Let me get this straight ... you want me to pay usurious prices because there's no way to avoid ESPN being bundled in and then trump it with ads?"

As a rule, if it has ads, I won't pay for it (I was fine with it back in print days, as they were paying my salary on the other side of the hairline). That's what the advertisers should be doing. You're charging the customers too much and the advertisers too little if this is the equilibrium that makes line go up while taking money that customers could have had to spend on the advertised products.

Let's say cable prices dropped to $20 per month. I'd imagine you'd get those ads in front of far more eyeballs, so increased ad rates would actually be beneficial. But let's not bring logic into capitalism.