Comment on Witch on the Holy Night Game Gets Release on Steam on December 14

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Spectacle8011@lemmy.comfysnug.space ⁨1⁩ ⁨year⁩ ago

DRM was a mistake enabled by corporate greed and our current copyright laws

Section 1201 of the DMCA is an incredibly shameful piece of legislation to have made it to law. Ridiculous copyright terms apparently weren’t enough for Disney and co.

the best we can do is show that we’re not biting anything that smells of these practices which is hard when exclusive licensing only provides one legal option with the alternative being piracy.

Yes, unfortunately, that’s all we can do. I doubt it will convince any of these companies to abandon these practices, but I refuse to support them monetarily. I’m reminded of the Veronica Mars Movie kickstarter campaign, where fans happily pledged over $5 Million dollars to see it come to fruition. Warner Bros. rewarded their fans for their generosity and support by encumbering the film with DRM so GNU/Linux fans who funded the film couldn’t watch the film: techdirt.com/…/warner-bros-turns-kickstarter-succ…

This is greed, plain and simple. They already brought in 5.7 Million dollars of revenue before the film was made. Sure, that money was spent on making the film, but at the very least, they knew they would braek even. Not many studios have that kind of guarantee. They brought in another 3.5 Million in the Box Office, making a profit. It’s very possible that without fans funding the film, Warner Bros would have lost money.

DRM did nothing to increase profits.

(Yes, I’m a Veronica Mars fan)

I haven’t gotten into the whole Blu-Ray shenanigans yet (part because getting anything anime here is a fucking nightmare in the first place and DVD/Blu-Ray are far down on the list of anime things I’d buy) I also don’t have anything that could read Blu-Ray ATM (my laptop does read CD/DVD perfectly fine though) so it’ll be a good bit before I even dare bother.

Thanks to the discussion we had, I spent yesterday going through my Blu-Ray collection. MakeMKV is fantastic and I highly recommend it if you ever buy a show on Blu-Ray. Hell, even DVD. I don’t know how well it keeps up with constantly changing Blu-Ray encryption schemes, but it seems to be much better than any of the standard methods. Plus, it has a nice GUI.

Depends from studio to studio, nowadays 1080p generally looks “fine” for most anime; but for older projects where SD DVD or VHS (/Betamax) was the best quality option or a lot of stuff early in the HD era it’s always a gamble to see if it turned out ok-ish.

Ah, that makes sense. I don’t have a VHS or Betamax player, haha. Or a Laserdisc player. I’ll have to settle for the DVD conversion when I buy one of those older shows.

New technology usually comes with less consumer control compared to it’s predecessor, e-books can have DRM

That’s an interesting thought. I can’t say I disagree with it at all. I own Harmony on Blu-Ray and started watching it again for the first time since 2015 (fantastic film btw), and it really does feel that way. The more advanced technology gets, the less the general public can do with it. It’s just…strange, when you think about it. The one exception has been the web, which was kind of an accident. Had Microsoft created it instead of some wide-eyed engineer at CERN, it definitely wouldn’t have ended up being the open platform it is today. And even though it is very open compared to a lot of other areas, there’s a trend toward certain companies trying to lock it down.

On the subject of locking down physical books, TorrentFreak has a super interesting article on the history of libraries and how publishers really didn’t like them: torrentfreak.com/you-cant-defend-public-libraries…

Make sure to set it to use an invidious instance that works well for you, freetube also has SponsorBlock built-in which you can enable in the settings, there’s also much more there for you to tweak.

I’ll have to tweak it sometime, thank you! For the moment, the default invidious instance has been working great. A lot better than the invidious instance I use in my browser.

On the surface it definitely sounds like the usual isekai; but it doesn’t just copy the formula for the sake of copying the formula, it takes care of every detail in order to build something that stands on it’s own.

That’s my favorite kind of story, actually. It’s the same reason I really like the Monogatari Series (even though I despised it when I watched it originally; the novels grew on me).

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