this post was submitted on 08 Sep 2024
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[–] [email protected] 81 points 1 week ago* (last edited 1 week ago) (10 children)

"taking the money creators would have made"

fun fact! this is not how the entertainment industry works.

The actual creators have long been paid for their work when a film/series releases, the only people who profit from the sales are those who own the IP, which is usually the production company (and the actors sometimes, if they decided to take a gamble and agreed on recieving royalties instead of signing a fixed contract. Or rarely the director, if their name alone can sell a film)

unless it's like a fully indie film, self made, self produced, and self published, people who made the thing never see the sales money

& there is very little inbetween those two extremes, only thing that comes to my mind is works either commissioned by, or sold to a streaming service (& most of the time creators lose the IP rights if they do that but still recieve royalties, then it's up to the creator team to share the royalties money).

so far the only exception to all this bullshit that i know of is Nebula

[–] [email protected] 10 points 1 week ago (1 children)

And also piracy does not automatically equal losing profits. If there is a show I want to watch, but I can't pirate it, then I simply don't watch it. And in this case, where the options are either me pirating the show or me not watching it at all, neither situation takes away profits from anyone nor gives anyone profits.

[–] [email protected] 9 points 1 week ago

and let's not forget that piracy still allows for the most powerful form of advertisement - word of mouth. You might've not paid to watch something, but if it was good and you recommended it to your friends, they might!

back in the old Internet days the music studio Two Steps From Hell gained popularity nearly exclusively through piracy. I'm not even sure if they sold any albums before the widespread reupload of their music happened. I myself found out about them from a long deleted anime music video. And I have since bought several of their CDs and saw them live in Europe (after fans have begged them for nearly a decade to go on a tour). Would I have known they even existed if their music wasn't spreading like illegal wildfire in the early 2010s? probably not, which would be a shame because they're one of my all time favourite band-thingies idk how to call them

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