- Dołączono
- 15 Sty 2019
They enjoy routinely "correcting" this misconception to insist you don't own it at all, period, for any period of time, no matter how much you paid or what you think you're holding in your hands. And I hate them for that, so very much.generally preventing anyone from owning anything for too long
They've claimed that from the beginning, from the first home media formats (8-tracks, vinyl, VHS, etc.) to now -- you may own a hunk of plastic and metal that can, in concert with a fancy electronic device, cause an audio/video "experience" to occur for you, but you don't "own" the content, just a hunk of plastic. Being all-digital just makes that substantially easier to enforce.
Ross Scott's analogy with SKG of a publisher breaking into your home at 3am to "revoke your license" by literally taking back a physical book you bought five years ago was perfect (and you'll note they never countered it, because there is[/] no counter). That's exactly what they've always dreamed of doing, and all-digital "licensed content" lets them do it.