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Disney Ditching Netflix Keeps Piracy Relevant (torrentfreak.com) 263

Yesterday, Disney announced its intent to pull its movies from Netflix and start its own streaming service. This upset many users across the web as the whole appeal of the streaming model becomes diluted when there are too many "Netflixes." TorrentFreak argues that "while Disney expects to profit from the strategy, more fragmentation is not ideal for the public" and that the move "keeps piracy relevant." From the report: Although Disney's decision may be good for Disney, a lot of Netflix users are not going to be happy. It likely means that they need another streaming platform subscription to get what they want, which isn't a very positive prospect. In piracy discussions, Hollywood insiders often stress that people have no reason to pirate, as pretty much all titles are available online legally. What they don't mention, however, is that users need access to a few dozen paid services, to access them all. In a way, this fragmentation is keeping the pirate ecosystems intact. While legal streaming services work just fine, having dozens of subscriptions is expensive, and not very practical. Especially not compared to pirate streaming sites, where everything can be accessed on the same site.
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Disney Ditching Netflix Keeps Piracy Relevant

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  • Shame (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:01PM (#54980259)

    Netflix started becoming close to an end to piracy. They were getting a great selection of content (US still had a better selection than most) and I was happy to pay for it as I always found something to watch for a reasonable cost. Not that I watched Disney products but inevitably others are going to follow suit.
    I am not a huge fan of paying multiple companies monthly to watch their content. Suddenly it becomes less value for money. Piracy is looking appealing again...

    • Re:Shame (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:18PM (#54980347)

      Disney, in a sense, effectively pirated the public domain. As far as I'm concerned, turnabout is fair play.

      • Re:Shame (Score:5, Insightful)

        by renegadesx ( 977007 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @10:35PM (#54980887)
        Jungle Book, Beauty and the Beast, Aladdin, Cinderella, Repunzal, yep fair point!
        • Re:Shame (Score:4, Insightful)

          by VernonNemitz ( 581327 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @11:24PM (#54981107) Journal
          That's not what the other poster meant. One of the recent revisions/extensions of copyright law was called the "Mickey Mouse Law", because it allowed Disney to keep MM under copyright, instead of that character getting liberated into the public domain.

          Regarding the other issue, of companies streaming content with fees, an alternative that works is advertising. Major networks like ABC and NBC and CBS and Fox all offer their broadcast programs on the internet for some weeks after the broadcast, and those streamed programs are interspersed with advertisements, just like the broadcasts. When we think about ancient TV programs that are still in syndication, broadcast still with interspersed commercials, it should be obvious that any content-production company should be able to offer its content via streaming practically forever (well, at least until it finally enters the public domain), if it always added some interspersed advertising. The companies would never need to charge viewers fees, but their programs would still be making money. And only the most die-hard of pirates would insist they have some kind of right to view commercial-free content.. Most folks are used to commercials, after all!
        • by jabuzz ( 182671 )

          Hum Rudyard Kipling died in 1936 and Dinsey's Jungle Book was released in 1967. I must be missing something here about the copyright expiring. Now on the other hand if we where to talk about Pinocchio we would be on the mark. Here Dinsey waited just exactly the 50 years from the death of Carlo Collodi before bringing out their bastardised version.

          My favourite idea is that any copyright extension is "retrospective". So if Disney want's more than 50 years better start paying a lot of money to the estate of Ca

          • Re:Shame (Score:4, Informative)

            by Letophoro ( 1417231 ) on Thursday August 10, 2017 @06:38AM (#54982085)

            Hum Rudyard Kipling died in 1936 and Dinsey's Jungle Book was released in 1967. I must be missing something here about the copyright expiring

            The Jungle Book was first published in 1894. The copyright laws of the time had a much shorter duration. If I remember correctly, it was 14 years from date of publication with the potential for one optional extension of another 14 years.
            Disney's version was taken from the public domain.

            • Re: (Score:2, Insightful)

              by Anonymous Coward

              So you're saying a commercial empire that has entertained millions, employed millions and made millionaires was made possible by shorter copyright duration that what we have now?

              The very company that is influential enough to extend copyright duration only exists because it was able to take advantage of shorter copyright terms?

      • public domain games (Score:5, Interesting)

        by harvey the nerd ( 582806 ) on Thursday August 10, 2017 @12:22AM (#54981261)
        As far as I'm concerned, any copyrighted material more than 28 years old is pirated public domain. I might settle for arguments of 17 - 20 years.
      • by Maritz ( 1829006 )

        Disney, in a sense, effectively pirated the public domain. As far as I'm concerned, turnabout is fair play.

        Yep. If you want Disney, pirate it. They're dickheads who are fucking around with copyright law and public domain. Don't fund them.

      • Re:Shame (Score:4, Funny)

        by stealth_finger ( 1809752 ) on Thursday August 10, 2017 @06:13AM (#54981999)

        Disney, in a sense, effectively pirated the public domain. As far as I'm concerned, turnabout is fair play.

        I pirated the last two star wars films from them and still felt ripped off. I'll probably pirate the new ones just to delete them.

      • Disney, in a sense, effectively pirated the public domain. As far as I'm concerned, turnabout is fair play.

        An increasing number of ordinary people, far beyond the original 'hacker' culture, are coming to the same conclusion.

    • Re:Shame (Score:5, Insightful)

      by renegadesx ( 977007 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @10:32PM (#54980877)
      This, I refuse to subscribe to HBOGo, I happily pirate Game of Thrones. Im on Netflix and Hulu and will not subscribe to a third. Same goes for Disney. I am happy to torrent whats not available on the main streaming services. Disney and HBO have the ability to take my money, but in trying to extract more out of me they will get none.
      • Re:Shame (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Wootery ( 1087023 ) on Thursday August 10, 2017 @04:52AM (#54981825)

        Ah, the old I don't like the pricepoint, so I'll just not pay.

        You'd come across as far more righteous if you just refused to watch GoT.

        • I've been told several times on this site that no-one is owed anything (for example, poor people are not owed a way out of poverty). So surely that applies to content makers?

        • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

          Ah, the old I don't like the pricepoint, so I'll just not pay.

          You'd come across as far more righteous if you just refused to watch GoT.

          That would be me. I'd love to watch it, but I don't care about any of HBO's other offerings, and to me, it isn't worth spending $15 for a few episodes per year of a single TV show. If you don't want to watch HBO's other content, that comes to something like twenty bucks per episode, making it by far the most expensive TV show to watch in the entire history of TV.

          I consider content sources in terms of the value per dollar. Netflix costs me... either $8 or $10 a month (I forget which) and provides content

          • by dgatwood ( 11270 )

            Err... I meant $15 per month to get a few episodes per year (in case that wasn't obvious). $15 per year would still be too expensive, but not extortionately so.

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
        I like what HBO is doing, you get their entire back catalog along with what they are currently airing. They make good stuff that people want to watch and don't penalize you if you want to subscribe for a month and binge watch.
        I'd be surprised if this is what Disney does. I subscribe to netflix and HBO, but I torrent all that Hulu crap because they insist on commercials.
        F#)@ that noise.
    • by Calydor ( 739835 )

      Are you absolutely sure you didn't watch Disney stuff? Disney is more than their animated movies today - it's Star Wars, it's Pirates of the Caribbean, it's Marvel and all their shows. The list goes on. Disney is essentially an umbrella corporation today.

    • Netflix started becoming close to an end to piracy.

      Hah! That's adorable if you actually believe that. While I agree that services like Netflix are probably making a dent, piracy is NEVER going to go away.

      Not that I watched Disney products but inevitably others are going to follow suit.

      Really? You didn't want any Marvel Cinematic Universe movies? No Star Wars? No Pixar? Touchstone Pictures? The Muppets? You realize all those are Disney properties, right? You'll forgive me if I don't actually believe you when you claim you don't watch any Disney products.

      I am not a huge fan of paying multiple companies monthly to watch their content.

      Agreed! I have zero interest in having twelve different subscriptions to var

      • It's funny that you point that out, except for Dr. Strange very recently I do watch very few Disney owned things. They've just gone downhill on a lot of their quality including Marvel the last few years.
    • I'm guessing, but I think that the reality is that a lot of the executives in the entertainment industry aren't actually very worried about piracy. They know it happens. They wish it didn't. They'll complain vocally about it. But it's not something that keeps them up at night.

      The issue is control over distribution channels. Decades ago, studios were concerned that VHS sales would cut into theater ticket sales, and then that VHS rentals would cut into VHS sales. For a while, Disney even refused to rel

    • by mysidia ( 191772 )

      I am not a huge fan of paying multiple companies monthly to watch their content.

      That IS important, but there is another issue: Infrastructure and delivery.... Software on my set-top box devices ONLY supports Netflix, Youtube, and some other standardized apps.

      So If I need to use a new streaming service, then you're basically saying I must chunk my set-top boxes and spend a few hundred $$$ on new ones...... that or stream from a media server such as Plex.

      But if I go through all the trouble of ha

  • Greed!! (Score:5, Interesting)

    by grumpy-cowboy ( 4342983 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:01PM (#54980263)

    No I will not paying for another streaming service. Good luck with that.

    • Re:Greed!! (Score:4, Insightful)

      by Rockoon ( 1252108 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:07PM (#54980295)
      ..or install another streaming application.

      Kodi with a pirate plugin or a solution like it will win because because then its all in one place.
      • ..or install another streaming application.

        Or just take up a hobby in real life. You'll be much happier and more fulfilled with the added bonus of knowing that you're not contributing to media companies.

    • Netflix will fund a series of animated movies of all the classic children's tales, complete with music...

      At some point they might even cross over and beat Disney on quality, not hard as Disney has been a mixed bag for a while. Some stuff is great but some of it mediocre.

      • by AmiMoJo ( 196126 )

        Disney has always been mediocre, just the best that was available in English. At least until Pixar came along.

    • Yeah!
      I do not want to have to subscribe to another streaming service! I want all my videos in one service. Everyone else wants that too. Everyone should just subscribe to the one same streaming service that controls ALL content. I'm sure they would not overcharge us. What could possibly go wrong?

      • by hawguy ( 1600213 )

        Yeah!
        I do not want to have to subscribe to another streaming service! I want all my videos in one service. Everyone else wants that too. Everyone should just subscribe to the one same streaming service that controls ALL content. I'm sure they would not overcharge us. What could possibly go wrong?

        You don't need to have a single monopoly service, set up compulsory licensing laws similar to those used for music and then you can have many competing services and they all have access to the same content.

  • by Snotnose ( 212196 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:03PM (#54980275)
    At $10/month or more each? No thank you. I'll just pirate your content, you can go fuck yourselves in whatever MMF, MFF, MMM, FFF, whatever configuration works best for you.
  • by under_score ( 65824 ) <mishkin.berteig@com> on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:13PM (#54980319) Homepage

    It was a bit hard to find a good place to provide feedback. Here is how I did it:

    1. 1. Go to https://help.disney.com/en_US/... [disney.com]
    2. 2. Select "Other"
    3. 3. In the field, type "Netflix"
    4. 4. Click the "Next" button
    5. 5. Click on the "Email" button
    6. 6. Type in your full complaint

    They responded to me by basically saying they were forwarding my comment to the appropriate person.

    • by macklin01 ( 760841 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @10:16PM (#54980819) Homepage

      It may go straight to File 13, but I wrote in too.

      Hello, I'm really disappointed that Disney is pulling its content from Netflix to force customers to purchase yet another subscription service. As more and more companies like you do this (e.g., CBS All Access), you are fragmenting the online market, and making it harder and costlier for customers to legally access content. We were willing to cut the cord from cable providers and buy access to 2-3 services like Netflix, Amazon, and Hulu to get access to most content at lower prices. But this fragmentation is quickly driving costs above traditional cable access. This is unsustainable. We don't plan to buy the extra subscription to Disney when it's off Netflix. Maybe we'll start watching more Dreamworks and Warner Bros. movies.

    • Thanks for the link. You made it nice and easy to let them know what I want them to do instead.

    • by l0n3s0m3phr34k ( 2613107 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @10:33PM (#54980879)
      "appropriate person" is /dev/null as far as Mickey is concerned.
  • this post seems to have convoluted logic.
    so called piracy is a function of cost to consumer. as long as searching and downloading, a delayed, usually not ideal, but good enough, quality media through a free resource in internet, is considered less costly, than alleged timeliness, convenience and quality of a subscription service, "piracy" will thrive.

    while more subscription services, with separate exclusive offerings , can increase costs, they can also reduce costs.
    they increase competition for none exclusive material, under competition, from others and "piracy".
    they may offer plans based on actual quantity of downloads than duration of subscription(removing injustice of people with non very active subscriptions subsidizing more active ones),
    etc.

    • while more subscription services, with separate exclusive offerings , can increase costs, they can also reduce costs.
      they increase competition for none exclusive material, under competition, from others and "piracy".
      they may offer plans based on actual quantity of downloads than duration of subscription(removing injustice of people with non very active subscriptions subsidizing more active ones),
      etc.

      Competition is good but that same "none exclusive material" means that most people are not going to subscribe to multiple channels. I think amazon probably has the winning strategy right now. Give away some titles for free to get people using your platform, allow you to add on additional channels for a small upcharge, and make almost everything available for a price. My only problem with amazon at the moment is their on demand price is still way too high. They have $4 rentals on movies that you can buy

  • by Kjella ( 173770 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:22PM (#54980367) Homepage

    There's two alternatives here:

    1) One or a few distribution companies manages to hit critical mass so everyone else "have to" be there. This is what happened with Spotify in the music business, who is now making a big squeeze play on the artists instead of the label.

    2) All these fragmented little services realize that even though they're competing, they're also pissing off the consumer by lacking the basic interoperability you got by changing channels on a remote control and make some kind of broad, open joint effort to offer different subscriptions through the same interface.

    I think the latter is the best solution for the long run, you don't want to make Netflix or Amazon be the new gatekeeper.

    • 2) All these fragmented little services realize that even though they're competing, they're also pissing off the consumer by lacking the basic interoperability you got by changing channels on a remote control and make some kind of broad, open joint effort to offer different subscriptions through the same interface.

      I think the latter is the best solution for the long run, you don't want to make Netflix or Amazon be the new gatekeeper.

      Amazon is working on plan 2. They have recently started adding a bunch of add on subscriptions to their video offerings. They also have one of the broadest selection of on demand titles of any service. Their on demand is overpriced but it's nice to be able to have an almost one stop shop for movies.

    • Just let the cable and sat co give us more choice.

      Why can't I buy my own hardware without high outlet fees or being forced to rent a card.

      Why am I forced to pay up $7/mo for locals (on top of the base rate) when I can just pick them up on my own??

      Why can't I just buy My local RSN and maybe NBCSN and maybe ESPN for the MNF (in season only) for My sports choices??

      Buy most of the main basic non sports channels but not say Disney channel and the other kids channels?

      at least you can get limited basic + HBO.

    • by tlhIngan ( 30335 )

      2) All these fragmented little services realize that even though they're competing, they're also pissing off the consumer by lacking the basic interoperability you got by changing channels on a remote control and make some kind of broad, open joint effort to offer different subscriptions through the same interface.

      In other words, the cable model where you get to bundle a bunch of services together for once price.

      Didn't we just bash the cable industry for bundling and demand they start making things availabl

      • What you say makes total sense, if you think that $200 is not a ridiculous amount to be paying for TV. Maybe we're spoiled in the UK, but here cable and satellite have to compete with Freeview - free OTA - which has 20-30 watchable (for varying degrees of watchable) channels.

        I can't help thinking that too many people are now used to paying maybe $30 max for 2 or 3 streaming services, and will baulk at prices anywhere near the amount they used to pay for cable.

  • by xxxJonBoyxxx ( 565205 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:32PM (#54980415)
    Dunno about that. My kids rewatch Disney movies (the shows are all crap) enough times that an investment in a $20 DVD usually makes sense. (Also, I don't want to have to set up the stream.)

    For me, piracy is all about GoT, Doctor Who, BSG and the occasional college game - geeky or manly stuff that doesn't come with NetFlix. The NetFlix catalog itself is fine for background TV watching since I have better things to do than binge-watch anyway.
    • So for the next installment, it hits theaters, then it's on streaming for 3 months before the blueray comes out. Your kids see the advertisements that they can stream it every second of every day, and so goes the Disney marketing scheme. You sign up for the streaming platform, and a week later they take the movie off the stream rotation and put out the DVDs. And market that on the streaming platform.
       
      It's fiendishly evil in its brilliance. Good luck!

  • by 93 Escort Wagon ( 326346 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:34PM (#54980423)

    Even if you like most Disney movies (and I do), there just isn't enough value being provided for a subscription costing 8-10 bucks a month. Even if we didn't already own most of the titles we care about - there just aren't that many to have it make sense for more than a month or two.

    And that's ignoring the more recent news that they're looking at splitting their titles up between two or more services!

    Seriously - we all know this channel will only offer just a few Disney movies at any one time, padded out with 24-hour access to That's So Raven And Boy Meets World.

    Cable TV has been continually losing subscribers because of cost... TV and movies just aren't that important to most people. Disney and others seem to think those same people are going to come back in droves, throwing money at them - but that's not going to happen.

    • Yup. I own most of the Disney movies I actually like. I own, for example, the DVD of Aladdin. The only reason I'd watch it on Netflix would be if I wanted instant gratification to watch it on a whim and save the whole 60 seconds it would take to eject whatever disc is in the Playstation, walk over to the shelves, carry the DVD to the TV, and swap it in. I'm not going to pay an extra subscription to save that minute. Nor will I pay an extra fee for the availability of direct-to-video rubbish like Aladdi

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
        And I'll just stream that shit from my own Samba share using Kodi.
        • Yeah, for quite a few years I've been running my own little streaming "server" on whatever surplus computer I have at the time... currently a 2006/7 MacBook Pro. My DVDs and Blu-Ray discs generally come out of their case just once (for ripping), then go into a box in the closet.

          It doesn't take much computing power to stream movies and TV shows; and it certainly makes it easier to find a given movie.

          • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
            I have a linux box that handles all this and runs NX so I can pull up a remote session to mange everything from work. It's way better then a NAS.
    • by Daetrin ( 576516 )
      Currently we subscribe to Netflix, Hulu, Crunchyroll, Funimation, and Amazon Prime, which already seems like a little too much. (Apparently there's some new service which merges Crunchyroll and Funimation that we need to look into.) The only other service i'd seriously consider getting is HBO Go, but I'm not currently into Game of Thrones because of reasons and i don't know of anything else they have that's that great. (Admittedly i haven't looked that hard given all the other stuff we have to watch.)

      As y
  • by gfxguy ( 98788 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @08:37PM (#54980433)

    Sorry, there's really no reason or justification for pirating Disney movies. Or any movies, really. If you don't want to pay what the companies that made them are asking, then don't watch. This is the entitlement mentality at it's worst. Nobody owes you anything, and you don't need movies. It's not like stealing bread to feed your family.

    That doesn't mean I'm happy about it - I'm not, but the worst thing an individual can do is come out and say they are now going to start violating the legal rights of others because they don't want to pay for a f#@king Disney movie. Do these people even listen to themselves?

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Anonymous Coward

      You say that.. but I don't think you understand the OP's thoughts. You have been paying for a subscription-based service (Netflix) that you have up to this point... have had access to content from the Disney network. Suddenly.. and without a refund from Netflix.. you find that the same content you've enjoyed for days/months/years is suddenly no longer available. Little did you know.. that the content owner decided that the Charlie Sheen-esque cocaine and hooker parties for the Disney elite were being imp

      • by gfxguy ( 98788 )
        I'm not saying "category 3" won't happen, I'm decrying the mentality of those who will opt for that "solution." Yes, I subscribe to Netflix, and I enjoy getting to see the Marvel movies (and shows, which apparently they will keep doing), but Netflix keeps making new deals, coming up with new content, and has constantly been rotating movies anyway, so they will start rotating out the Disney movies and getting something else.
    • by StormReaver ( 59959 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @09:23PM (#54980625)

      Do these people even listen to themselves?

      While I don't use pirate sites, I applaud those who do. Those are the people who put pressure on movie studios to bring the price of movies from $100+ down to $14.95.

      Piracy is an important facet of the free market. It's an indicator that the seller's product is priced too high. Everything the seller does contributes to this indicator. It can be that the seller puts too many obstacles in place for paying customers to make use of the product, making the product less valuable, or any number of things that makes the cost exceed the worth. When this happens, piracy is the relief valve.

      Disney is actively encouraging movie piracy by exiting Netflix, and this will bite them in the ass for years to come. I think the market for paid streaming services is near saturation, and Disney is too late to make much of an impact.

      • > Piracy is an important facet of the free market. It's an indicator that the seller's product is priced too high. Everything the seller does contributes to this indicator. It can be that the seller puts too many obstacles in place for paying customers to make use of the product, making the product less valuable, or any number of things that makes the cost exceed the worth. When this happens, piracy is the relief valve.

        You mean not purchasing the product is a facet of the free market. That's like you
      • Not necessarily just priced too high - unavailable or difficult/inconvenient to get causes things to be pirated as well. When you look at the massive drop in piracy with the advent of paid streaming services, part of that is because it's just so much easier than torrenting, and more convenient than stockpiling CDs and DVDs. Price is definitely a driving factor, but convenience is a big one as well.

    • by TheGratefulNet ( 143330 ) on Wednesday August 09, 2017 @09:52PM (#54980727)

      when people feel that they are constantly cheated and lied to, well, they start to lose faith in the system. when they are fucked repeatedly, they just say 'the hell with it' and do whatever they feel like.

      the companies have had control for WAY too long and there is no balance. we still have DRM and all that goes with it.

      I don't weep one bit for media companies. they are all thieves and so if we are 'thieves', we have at least created our own form of balance.

      I sleep well at night. and I pirate. if you don't, that's you; but I'm going to do what I want, when the power brokers all seem to tilt the rules their way.

      treat me fair, I'll treat you fair. treat me like shit and you'll get the same back at you.

      and its not about entitlement. unless, of course, you mean the mega corps who think they have a RIGHT to keep charging rent over and over again for the right to view or hear things.

      fuck them. I weep not one tear for the rich .1% who own everything and keep it all to themselves.

      yes, its gotton to this. and it will get worse, too.

      • Uhh, do you really hear yourself? I mean, there is no way to be in your position without some serious cognitive dissonance, because it lacks any sense of logic. I mean, if you don't like what they are doing or how they are doing it, uh.... don't participate. It's not like you have some sort of inalienable right to *entertainment* that is produced by someone else's hard work and investment. We aren't talking about food or shelter here. Just come out and say "I like to steal because it's best for me" and
        • Actually, 'tit-for-tat' turns out to be a deeply instinctual primate behaviour.

          In fact, it's more like 'two tits per tat'. We like to punish people who we view as having violated the perceived rules, even at our own expense.

          So... having been used and abused by media for as long as we can recall, lots of us have no qualms at all about stealing even if we suspected it would drive the big content producers to bankruptcy. We'd probably celebrate.

    • I feel you man. The top comments on this story are frightening. I don't like your choice with the work you produced, so I will steal it! I mean, come on, there's not even a hint of an ethical dilemma here!
    • Sorry, there's really no reason or justification for pirating Disney movies. Or any movies, really. If you don't want to pay what the companies that made them are asking, then don't watch.

      I don't think the point of the article is 'entitlement' exactly, or that there are a whole lot of people who don't believe that there is an equilibrium to be had between fairly compensating content producers for desirable content, so long as that content is actually accessible.

      This is the entitlement mentality at it's worst. Nobody owes you anything, and you don't need movies. It's not like stealing bread to feed your family.

      And nobody is comparing it to that scenario. Movie piracy has been a byproduct of selling movies for home viewing since the inception of the industry. At first it was kept somewhat in check based on the fact that it required organized

  • As the disney streaming service will be available only in 2019, which is basically 2 years of not having any sort of streaming service with disney movies.

  • It's not a completely valid comparison, but this feels like when Disney decided not to release their materials on DVD when it became available, choosing the self-destructing dvd variant Flexplay instead. I believe the motivation at the time was protecting Disney IP by not allowing content on digital media that presumably could be ripped with no loss of quality. (Which admittedly turned out to be true.)

    This move simply seems like a money grab, giving Disney the entire profit from the streaming service, rat

  • I don't watch Disney, haven't since the 70s. If it keeps my Netflix cost down then that is great news.

  • Now make the disney channel premium and let ESPN be put into the sports pack on cable and sat.

    Don't need ESPN for local NFL games / and all NHL games.

  • While there are some complaints, generally Netflix is good enough for me, and unless that changes then it will be the only one I have.

    I watch some Disney stuff. Not a lot though, so not enough to justify a subscription with them, so they lose all income from me if they are not on Netflix.

    I think a lot of fragmentation will cause many people to feel the same way, and they will either not watch the stuff that is pulled from Netflix (or whatever ONE or TWO they choose to subscribe to), or they will infringe. T

  • they take the /. dupes with them. ;)

  • Just as we were finishing Buffy and starting Angel, about four months ago, Netflix deleted all Joss's content: Buffy, Angel, Firefly, Dollhouse. http://decider.com/2017/03/23/... [decider.com]
  • its true Netflix hulu started making real strides in curbing piracy you had hulu for all your shows and it was free then you had Netflix for 7$ a month and what happend everyone else started with the me to nonsense only adding to the cost making it just as expensive as keeping the cord. most will probably be dead whiten the first year much like when music was doing the same thing. the same things starting to happen with pc games to steam is the go to app g\for games and with the sales at good prices and ha
  • First of all, I'm not paying for more than one streaming service.
    Secondly, I'm in Canada so choices are already extremely limited.
    Thirdly - is that even a word? - I'm pretty sure we won't get a Disney stream service in Canada and Disney will pull their content from Netflix Canada on top of that, totally screwing everyone of us.

  • Is the amount of people who seem to think they have a RIGHT to access media content they want, in a way they want and feel justified taking it for free if their conditions are not met. Nobody owes you anything. You are free to vote with your wallet, but not to vote by committing copyright infrigement.

  • whole appeal of the streaming model becomes diluted when there are too many "Netflixes."

    This is another case of companies just not understanding the internet. They use a completely different, and frustrating, business model to distribute something online rather than retail.

    Pick any movie studio. There are probably 1000 stores that sell DVDs for that movie studio. Target, Walmart, Sam's Club, Best Buy, FYE, Barnes and Noble, etc. And the price is almost the same. We take this for granted: It is in the best interest of the studio to sell their product at as many retailers as possible.

    But yo

  • I would say that a monopoly would be even worse.
    Netflix is just a middle man. The best would be an open source platform where content creators could publish their content and they would decide the pricing.

Algebraic symbols are used when you do not know what you are talking about. -- Philippe Schnoebelen

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