Meta is now allowing lies about the 2020 election in political ads
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    Now 11%

    Infine this statement quite contradictory considering it's on a decentralized social network whose main selling point is giving companies LESS control on what actually get on platforms

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  • lemm.ee plans for mitigating image upload abuse
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    Now 71%

    Forums have existed on the internet forever and and have already dealt with this thousands of times previously

    The main difference is that forums aren't federated. On Lemmy you not only need to keep in check internal users, but also external instances, and as everyone can host one, federation ads extra complexity

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  • lemm.ee plans for mitigating image upload abuse
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    if an admin of an instance marks a post as potentially illegal, it gets replicated to other instances automatically and gets in queu for deletion.

    This opens at some terrible abuse, just open a malevolent instant and start flagging all the content you don't like as illegal

    At the same time I hate to see the promised federated network revert to what commercial platforms have become, karma and account age requirement, phone and identity verification , forced 2fa and what not.

    While I share this very same feeling, I also recognize there are reasons why commercial platforms have done what they've done, I don't think they're inherently evil, they just had to face the very same problems we have

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  • Question: Where is federated content stored?
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    The only objection I have with that is redundancy is useless because if the main server who "host" the community goes down then all the other copies will die too as content can't be added anymore.

    There's no mechanic for orphan communities

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  • Piracy is bad.
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    don't try to tell me that Disney is going to go out of business because I pirated their latest movie

    The problem is the antisocial behavior and externalities. Piracy has a negative externality on society, it lets you consume a product you didn't contribute to production whatsoever. If it becomes commonplace then yes, Disney will go bankrupt, but will every producer, small or big or anything in between.

    Rules shouldn't be arbitrary. People work at Disney too, and you'll have less artist, animator and stuff, all paid less, it the market shrinks because of piracy

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  • Piracy is bad.
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    People who will pay as long as they get their money's worth, who may also be open to supporting the creator directly

    The point is, isn't the producer right to make the price? You can always not consume what they produce. This category is the most obnoxious; would you ever go to a restaurant and expect to decide the prices?

    It's the very same argument for producers that willingly release their contently freely and let you support them, eventually. It's their choice.

    Of the three you quoted preservation is the only one I find acceptable. If the producer no longer care to distribute their product, then they probably don't care to what it happens to it either.

    I think It is illegal and immoral to sell consumers a license to use a product, under the guise of them owning it

    For me the main difference is that nobody is forcing you to accept the transaction. I could accept this kind of argument for drugs for example, where you either take it or die/have serious repercussions. But pirating a movie you would have very much lived without just because is easy to do so it's particularly problematic.

    they are going to get paid regardless of whether you as an individual decide to purchase or pass on a product

    Except they aren't. Or at least, of course they're payed the same, at the moment. But in our economy prices are signals. If a market will appear smaller then it is because of piracy then after some timesfewer developers will be hired, and each of them will be payed less because you're "falsifying" the signals. Or even worst, the producers will start to use alternative form of monetization. That's one of the reason the modern web is based off ads or free-to-play games with microtransanctions are so damn common.

    IMO the people in the first camp probably aren't interested in money if they have chosen not to purchase their media to begin with

    The people in the first category should also think about the allocation problem. Those products which they like to consume but not pay for, still had a cost of production. The problem is they want ti consume, without supporting production, and that's not gonna work for a society.

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  • Madden should not be 70$
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    While on a side I agree with you, on the other I see everytime people complaining about subscription fatigue and they never, ever would pay a recurring amount for a game.

    So I don't really have a solution for this lol

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  • YouTube’s anti-ad blocking test gets even pushier with a new timer
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    I'm sorry but I find this deeply comic and I can't stop giggle

    At the same time, clickbait has always existed. There's a reason trash emerged from tv to become his own subgenre

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  • The Main Lesson From ‘Baldur’s Gate 3’ Should Be ‘People Hate Microtransactions’
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    Now 50%

    There's only so much entertainment you can get out of one before you've seen everything, get bored, and look for another one.

    You're absolutely right, but that's true from "your perspective". For you the fame might last 50 hours and that's all, but the developers still need to work on big patches, content and fixes even years after release.

    If a studio fails to budget for that and make sure those costs are included in the price of the game, it frankly deserves to go bust

    And this introduces another topic I think. Would the average consumer willing to spend more for a game with everything in it? AAA already cost 70$ at launch, would the average consumer accept further price increases, or would selling plummet in comparison with reduced price+dlc or free to play with microtransanction?

    At the end companies are not inherently "evil" they just look for what works and what doesn't by trial and error

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  • The Main Lesson From ‘Baldur’s Gate 3’ Should Be ‘People Hate Microtransactions’
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    but authors and filmmakers still make TONS of money.

    This is an affirmation many writers would find offensive lol

    The editorial sector is in deep crisis, it's really hard to live off as a writer unless you're ridiculously famous.

    Same thing for the filmmaking industry, look at protest of screenwriters and actors, and to companies terrible financial sheets, and to movie theaters basically bankrupting as maybe their time is over. Also we both agree there's been a shift from movies to tv series and one of the reason is that you "buy the product piece by piece"?

    Ps: funnily enough, period publication of chapters were a thing until not long ago, and still are in somewhere (for example manga in Japan)

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