this post was submitted on 07 Aug 2023
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Piracy: ꜱᴀɪʟ ᴛʜᴇ ʜɪɢʜ ꜱᴇᴀꜱ

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I only use free VPN extensions or apps and I fully aware of the limitation of this. I use shabby ones, which don't protect and probably sell my data. It slow and I can't have only a few location. But I can't get around the idea that people can pay for a service to refuse to pay to a service. Please help me understand.

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[–] Durotar@lemmy.ml 43 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You're paying for your privacy. Also, a copy of a game or a movie is not a service.

[–] Aatube@kbin.social 5 points 1 year ago

should not be a service*

[–] Flyberius@hexbear.net 20 points 1 year ago (2 children)

But I can't get around the idea that people can pay for a service to refuse to pay to a service.

I mean, if you assume that the only reason people are pirates is because they refuse to pay anyone for a service then I could see why you would have trouble with this point. But that isn't why most people pirate. Most people pirate because they don't want to pay the extortionate prices that media companies demand for their IP. Spending some small yearly fee to avoid paying several much large fees looks like a pretty solid reason for paying for a VPN service.

I would add that the original understanding for cable tv and every service since was you pay a set fee and get some specialized content along with specialized content others would be interested in and the $$ is pooled to allow this. These companies keep subdividing services and subscriptions and thereby charging specifically for the specialized content. They broke our contract when they did this.

Along with the crazy prices, there is the simplicity. No need to figure out what is streaming where. Just open plex/jellyfin and watch.

VPN isn't specifically for pirating, personally I could even torrent without it, no one would give a crap; my situation aside, you can DDL without a VPN and you'd still be in the clear

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 11 points 1 year ago (1 children)

You can ask the same thing at the internet level. Why are people paying for internet service when they could go to the public library and get free Wi-Fi.

Internet service VPNs are foundational networking. You need them to do anything else.

[–] Grandsinge@lemmy.zip 8 points 1 year ago (1 children)

True pirates only get their Internet from the parking lot of a BK lounge, 😂.

[–] jet@hackertalks.com 4 points 1 year ago

Have it your way! Surely they can also use long John silvers...

[–] Commiejones@hexbear.net 10 points 1 year ago

How is the idea of paying $20 for 2 years so you can not pay for anything else confusing?

[–] GenderIsOpSec@hexbear.net 7 points 1 year ago

if i pay for a vpn and then just torrent the nights away that's a lot more bang for your buck than subscription to netflix or whatever

also, a copy of a game or a movie is not a service. as was said

[–] Yendor@reddthat.com 7 points 1 year ago

A “free” VPN is worse than no VPN. They have to pay for the service somehow, and you’re not paying, so they are making money off you somehow.

[–] JoeCoT@kbin.social 6 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I have a VPN that I pay less than 100 a year for. Here's some examples of what I use it for:

  • Free movies. Each of those movies would be at least $5 to rent and more to buy. If I could even find them.
  • Pirating TV shows for streaming services I don't have. For a long while, almost everything was on Netflix, so I didn't need to pirate shows. Now with everyone making their own streaming service, it'd cost me $50+ a month just to get access to all the different shows I want to watch. I have Netflix, and Amazon Prime, and I have access to HBO and Disney. But I don't have: CBS All Access, Apple TV, etc etc. There are a ton of platforms where there's only 1 or 2 shows I want to watch. I can pirate them instead.
  • Pirating TV shows for streaming services I do have. There are streaming services I have that my friends and family can't access, especially because of Netflix's new location restrictions. So often I'm subscribed to torrent RSS feeds for shows to put on Plex for my friends, even though I'll end up watching them through the actual streaming service.
  • Breaking through geo-restrictions on streaming sites. I'm a pro wrestling fan, but I don't have cable. In the US it's very hard to watch AEW without cable, because they have an exclusive deal with Warner Brothers. Eventually they might go on HBO Max, but in the mean time the only way to stream them is over Fite.TV, which is restricted to outside the US. I can VPN to England, then pay $9 for all the AEW weekly shows, with no commercials. I can also access a bunch of wrestling pay per views for half the price as in the US.
  • Pirating audiobooks. Often the only place to get an audiobook is Audible. I don't want to pay a subscription, the books are expensive, and I don't want to deal with DRM. Instead I can just download them.
  • Pirating retro game ROMs. I have a raspberry pi with RetroPie on it, a handheld abernic retro console, and a ROM cartridge for my N64. Instead of having to buy the same retro games over and over for new consoles, I can just download the ROMs and use them on very cheap retro consoles. Many of the games I wouldn't be able to buy at all, outside a flea market for 80 bucks
[–] illyria817@lemmy.dbzer0.com 6 points 1 year ago

My VPN comes out to about $2/month (got a promotional offer). What other service, exactly, can I buy for 2 dollars?

[–] Mooshie@lemmynsfw.com 6 points 1 year ago

I guess it’s cheaper. $100 a year for a good vpn is much cheaper than all of the things they pirate.

[–] CrabAndBroom@lemmy.ml 6 points 1 year ago

For me it's more of a convenience issue. If there was a legit site with a subscription for a few bucks a month that had every TV show and movie on it that I could watch in high resolution without ads and other bullshit going on then I'd probably just do that. In fact I basically do that with music already with Spotify. Netflix looked like it might have been going that way back the day but then it all went sideways.

But yeah basically I just don't want to have to subscribe to like 8 different services or have to keep switching around to find the show I want so piracy & a couple of bucks a month for a VPN is the better service IMO.

[–] southsamurai@sh.itjust.works 5 points 1 year ago

VPN usage isn't solely for pirating.

But, the use of one for pirating is just to keep the hassles down. It isn't necessary to pirate in general.

I also use VPN all the time for privacy - if I wasn't pirating I'd still have it. I've also used it at times to access region locked content.

I personally only pirate things I feel are more "moral" to pirate, or if I don't have a choice - I never pirate any kind of indie content, for instance, but I do pirate movies and tv shows put out by large corporations. In undergrad I pirated almost all of my textbooks because the markups are unethical. I'm not against paying for things, I just want to boycott some specific companies, plus I'm often too broke to afford things or sometimes need a downloaded copy specifically for offline access. When I was working full time I did actually pirate fewer things - only things from the companies I boycott or things I can't access legally where I live - and I will return to that once I finish grad school.

[–] QualifiedKitten@kbin.social 4 points 1 year ago

I pay $15/month for a seedbox because I prefer the overall experience compared to Netflix, etc. My parents have given me their login details for the services they subscribe to, and every so often, I check them out, but end up going back to my seedbox + Plex setup. Some of the reasons I prefer my piracy-based setup:

  • I often set up a queue/playlist of shows, not necessarily all from the same series. As far as I'm aware, the streaming services let you do that.

  • My shows never pause to ask me if I'm still watching.

  • I can access an unlimited library of content without switching apps.

  • Content won't become unavailable if I try to access it from a different country or totally disappear when a contract expires.

  • Some episodes of some shows have been edited/censored, or removed completely, from whatever streaming service hosts it, but those episodes are available in their original form via torrents.

[–] Generic_Handel@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

I pay for a VPN and don't use it for piracy.
I pay for Usenet and I use it for piracy.
Money has never really been a consideration as to whether I pirate or not.
If you want to know why I pirate stuff you can thank Mediacom, after becoming nearly homicidal talking to their "tech support" line for 2 years (I was locked in a 2 year contract), I decided to never pay directly for media again.
12 years and counting

[–] czech@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago

Nobody offers the service that I can offer myself. Not even close.

[–] brimnac@lemmy.world 3 points 1 year ago

Free VPN == you are the product.

[–] Swimmerman96@beehaw.org 3 points 1 year ago

It's all about what you value, and supporting the things you love (or rely on, in a more utility sense). I'd value the speed, the lack of data collection that may be used against a user, the speed, the location options, and that same provider being in business for time to come. When I'd need a good VPN, nothing else will do. That seems worth the couple of USD per month to me, whether that VPN is for obscuring traffic I don't want others to know about (whether it'd be because of those facilitating the connection or the other end of the connection).

[–] downpunxx@kbin.social 3 points 1 year ago (1 children)

VPN's give people access to foreign nations without location blocking, where there is no way to get their content otherwise.

VPN's allow pirates to download torrented media, without advertisements, to be enjoyed offline, which streaming doesn't always do.

VPN's are useful in keeping the ISP's out of your business from snooping on all your websites that you visit, and all the traffic coming and going from your PC.

Ad Blocking is cyber security.

Anyone not using a paid VPN service is insane.

Hope that answers your question.

VPN’s are useful in keeping the ISP’s out of your business from snooping on all your websites that you visit, and all the traffic coming and going from your PC

A VPN isn't a miracle cure-all. You are just transferring all your traffic from your local ISP to another. Usually the new one is by choice, so there is a lot more competition and thus more likely a better service provided.

VPN’s allow pirates to download torrented media, without advertisements, to be enjoyed offline, which streaming doesn’t always do.

Just for clearity, its not the VPN that's enables this. /Some/ VPNs allow for this, and you have to do your due diligence or else you could just be handing all your data straight into a honeypot. VPN providers are rife with paid shills and bad actors.

Not picking on you specifically, but I'd hate to see a fresh recruit find some rando VPN from a youtube ad and think they're in international waters when they're really standing on dry land.

[–] Johanno@lemmy.fmhy.net 3 points 1 year ago* (last edited 1 year ago)

I pay 90€ a year for a vpn with high speeds that I actually don't use that often.

However I can download games worth a thousand Euros (and don't play them) with that vpn.

However when torrenting I need a vpn since uploading is prosecuted in my country.

If you want to download illegal stuff you can do that here with direct Downloads. Your chances of being caught are so slim that most people don't need a vpn.

My most usage I have from the vpn is that I chan change ip addresses on the fly. Some Websites or Services don't work for Europe and then I use the vpn. Or some Services block usage for your IP then changing it without restarting the Router is useful.

I don't care about encryption, privacy and shit.