Huge internet outage live blog: Amazon, Disney+, Hulu, HBO Max and more experiencing issues

https://lemmy.ca/post/53688974

Huge internet outage live blog: Amazon, Disney+, Hulu, HBO Max and more experiencing issues - Lemmy.ca

Lemmy

Funny, my digitized collection of movies and TV shows seems to be working just fine. :3
Funny, people who spent ludicrous amounts of time and money to build up private libraries can’t pass the opportunity to be conceited.
What’s even funnier are the people who spend lots of money on subscription services to own nothing. This outage just demonstrates who really owns their purchases.
it’s not like people were being scammed

It IS a scam since a lot of subscription services do not make it clear that the buyer is only granted limited access, and not ownership of the product.

Just last year, due to legal reasons, Steam placed a notice on their cart page stating that purchases only grant a licensemuch to the surprise of some Steam users. Steam has been around for 20+ years, and it took a piece of legislation to force the company to inform their buyers of this very important fact. It is clear that they would rather have misinformed customers, much like in a scam.

Steam now says the ‘game’ you’re buying is really just a license

Valve now discloses that you’re paying for a game license on its Steam digital storefront. The change comes before a new California law AB 2426 goes into effect in 2025.

The Verge
Steam is not a subscription service and in contrast to the services mentioned in the headline there is indeed grounds to be confused about what I’m actually buying. no one is surprised that a monthly subscription to say Disney+ does not grants them unlimited access forever. and buying on DRM-free platforms like GOG or itch also only grants a license, you’ll never own a piece of software by buying it in a video game store.

Steam is not a subscription service

Steam provides a cloud service. Not dissimilar to other subscription-based services. Had they been using AWS, they would also have been affected by the outage, resulting in Steam also being mentioned in the headline. So it’s just as relevant as the others.

you’ll never own a piece of software by buying it in a video game store.

Sure, I’m both granted a license on both Steam or GOG, but the crucial difference is still about offline access. If GOG stopped existing tomorrow, I’d still be able to install, and play, all my GOG games. The same cannot be said for Steam. Which one, then, grants the most ownership? License or no license.

All true, one small caveat. If GoG went down, you would still have all your games as long as you downloaded the installer.

But then again, you could just copy the installed files around. That works for most games. So it’s close to the same.