• CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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    1 年前

    Yes, that is the small text they use to justify it, but that’s not how they advertise it. When Amazon Prime wants me to pay for a movie it doesn’t say “License it now!” It says “Buy it now!”

    If you go digging into the EULA you’ll see it being called a license, but no effort is made to actually make that clear to the customer.

    Furthermore, being technically legal doesn’t make it acceptable. If someone opened a bookstore, and put some treatment on all their books that caused them to suddenly disintegrate after a year, it doesn’t matter if they have on all their receipts that “books are not guaranteed to last longer than a year” or that they “aren’t doing anything illegal”. It’s still a bullshit business practice that shouldn’t be tolerated.

    • illi@lemm.ee
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      1 年前

      When it says “buy it” you asuume the it refers to the content - they’d probably argue it refers to the license.

      • Katana314@lemmy.world
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        1 年前

        It’s worth stating this has basically always been true for books. You can buy paper. Buying bound paper with words on it is not quite the same. You can’t produce a movie from that idea, and state “I invented this idea from a bundle of bound pages I bought, that already had some words on them.”

        You never owned the original reproduction rights to the book’s content. That never mattered much until copying and pasting became so easy.

        • illi@lemm.ee
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          1 年前

          Huh. Never quite looked at it that way, but you are right. I can see how physical book is a form of a license to read a literary work. It is however naturally impossible to revoke. It would be the same if digital content had no DRM - which is generally not the case.

          So I guess DRM and you not being able to download and use content outside the company’s ecosystem is the real issue here.

    • TAYRN@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      Yes, scams exist. I never claimed that things like your hypothetical situation would be moral, or should be tolerated.

    • jimbo@lemmy.world
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      1 年前

      Were you under the impression that Amazon was going to assign you the copyright to the song or movie that you purchased? No? Then you understood that you were buying a license and you’re just playing pretend about the confusion.

      • Cryophilia@lemmy.world
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        1 年前

        It’s got nothing to do with copyright. It’s about ownership of a copy. You buy a CD, you own it. You “buy” digital media, it can get taken away from you. That should not be permissable. Yes, I know it’s legal, but it shouldn’t be, and in a just society, it wouldn’t be.