| >Funny how the HN crowd gets riled up when it happens to programmers. The author of the article doesn't care about run-of-the-mill torrenting. So I believe the average HN commenter doesn't get "riled up". Quote from the article:
>When I ran Tekpub it would take (typically) a day or two (sometimes just a few hours) for the torrents to hit. It’s a price of doing business. The problem in this case is that people are willing to pay for the courses but don't know that they are actually pirating them and Udemy is directly profiting from this. >Movies cost tens of millions to make and employ hundreds if not thousands. Tv shows are maybe an order of magnitude smaller, records maybe one more. Any of those media products blow these aggrieved programmers out of the water, impact wise. This is just my personal opinion but I'm not interested in either of those. They have no "impact" on me. >But the founders of YouTube -- who played this little copyright game like a fiddle -- are heroes in the Valley. They are actually taking action against copyright infringement. You can even claim the ad revenue from your works that the pirates would receive. Udemy does no such thing, even though they have enough employees to check the courses at a reasonable rate by hand and enough money since they take a cut for every sold course. >I guess "move fast and break things" is a great motto until it's your stuff getting broken. I don't mind getting my stuff "broken", whatever that is even supposed to mean. I want to receive their works for free in the same manner as I want them to receive my works for free. I don't see any inconsitency with that. |