|
|
|
|
|
by ryandrake
3640 days ago
|
|
So, these media companies would love nothing more than to provide (or enable someone else to provide) a Steam-like worldwide un-region-locked reasonably priced streaming service that supports all my devices, lets me pick and choose audio tracks/encodings and subtitles, not force me to go through a network of partners or worry about who has a distribution deal with who--a service that just lets me pick a show/movie and watch it. But, the only reason they can't do this is "contracts"? We're not talking about the speed of light or the limits of thermodynamics. Contracts are written by humans, signed by humans, and enforced by humans. Surely if the humans running these companies really wanted to provide such a customer-focused product, they could today stop signing these "old media" contracts and work together to quickly unwind what's preventing them from competing with piracy. I don't buy the "but our hands are tied" story. |
|
Each of the distributors is then tied into exclusive deals with TV stations, streaming services, etc.
It's the "exclusive" part of the rights that stops us from having nice things.
Oh, and Steam? un-region-locked? Hahahahhahahaahaha no