Fortnite isn't the future, it's an anomaly, and Tim Sweeney is just another CEO wrongly predicting the death of big singleplayer games
Check it out! 👇
pcgamer.com/games/fortnite-isn…
Fortnite isn't the future, it's an anomaly, and Tim Sweeney is just another CEO wrongly predicting the death of big singleplayer games
Singleplayer and multiplayer games will continue to coexist, just as they always have.Fraser Brown (PC Gamer)
Prime's gonna add more ads. They brought in ads in January, and people didn't cancel their Prime subscriptions, so Amazon figures that they can make Prime even worse and make more money:
arstechnica.com/gadgets/2024/1…
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If you'd like an essay-formatted version of this thread to read or share, here's a link to it on pluralistic.net, my surveillance-free, ad-free, tracker-free blog:
pluralistic.net/2024/10/03/mot…
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Amazon will “ramp up” Prime Video ads in 2025
Subscribers tolerated the current ad load, so Amazon is adding more commercials.Scharon Harding (Ars Technica)
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Meet the W3C Team w3.org/2024/09/w3cteam.html
We are a international public-interest non-profit where since 1994 the Members, staff and public develop open standards and guidelines for an interoperable web to connect and empower humanity.
Our focus: security, privacy, web accessibility, internationalization.
With your help and our proven standards process based on fairness, openness, royalty-free, we make the Web work, for everyone.
Federated Nextcloud collaboration is here! 🌐
Hub 9 introduces federated calls to our growing array of #decentralized features:
Make video calls with users from other Nextcloud servers, using your own account and preferred interface. 🎉
nextcloud.com/blog/nextcloud-h…
Be connected with Nextcloud Hub 9 - Nextcloud
Nextcloud Hub 9 lets you stay connected: new federation features, workflow automation, big design overhaul and much much moreMikhail Korotaev (Nextcloud)
Darum möchte ich Dich bitten zu überlegen, ob Du nicht die vollständige Suche auf squeet.me einrichten kannst.
+from:gerhardsgedankenbuc +(entsprechender Tag bzw. Tags)
Im @neuSoM haben wir gemeinsam ein Tutorial erstellt, das Hochschulen und anderen öffentlichen Einrichtungen dabei helfen soll, zu #Mastodon umzuziehen.
Zu finden hier
▶️ ▶️ tubcloud.tu-berlin.de/s/37Z3Cp…
Die #SocialMedia-Redaktionen der #Hochschulen haben es schon erhalten. Wir freuen uns über weitere Verbreitung.
Und für diejenigen, die noch Argumente brauchen, um Kommunikationsprofis von Mastodon zu überzeugen, gibt's hier die allerbesten Argumente:
💬 📣 tubcloud.tu-berlin.de/s/gnS7Zx…
NeuSoM Step-by-Step Anleitung.pdf
TU Berlin - Wir haben die Ideen für die Zukunft. Zum Nutzen der Gesellschaft.TU Berlin
It fixes an issue in the #RMV integration so it now reliably respects the distance (in minutes) between your doorstep and the RMV station.
Mehr als zwei Promille: Betrunkener Kapitän baut Schiffsunfall in Bremen
Mit deutlich zu viel Promille hinter das Steuerrad - im Fall eines Kapitäns bei Bremen nimmt das ein teures Ende. Der stark alkoholisierte 53-Jährige rammt mit seinem Schiff einen Pfahl.n-tv NACHRICHTEN
„Unsere Wähler sagen mir: Ihr macht zu viel Rot-Grün“ FDP-Chef Lindner schließt vorzeitiges Ende der Ampel nicht aus
tagesspiegel.de/politik/unsere…
Die Wähler der #fdp saufen doch auch Lack, oder? #lindner
„Unsere Wähler sagen mir: Ihr macht zu viel Rot-Grün“: FDP-Chef Lindner schließt vorzeitiges Ende der Ampel nicht aus
Die Koalition steckt in der Krise, und es wird immer deutlicher, wie genervt die Partner voneinander sind. „Irgendwann kann eine Regierung auch selbst Teil des Problems sein“, sagte der FDP-Chef.Der Tagesspiegel
Kennt das jemand genauer was das soll.
Cory Doctorow
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The cruelty isn't the point. Money is the point. Every ad that Amazon shows you shifts value away from you - your time, your attention - to the company's shareholders.
That's the crux of enshittification. Companies don't enshittify - making their once-useful products monotonically worse - because it amuses them to erode the quality of their offerings.
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Cory Doctorow
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They enshittify them because their products are zero-sum: the things that make them valuable to you (watching videos without ads) make things less valuable to them (because they can't monetize your attention).
This isn't new. The internet has always been dominated by intermediaries - platforms - because there are lots more people who want to *use* the internet than are capable of *building* the internet.
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Cory Doctorow
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There's more people who want to write blogs than can make a blogging app. There's more people who want to play and listen to music than can host a music streaming service. There's more people who want to write and read ebooks than want to operate an ebook store or sell an ebooks reader.
Despite all the early internet rhetoric about the glories of disintermediation, intermediaries are good, actually:
pluralistic.net/2022/06/12/dir…
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Direct: The Problem of Middlemen – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
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The problem isn't with intermediaries *per se*. The problem arises when intermediaries grow so powerful that they usurp the relationship between the parties they connect. The problem with Uber isn't the use of mobile phones to tell taxis that you're standing on a street somewhere and would like a cab, please. The problem is rampant worker misclassification, regulatory arbitrage, starvation wages, and price-gouging:
pluralistic.net/2024/02/29/geo…
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Pluralistic: Lies, damned lies, and Uber (29 Feb 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
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There's no problem with publishers, distributors, retailers, printers, and all the other parts of the bookselling ecosystem. While there are a few, rare authors who are capable of performing all of these functions - basically gnawing their books out of whole logs with their teeth - most writers can't, and even the ones who can, don't want to:
pluralistic.net/2024/02/19/cra…
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Pluralistic: Middlemen without enshittification; The Bezzle excerpt (Part II) (19 Feb 2024) – Pluralistic: Daily links from Cory Doctorow
pluralistic.netCory Doctorow
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When early internet boosters spoke of disintermediation, what they mostly meant was that it would be harder for intermediaries to capture those relationships - between sellers and buyers, creators and audiences, workers and customers. As Rebecca Giblin and I wrote in our 2022 book *Chokepoint Capitalism*, intermediaries in every sector rely on chokepoints, narrows where they can erect tollbooths:
chokepointcapitalism.com/
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(no title)
chokepointcapitalism.comCory Doctorow
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When chokepoints exist, they multiply up and down the supply chain. In the golden age of physical, recorded music, you had several chokepoints that reinforced one another. Limited radio airwaves gave radio stations power over record labels, who had to secretly, illegally bid for prime airspace ("payola").
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Cory Doctorow
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Retail consolidation - the growth of big record chains - drove consolidation in the distributors who sold to the chains, and the more concentrated distributors became, the more they could squeeze retailers, which drove *even more* consolidation in record stores. The bigger a label was, the more power it had to shove back against the muscle of the stores and the distributors (and the pressing plants, etc).
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Cory Doctorow
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Consolidation in labels also drove consolidation in talent agencies, whose large client rosters gave them power to resist the squeeze from the labels. Consolidation in venues drives consolidation in ticketing and promotion - and vice-versa.
But there's two parties to this supply chain who *can't* consolidate: musicians and their fans.
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Cory Doctorow
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With limits on "sectoral bargaining" (where unions represent workers against *all* companies in a sector), musicians' unions were limited in their power against key parts of the supply chain, so creative workers who *made* the music were easy pickings for labels, talent reps, promoters, ticketers, venues, retailers, etc. Fans are diffused and dispersed, and organized fan clubs were usually run by the labels, who weren't about to allow those clubs to be used against the labels.
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Cory Doctorow
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This is a perfect case-study in the problems of powerful intermediaries, who move from facilitator to parasite, paying workers less while degrading their products, and then charge customers more for those enshittified products.
The excitement about "disintermediation" wasn't so much about *eliminating* intermediaries as it was about *disciplining* them.
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Cory Doctorow
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If there were *lots* of ways to market a product or service, sell it, collect payment for it, and deliver it, then the natural inclination of intermediaries to turn predator would be curbed by the difficulty of corralling their prey into chokepoints.
Now that we're a quarter century on from the Napster Wars, we can see how that worked out.
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Cory Doctorow
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Decades of failure to enforce antitrust law allowed a few companies to effectively capture the internet, buying out rivals who were willing to sell, and bankrupting those who wouldn't with illegal tactics like predatory pricing (think of Uber losing $31 billion by subsidizing $0.41 out of every dollar they charged for taxi rides for more than a decade).
The market power that platforms gained through consolidation translated into *political* power.
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Cory Doctorow
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When a few companies dominate a sector, they're able to come to agreement on common strategies for dealing with their regulators, and they've got plenty of excess profits to spend on those strategies. First and foremost, platforms used their power to get *more* power, lobbying for even less antitrust enforcement.
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Cory Doctorow
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Additionally, platforms mobilized vast sums to secure the right to screw customers (e.g. by making binding arbitration clauses in terms of service enforceable) and workers (think of the $225m Uber and Lyft spent on California's Prop 22, which formalized their worker misclassification swindle).
So big platforms were able to insulate themselves from the risk of competition ("five giant websites, filled with screenshots of the other four" - @tveastman), and from regulation.
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Cory Doctorow
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They were also able to expand and mobilize IP law to prevent anyone from breaking their chokepoints or undoing the abuses that these enabled. This is a good place to get specific about how Prime Video works.
There's two ways to get Prime videos: over an app, or in your browser.
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Cory Doctorow
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Both of these streams are encrypted, and that's *really* important here, because of a law - Section 1201 of the 1998 Digital Millennium Copyright Act - which makes it *really* illegal to break this kind of encryption (commonly called "Digital Rights Management" or "DRM").
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Cory Doctorow
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Practically speaking, that means that if a company encrypts its videos, no one is allowed to do anything to those videos, *even things that are legal*, without the company's permission, because doing all those legal things requires breaking the DRM, and breaking the DRM is a *felony* (five years in prison, $500k fine, for a first offense).
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Cory Doctorow
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Copyright law actually gives subscribers to services like Prime a *lot* of rights, and it empowers businesses that offer tools to exercise those rights. Back in 1976, Sony rolled out the Betamax, the first major home video recorder. After an eight-year court battle, the Supreme Court weighed in on VCRs and ruled that it was legal for all of us to record videos at home, both to watch them later, and to build a library of our favorite shows.
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Cory Doctorow
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They also ruled that it was legal for Sony - and by that time, every other electronics company - to make VHS systems, *even if those systems could be used in ways that violated copyright* because they were "capable of sustaining a substantial non-infringing use" (letting you tape shows off your TV).
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Cory Doctorow
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Now, this was more than a decade before the DMCA - and its prohibition on breaking DRM - passed, but even after the DMCA came into effect, there was a *lot* of media that didn't have DRM, so a new generation of tech companies were able to make tools that were "capable of sustaining a substantial non-infringing use" and that didn't have to break any DRM to do it.
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Cory Doctorow
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Think of the Ipod and Itunes, which, together, were sold as a way to rip CDs (which weren't encrypted), and play them back from both your desktop computer and a wildly successful pocket-sized portable device. Itunes even let you stream from one computer to another. The record industry hated this, but they couldn't do anything about it, thanks to the Supreme Court's Betamax ruling.
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Cory Doctorow
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Indeed, they eventually swallowed their bile and started selling their products through the Itunes Music Store. These tracks had DRM and were thus permanently locked to Apple's ecosystem, and Apple immediately used that power to squeeze the labels, who decided they didn't like DRM after all, and licensed all those same tracks to Amazon's DRM-free MP3 store, whose slogan was "DRM: Don't Restrict Me":
memex.craphound.com/2008/02/01…
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Cory Doctorow
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Apple played a funny double role here. In marketing Itunes/Ipods ("Rip, Mix, Burn"), they were the world's biggest cheerleaders for things you were allowed to do with copyrighted works, even when the copyright holder objected. But with the Itunes Music Store and its mandatory DRM, the company was *also* one of the world's biggest cheerleaders for wrapping copyrighted works in a thin skin of IP that would allow copyright holders to shut down products like the Ipod and Itunes.
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Cory Doctorow
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Microsoft, predictably enough, focused on a "lock everything to our platform" strategy. CEO Steve Ballmer calied every Ipod owner a "thief" and arguing that every record company should wrap music in Microsoft's Zune DRM, which would allow them to restrict anything they didn't like, even if copyright allowed it (and would also give Microsoft the same abusive leverage over labels that they famously exercised over Windows software companies):
web.archive.org/web/2005011305…
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iPod users are music thieves says Ballmer - silicon.com
web.archive.orgCory Doctorow
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In the end, Amazon's approach won. Apple dropped DRM, and Microsoft retired the Zune and shut down its DRM servers, screwing anyone who'd ever bought a Zune track by rendering that music permanently unplayable.
Around the same time as all this was going on, *another* company was making history by making uses of copyrighted works that the law allowed, but which the copyright holders *hated*.
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Cory Doctorow
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That company was Tivo, who products did for personal video recorders (PVRs) what Apple's Ipod did for digital portable music players. With a Tivo, you could record any show over cable (which was too expensive and complicated to encrypt) and terrestrial broadcast (which is illegal to encrypt, since those are the public's airwaves, on loan to the TV stations).
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Cory Doctorow
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That meant that you could record *any* show, and keep it forever. What's more, you could *very* easily skip through ads (and rival players quickly emerged that did *automatic* ad-skipping). All of this was legal, but of course the cable companies and broadcasters hated it. Like Ballmer, TV execs called Tivo owners "thieves."
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Cory Doctorow
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But Tivo didn't usher in the ad-supported TV apocalypse that furious, spittle-flecked industry reps insisted it would. Rather, it *disciplined* the TV and cable operators. Tivo owners actually sought out ads that were funny and well-made enough to go viral. Meanwhile, every time the industry decided to increase the amount of advertising in a show, they also increased the likelihood that their viewers would seek out a Tivo, or worse, one of those auto-ad-skipping PVRs.
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Cory Doctorow
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Given all the stink that TV execs raised over PVRs, you'd think that these represented a novel threat. But in fact, the TV industry's appetite for ads had been disciplined by viewers' access to new technology since 1956, when the first TV remotes appeared on the market (executives declared that anyone who changed the channel during an ad-break was a thief). Then came the mute button. Then the wireless remote.
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Cory Doctorow
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Meanwhile, a common VCR use-case - raised in the Supreme Court case - was fast-forwarding ads.
At each stage, TV adapted. Ads in TV shows represented a kind of *offer*: "Will you watch this many of these ads in return for a free TV show?" And the remote, the mute button, the wireless remote, the VCR, the PVR, and the ad-skipping PVR all represented a *counter-offer*.
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Cory Doctorow
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As economists would put it, the ability of viewers to make these counteroffers "shifted the equilibrium." If viewers had *no* defensive technology, they might tolerate more ads, but once they were able to enforce their preferences with technology, the industry couldn't enshittify its product to the liminal cusp of "so many ads that the viewer is *right on the brink* of turning off the TV (but not quite)."
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Cory Doctorow
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This is the same equilibrium-shifting dynamic that we see on the open web, where more than 50% of users have installed an ad-blocker. The industry says, "Will you allow this many 'sign up to our mailing list' interrupters, pop ups, pop unders, autoplaying videos and other stuff that users hate but shareholders benefit from" and the ad-blocker makes a counteroffer: "How about 'nah?'":
eff.org/deeplinks/2019/07/adbl…
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Adblocking: How About Nah?
Electronic Frontier FoundationCory Doctorow
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TV remotes, PVRs and ad-blockers are all examples of "adversarial interoperability" - a new product that plugs into an existing one, extending or modifying its functions without permission from (or even over the objections of) the original manufacturer:
eff.org/deeplinks/2019/10/adve…
Adversarial interop creates a powerful disciplining force on platform owners.
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Adversarial Interoperability
Electronic Frontier FoundationCory Doctorow
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Once a user grows so frustrated with a product's enshittification that they research, seek out, acquire and learn to use an adversarial interop tool, it's really game over. The printer owner who figures out where to get third-party ink is gone *forever*. Every time a company like HP raises its prices, they have to account for the number of customers who will finally figure out how to use generic ink and *never, ever send another cent to HP*.
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Cory Doctorow
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This is where DMCA 1201 comes into play. Once a product is skinned with DRM, its manufacturers gain the right to prevent you from doing *legal* things, and can use the public's courts and law-enforcement apparatus to punish you for trying.
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Cory Doctorow
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Take HP: as soon as they started adding DRM to their cartridges, they gained the legal power to shut down companies that cloned, refilled or remanufactured their cartridges, and started raising the price of ink - which today sits at more than $10,000/gallon:
pluralistic.net/2024/09/30/lif…
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Cory Doctorow
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Using third party ink in your printer isn't illegal (it's your printer, right?). But *making* third party ink for your printer *becomes* illegal once you have to break DRM to do so, and so HP gets to transform tinted water into literally the most expensive fluid on Earth. The ink you use to print your kid's homework costs more than vintage Veuve Cliquot or sperm from a Kentucky Derby-winning thoroughbred.
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Cory Doctorow
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Adversarial interoperability is a powerful tool for shifting the equilibrium between producers, intermediaries and buyers. DRM is an even more powerful way of wrenching that equilibrium *back* towards the intermediary, reducing the share that buyers and sellers are able to eke out of the transaction.
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Cory Doctorow
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Prime Video, of course, is delivered via an app, which means it has DRM. That means that subscribers don't get to exercise the rights afforded to them by copyright - only the rights that Amazon permits them to have. There's no Tivo for Prime, because it would have to break the DRM to record the shows you stream from Prime. That allows Prime to pull *all kinds* of shady shit.
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Cory Doctorow
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For example, every year around this time, Amazon pulls popular Christmas movies from its free-to-watch tier and moves them into pay-per-view, only restoring them in the spring:
reddit.com/r/vudu/comments/1bp…
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Cory Doctorow
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And of course, Prime sticks ads in its videos. You can't skip these ads - not because it's technically challenging to make a 30-second advance button for a video stream, and doing so wouldn't violate anyone's copyright - but because Amazon doesn't permit you to do so, and the fact that the video is wrapped in DRM makes it a felony to even try.
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Cory Doctorow
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This means that Amazon gets to seek a different equilibrium than TV companies have had to accept since 1956 and the invention of the TV remote. Amazon doesn't have to limit the quantity, volume, and invasiveness of its ads to "less the amount that would drive our subscribers to install and use an ad-skipping plugin." Instead, they can shoot for the much more lucrative equilibrium of "so obnoxious that the viewer is *almost* ready to cancel their subscription (but not quite)."
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Cory Doctorow
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That's pretty much *exactly* how Kelly Day, the Amazon exec in charge of Prime Video, put it to the *Financial Times*: they're increasing the number of ads because "we haven’t really seen a groundswell of people churning out or cancelling":
ft.com/content/f8112991-820c-4…
At this point, attentive readers might be asking themselves, "Doesn't Amazon have to worry about Prime viewers who watch in their browsers?"
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Subscribe to read
Financial TimesCory Doctorow
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After all browsers are built on open standards, and anyone can make one, so there should be browsers that can auto-skip Prime ads, right?
Wrong, alas. Back in 2017, the @w3c - the organization that makes the most important browser standards - caved to pressure from the entertainment industry and the largest browser companies and created "Encrypted Media Extensions" (EME), a "standard" for video DRM that blocks *all* adversarial interoperability:
eff.org/deeplinks/2017/09/open…
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An open letter to the W3C Director, CEO, team and membership
Electronic Frontier FoundationWorld Wide Web Consortium
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in w3.org/press-releases/2017/eme… we put together background information on Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) since it received a high degree of adoption and implementation, but also some pushback.
We continue to object to the characterization "caved to pressure from the entertainment industry and the largest browser companies".
Backgrounder on Encrypted Media Extensions (EME) at the World Wide Web Consortium (W3C)
W3CCory Doctorow
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bri
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