• woelkchen@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      or I guess spoof your user agent

      That won’t help. The issue is Widevine DRM protection level. It’s the same issue everywhere.

          • RockyBass@lemmy.world
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            1 year ago

            Streaming services like netflix and prime helped reduce piracy to all time lows. But then corps started getting stupid again and making their own exclusive streaming services, requiring you to have 20 subscriptions just get all the same shit you had with 2. Now drm enforcement on top of that and piracy is back on the rise…

    • Darkassassin07@lemmy.ca
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      1 year ago

      whatever resolution I went out of my way to download.

      Addon Radarr, Sonarr, and Ombi and you won’t even have to do that.

      Users make requests via Ombi, those get sent to Radarr/Sonarr to search for and download. Most stuff is ready to watch ~15min after requesting, with no interaction from the servers admin needed. (optionally, requests can require approval before downloading, that’s disabled for the users I trust)

    • Holzkohlen@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      And if you purchased movies from Sony instead, they will just remove them all from your account.

  • mctoasterson@reddthat.com
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    1 year ago

    Louis Rossman has done a couple videos about this and I tend to agree - Paying customers get a worse experience.

    You use the official apps and real accounts and you are still subject to artificial bandwidth restrictions. You use the official YouTube app on your smart TV and you get 10+ midroll ads at unnatural places during a 12 minute video. You “own” purchased content in one platform and it can still be taken away from you or made inaccessible when a service gets collapsed into another platform or rebranded etc. I’m not going to re-buy the same fucking movie I already owned on one streaming platform and have already owned on 2 different formats of physical release.

    Curating your own digital copies, regardless of how you obtain them, is the only way to guarantee quality and availability anymore.

  • whoareu@lemmy.ca
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    1 year ago

    It doesn’t matter how much DRM you put into the service. someone can just spin up a Virtual Machine and install chrome, windows in it and then record the stream from the host system.

    • businessfish@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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      1 year ago

      i wouldn’t count it as impossible for really cool and well-meaning businesses like the amazon fun factory to somehow detect and ban/restrict use on VMs

      • aksdb@feddit.de
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        1 year ago

        Sure, but the thing is: only a single person needs to break it temporarily in some way and this person can then leak the DRM free copy for everyone to consume.

        That’s why DRM is such bullshit. It only ever punishes legitimate users. All others are unaffected.

  • slacktoid@lemmy.ml
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    1 year ago

    Seems like there is no legitimate way for you to get that content. I guess youre forced to be a pirate!

  • Da_Boom@iusearchlinux.fyi
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    1 year ago

    That’s the case for pretty much all systems that use widevine - you can blame google for it, as they are the one that built the widevine DRM that all streaming services use

    • nicolauz@feddit.de
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      1 year ago

      I’m in no way a Google fan boy (rather the opposite), but IMHO this is backwards.

      We have a (at some levels) shits DRM because of Google providing a semi-secute DRM stack.

      If you want to go full DRM, there is no way around a key store, so for most (user) linux installations unachievable.

      Without widevine nobody would give a fuck about Linux DRM anyway and Netflix, Amazon and friends would be out of reach for “normal” Linux users.

      That said: fuck DRM, fucking cancer.

      • dreamwave@sh.itjust.works
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        1 year ago

        Not just key store, since you can quite easily use a secure enclave on Linux just as on any other platform.

        The key issue is the render stack. On Windows and MacOS, providers can get certain assurances that the parts of the stack that take their decoded DRM’ed content and draw it into a window, get composited with other windows, have various transforms applied, and actually get things out to an HDCP-supporting monitor are all unmodified and (at least to a certain extent) immune to screen captures and other methods of getting the plain un-encrypted media stream. Linux on the desktop almost never provides those assurances. The only ones that really do are ChromeOS and Android–and both of those provide relatively high trust DRM as a result.

        DRM doesn’t work in practice to prevent piracy, but if you drink that cool-aid and assume for a moment that DRM actually worked, then Linux is basically impossible to provide verified DRM content to with the current landscape in the way that Windows, MacOS, CrOS and Android/iOS do

  • InternetUser2012@midwest.social
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    1 year ago

    This is why even though I pay for prime, I pirate everything. It’s amusing to pay for a service that your experience is better pirating than using the service you pay for.

      • Nath@aussie.zone
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        1 year ago

        I pay for prime for the shipping advantages. I barely ever watch it, no way could I justify having it for just the streaming services.

        • Primes shipping advantages are 100% hit or miss. They no longer honor delivery estimates. In tgier efforts to save a buck, they implement private shipping companies that send your shit half way around the world and back, when your item started 100 miles away. I’d say about ~50% of my prime orders take 8-10 days when they advertise 2 days. I bitch, and they keep moving the goalpost, changing thier promises. Over and over. And, prices now are on par with so many other sellers. There is very little reason to continue using Amazon.

  • A_Random_Idiot@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You have no idea how insane i went trying to figure out why clarkson farm was playing at extremely low quality, pixelated 320p on my PC before I realized Amazon just hated Linux.