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PlayStation Is Deleting 551 Movies from Customers' Accounts

208 pointsby ortusduxyesterday at 8:07 PM117 commentsview on HN

Comments

thomasmartonyesterday at 9:45 PM

Piracy is justified especially when it comes to movies!

If I am buying a DVD, I own that copy regardless of the studio and the distributor being in legal trouble or not. If I "buy" or "purchase" something online, I expect the same thing.

I'm not always a fan of the EU over-regulating some things but I feel like they should start fining companies who want to re-define the meaning of the word purchase

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naturalmovementyesterday at 11:45 PM

Not limited to PlayStation. Apple's been doing this for years.

I have iTunes music going back to the day the store opened. Some of it is now missing from the iTunes cloud (or Apple Music or whatever it's called this week). It would be gone forever had I not made a local backup.

At least Sony's contacting customers. I was looking for songs I knew I had and couldn't find them until I searched a local backup.

When I complained, I got a boilerplate "tough titties, sometimes we lose licensing" response.

Always keep hard copies people.

This foolishness of trusting someone else to host your stuff for you? Well now you know.

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nayukitoday at 12:10 AM

> Reminding Us Nothing Digital Is Ever Truly Ours

Wrong, Kotaku. Lots of digital things are ours. Digital files on our personally owned HDDs and SSDs. Digital movies on DVD and Blu-Ray discs on our shelves. Digital ISO files on hard drives that are ripped from the aforementioned digital physical DVDs.

What you meant to say is, streaming content is not ours - and that is true by definition, because the data is streamed from somewhere else. Someone else can always delete files, take down servers, or go out of business entirely.

The word digital contrasts with analog. Digital and physical are two independent axes - there are digital physical things, digital virtual things, analog physical things, and analog virtual things.

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patmccyesterday at 10:18 PM

They should absolutely be forced to provide either a refund or a downloadable copy, this is absurd. It sounds like they didn't actually have the license necessary to be able to sell these movies in any reasonable way.

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dc3kyesterday at 9:24 PM

it should not be legal for the product page to say “purchase” or “buy” when in reality you’re only renting it with a to be determined end date

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kelvinjps10yesterday at 11:17 PM

I feel these license agreements have to be set up in such a way people that already bought their movies get to keep them, like okay Sony lost the licences and they shouldn't sell it to new customers but existing customers should get to keep their movies. Since companies don't care the government needs to force their hand and put it into law

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AdmiralAsshatyesterday at 10:48 PM

How is it that Steam manages to avoid yanking games from people's libraries even after the games are delisted for licensing issues, etc? I have multiple games that you can't "buy" anymore, but Steam doesn't stop me from reinstalling them as often as I like.

Are they negotiating that as part of the deal with their vendors? Or is it as simple as "We're not dicks." ?

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anigbrowltoday at 3:31 AM

I find it a bit sad that everyone is dumping on Sony here, considering it's StudioCanal that is presumably demanding the movies be made inaccessible to customers, but presumably is not offering to refund the royalties they collected. I't's natural for people to direct their ire at the reailer to whom they gave their money, but in my view its the rightsholder who is generally the abd guy in these situations.

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40fourtoday at 3:53 AM

Makes me glad I never got in the habit of buying digital copies of movies or TV shows. If you really want to purchase a title, get the Blu-ray or DVD

PacificSpecificyesterday at 10:11 PM

A decade ago they pulled my purchased copy of mortal kombat 2. Not the first time they've done stuff like this.

I stuck to buying hard copies and dwindled off the series as they started to charge just to play multiplayer.

Karlissyesterday at 9:50 PM

Again? They already tried to pull that one a few years ago.

[1] https://consumerrights.wiki/w/Sony%27s_attempted_removal_of_...

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alpinemanyesterday at 9:59 PM

No refunds. Sounds like Playstation customer support. The most customer-unfriendly policies a company could think of.

chmod775yesterday at 11:12 PM

  sudo pacman -S transmission-gtk 
I suppose it's time to form a new media consumption habit.
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cameldrvtoday at 3:09 AM

Arbitrage baby. Rent the movie from the studios, and then sell it to your customers! Before they know what happened, the sheriff is coming to evict them from the house they thought they bought, but you can just pocket the difference!

bix6yesterday at 11:24 PM

What’s wild is there is no legal way to actually buy and truly own movies anymore. Any major service is a license and if you can even get a DVD the legality of ripping it is questionable since you have to break DRM. I have purchased a few movies (surf films) from people who actually give you the digital file and it is so wonderful.

jamesponddotcotoday at 12:32 AM

A Jellyfin or Plex server can be had for real cheap using used hardware. A Ryzen 3 build can be found for next to nothing here in Brazil[1], so I imagine it’d be even cheaper in the US.

Add an old Quadro card for hardware decoding, or go with an Intel CPU for Quick Sync, throw some IronWolf drives inside, install your favorite Linux distro, and you’re off to the races.

Yes, managing a server is more work than just signing up for Netflix or whatnot, but it’s definitely worth the effort.

[1]: A quick search shows me a Ryzen 3 3200G build with 16 GB of RAM for $200, and electronics are super expensive in Brazil.

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nottorpyesterday at 11:55 PM

I own a playstation. I do not buy digital games, only discs. See the article for why not.

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bergfestyesterday at 11:44 PM

What will the end game in this licensing scheme be? I reckon once enough movies have been sold, the reputational damage of taking them away would become so large that streaming services will be strongarmed into accepting increasingly unreasonable fees.

al_borlandtoday at 12:01 AM

I will only buy digital media from DRM free stores, which as far as I know, means I can buy music, not movies.

I don’t trust any provider to honor purchases I made 20 years from now. I really wish I could, as it would simplify things for me.

tracerbulletxyesterday at 10:58 PM

Would love to know how hidden the fine text was on that buy button. Unless it said rent this should be illegal.

whycomeyesterday at 10:18 PM

Fix the headline to say Sony

bit_economisttoday at 12:54 AM

Here is the full list of the 551 movies and TV shows being removed: https://www.playstation.com/en-us/legal/psvideocontent/

Top movies include Apocalypse Now, The Deer Hunter, The Graduate, Moonlight, Manchester by the Sea, Room, Silver Linings Playbook, Terminator 2: Judgment Day and Pan's Labyrinth.

socalgal2yesterday at 10:32 PM

Sony sucks and I will never give them another dime. Had a PS5 with a 120+ games (majority PS4), also PSVR2, got f-ed over by Sony when they would not refund in incorrect game purchase I'd bought literally minutes before asking for the refund. Gave up my PS5, I will never purchase anything from Sony ever again. Recommend everyone else do the same.

jmclnxyesterday at 9:30 PM

Off to small claims court people should go. Amazon tried something similar and got in trouble because people when after them.

And people wonder why some people sail the high seas.

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rachel-ftwyesterday at 10:51 PM

This is making me mad enough that I’m going to spend my weekend figuring out a media server and pirating movies.

If buying isn’t owning, pirating isn’t stealing. Fuck those guys.

It’s been 20 years since I’ve pirated shit, but here we are again…

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ls612today at 2:48 AM

Nobody can delete 551 or even 1 movie from my Plex library other than me or the hard drive grim reaper.

mannanjyesterday at 10:43 PM

How soon until the digital distributions are owned by just a few cartels, and later when it’s suitable for them, they also modify digital movies to suit a political agenda without letting you know?

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Devastayesterday at 11:23 PM

By not teaching the younger generations the virtues of piracy, millennials have failed them.

It'll be all the more critical in years to come when we get more and more AI remastered versions of stuff so even stuff pre-2020 is slop.

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ganelonhbyesterday at 9:57 PM

Wow.