re: Rossman's list of morality.
I don't agree with the order of your continuum. You have people claiming rights to content without paying for it higher than people who've paid for content.
I've added 16 and 17 to cover region locking too. Often immigrants want to immerse their children in their own culture's media. Often it is blocked for no reason, as it's not actually offered by anyone in any other region. No local sellers are affected. I actually consider #16 to be entirely justified.
I've added 18 too, to cover things like VCDs, often used for Polish cartoons.
You've paid, media companies want to claim your disc is a license to watch at a particular quality, so watch:
16. New entry. Region locked content not available in your region. You've bought the rights to the content, but can't watch it. Feel free to grab a copy.
18. New Entry. Modern players refused to be backwards compatible. VCD discs that played on a PS3 don't work on a newer console, and you have no other reasonable way to play media. It is not realistic to keep a legacy device and its controllers around and connected for an occasional use. You've paid for the content, feel free to grab a copy.
1-5. you've paid for a license to the content, backups are often prevented or considered illegal to make, so not having a backup isn't your fault. Feel free to grab a new copy.
8. Again, you've paid for the rights to the content. Suck their DRM needs a newer chip. Bait and Switch if they didn't clearly disclose the needs up front. Feel free to grab a copy.
9. You've paid for the rights to the content, you've just expediting shipping. Could be argued you don't have the rights to the content yet, but whatever, you've paid... you could also argue your rights should start with them collecting payment. Is it seriously worth anybody's time to go after someone who watches a movie they've paid for a few days early?
You want to pay, but nobody wants your money:
11. You haven't paid, but you can't. Disney vault, BBC UK-only content... As have no way to pay for the content legally, go wild.*
You don't agree with terms of content availability:
17. New Entry: Region locked content not available in your region. Since you can't buy a working copy, you don't buy a copy at all, and download. - You have no rights to the content for free.
6. rights to shows come and go on streaming services. You have no right to the content. If service advertised it just before pulling it, you have a legit beef with the streaming service, but still no right to that specific content.
7. turning your rental right into a purchase right isn't a thing.
10. You haven't paid for the rights to view the content, and the content is available for purchase. If you want to boycott it, fine, but you don't get it free.
You want everything free, sometimes with BS justifications:
12-15. You might want a middle-man free experience, you don't have the right to demand it.
* - For me, #11 was the damn Disney vault. Or maybe it wasn't even the official vault, but a complete lapse in availability in every format. When my daughter reached a reasonable age for Toy Story, it was not for sale. No VHS. No DVD. No re-release on DVD. No Bluray. No collections that included the film. Nada. Every format was magically unavailable. Sure, there were scalpers on Amazon offered used copies of Toy Story 1 on VHS for $50, a 3 movie set, Toy Story 1, Toy Story 2, and A Bug's Life for $150, or a 5 movie set for $250... but I'm sorry, no. Halting official sales, creating an overpriced used-market for kids films? That's insanity. I was actively looking for a way to give Disney money, and they weren't interested. While legally wrong, I have no problem with someone pirating in such a case.
I don't agree with the order of your continuum. You have people claiming rights to content without paying for it higher than people who've paid for content.
I've added 16 and 17 to cover region locking too. Often immigrants want to immerse their children in their own culture's media. Often it is blocked for no reason, as it's not actually offered by anyone in any other region. No local sellers are affected. I actually consider #16 to be entirely justified.
I've added 18 too, to cover things like VCDs, often used for Polish cartoons.
You've paid, media companies want to claim your disc is a license to watch at a particular quality, so watch:
16. New entry. Region locked content not available in your region. You've bought the rights to the content, but can't watch it. Feel free to grab a copy.
18. New Entry. Modern players refused to be backwards compatible. VCD discs that played on a PS3 don't work on a newer console, and you have no other reasonable way to play media. It is not realistic to keep a legacy device and its controllers around and connected for an occasional use. You've paid for the content, feel free to grab a copy.
1-5. you've paid for a license to the content, backups are often prevented or considered illegal to make, so not having a backup isn't your fault. Feel free to grab a new copy.
8. Again, you've paid for the rights to the content. Suck their DRM needs a newer chip. Bait and Switch if they didn't clearly disclose the needs up front. Feel free to grab a copy.
9. You've paid for the rights to the content, you've just expediting shipping. Could be argued you don't have the rights to the content yet, but whatever, you've paid... you could also argue your rights should start with them collecting payment. Is it seriously worth anybody's time to go after someone who watches a movie they've paid for a few days early?
You want to pay, but nobody wants your money:
11. You haven't paid, but you can't. Disney vault, BBC UK-only content... As have no way to pay for the content legally, go wild.*
You don't agree with terms of content availability:
17. New Entry: Region locked content not available in your region. Since you can't buy a working copy, you don't buy a copy at all, and download. - You have no rights to the content for free.
6. rights to shows come and go on streaming services. You have no right to the content. If service advertised it just before pulling it, you have a legit beef with the streaming service, but still no right to that specific content.
7. turning your rental right into a purchase right isn't a thing.
10. You haven't paid for the rights to view the content, and the content is available for purchase. If you want to boycott it, fine, but you don't get it free.
You want everything free, sometimes with BS justifications:
12-15. You might want a middle-man free experience, you don't have the right to demand it.
* - For me, #11 was the damn Disney vault. Or maybe it wasn't even the official vault, but a complete lapse in availability in every format. When my daughter reached a reasonable age for Toy Story, it was not for sale. No VHS. No DVD. No re-release on DVD. No Bluray. No collections that included the film. Nada. Every format was magically unavailable. Sure, there were scalpers on Amazon offered used copies of Toy Story 1 on VHS for $50, a 3 movie set, Toy Story 1, Toy Story 2, and A Bug's Life for $150, or a 5 movie set for $250... but I'm sorry, no. Halting official sales, creating an overpriced used-market for kids films? That's insanity. I was actively looking for a way to give Disney money, and they weren't interested. While legally wrong, I have no problem with someone pirating in such a case.
Last edited: