this post was submitted on 16 Sep 2023
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Libraries have existed for centuries and somehow books are still being sold. Philosophically I believe information should be free and piracy is functionally the modern equivalent of libraries.
Piracy is a service and access problem. When the only subscription you needed was Netflix to get all the best content I didn't pirate TV. That landscape is changing rapidly and I'm back to flying the Jolly Roger for any shows or movies I might want to watch. I'd genuinely prefer not to pirate if it means supporting the creators, easier access and a fair price.
That said I do support creators I like and I've happily spent money on everything from YouTube memberships, patreons, Kickstarters, podcasts, etc. I tend to prefer ways of supporting that cut out the egregious publishing industries, in fact that's a large part of how I became a fan of Andy Weir in the first place.
As far as discoverability goes, I think it's easier than it's ever been, we're far past the need for publishers to get content out there when it comes to indie books, music, videos and games. Though I do agree it can be hard for people starting out. There has to be a perfect storm of quality + viral success, but that's not much different to landing a publishing deal.
In a perfect world I'd like to see an open standard for multimedia. I should be able to browse for media on a protocol similar to federation or HTML, where I can connect to that protocol with a media browser of my choice, and the monetization is set by the creators instead of the platform they're hosted on. That's a bit of a pipe dream, I know, but it's always felt strange to me that I need a dozen different locked down apps for each service when I'm functionally consuming the same type of media across all of them.
At the same time we are inevitably moving toward a future where automation will render obligatory employment obsolete and impossible for everyone, so we will need to figure out how to take care of more than just artists. I do think that would play a massive role in how we look at copyright all together.