- cross-posted to:
- piracy@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- piracy@programming.dev
cross-posted from: https://programming.dev/post/35892866
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Republished here, as AI content is in the Public Domain. References are available in the original article.
Frustrated by rising subscription costs and fragmented content availability, viewers worldwide are returning to piracy at unprecedented levels, reversing years of progress made by affordable streaming services. Recent data from London-based monitoring firm MUSO shows piracy visits skyrocketed from 130 billion in 2020 to 216 billion by 2024, with the industry facing projected losses exceeding $113 billion.
Subscription Fatigue Drives Digital Exodus
The streaming landscape has transformed from Netflix’s early promise of “everything in one place” into what critics call “Cable 2.0”—a fractured ecosystem requiring multiple subscriptions. According to The Guardian, the average European household now spends close to €700 annually on three or more video-on-demand subscriptions. With Netflix’s standard plan reaching $15.49 monthly and competitors following suit, consumers are increasingly viewing piracy as a rational alternative.
“Piracy is not a pricing issue, it’s a service issue,” Valve co-founder Gabe Newell observed in 2011—a prediction that appears prophetic as streaming platforms struggle with content fragmentation and rising prices. In Sweden, birthplace of both Spotify and The Pirate Bay, 25% of people surveyed admitted to pirating content in 2024, predominantly driven by those aged 15 to 24.
Content Wars Create Consumer Casualties
The fragmentation crisis has worsened as studios create exclusive content silos. Viewers face scenarios where favorite shows vanish from one platform only to appear on another, or require separate purchases despite existing subscriptions. Even purchased content can become unavailable due to licensing disputes, prompting consumer lawsuits against platforms like Amazon Prime Video.
MUSO data reveals that unlicensed streaming now accounts for 96% of all TV and film piracy, representing a fundamental shift in how content theft occurs. Modern pirates leverage sophisticated tools including AI-driven search engines and encrypted networks that adapt faster than anti-piracy measures can respond.
Industry Scrambles for Solutions
Streaming executives are experimenting with bundled offerings and cracking down on password sharing, but these measures often backfire by further alienating users. According to Antenna research, one-quarter of U.S. streamers are “chronic churners,” frequently canceling subscriptions due to cost and frustration.
The resurgence marks a stark reversal from the mid-2010s when convenient, affordable streaming services nearly eliminated piracy. As one industry analyst noted, studios have created “artificial scarcity in a digital world that promised abundance”, suggesting that without addressing core affordability and access issues, the piracy revival may continue reshaping entertainment consumption patterns.
Action?

Reaction.
Choice?

Consequence.
Get Stremio setup with a debrid subscription. Stream all your content at better quality than streaming sites
I’ve been using this setup for a bit. Super simple and hassle free. I enjoy self hosting but in terms of simplicity, you really cannot beat Stremio combined with a debrid sub.
Yar har etc…
Being a pirate is all right with me!
SurprisedPikachu.png
<Insert piracy is a service issue Gaben quote>
Industry Scrambles for Solutions
Anything but solve the main issue: pirate sites offer a better service, with no stupid licensing problems, having everything on a single app and without geolocking bullshit.
When the pirate alternative it’s not just cheaper but also way more convenient, it’s no wonder they are losing customers.
Netflix: Pay for 4k, max at 720p in Firefox or Librewolf
Trackers: Don’t pay, actual 4k
DRM limiting the quality is the main reason I won’t pay for streaming.
That was my reason for cancelling. I can afford the service, but it better let me stream at full resolution through LibreWolf or I’m just gonna download the movies and shows.
Exactly, if they came up with some open standard for payments, subscriptions, so that most users got seamless one stop shopping for all content without barriers the convenience would beat the price.
They don’t have a piracy problem, they have a convenience problem.
It’s so damn stupid. Every time i hear of a new show, I must look for which platform will have it in my country. And also which seasons, because it happens (with old shows specially) that they are fragmented, having some seasons here, some there, and some unavailable.
Then, I open stremio and the whole show is there, a single app with all the content.
Now tell me, if I want to watch that show, what should I do?
Like Gaben said, piracy is service problem.
I absolutely love rubbing it in the face of people subscribing to streaming services that I get more content without even having to enter in my credit card info.
Brains > wallets, every time.
No mention of advertising in streaming services now? That was a big factor in making me shut of my subscriptions. The price increases made me cut back but the ads have made me turn them off. I’m not paying to watch commercials.
Yeah I was watching a show recently on Prime and now they are injecting 1min plus long ads like every 10-20 minutes. It’s worse than watching cable tv.
And they only do it to maximize profit off of people’s low standards.
It has never been about putting food on the table or keeping the lights on. It’s always been about fleecing idiots with more money than sense.
my jellyfin library is cuter than netflix anyway
My local has a higher % of shit i want to watch in higher quality with better uptime and less bullshit. Maybe larger total library by now, too.
At the end of the day, all they are doing is waiting till the day that costs of piracy > money they make
Yep. And then you can guarantee a Italian piracy shield law will be established stateside
There’s an easy solution to this. I pay for Apple Music because I get access to pretty much all the music I want. I can sideload what they don’t have, which isn’t much. They have better audio quality, and aren’t stiffing artists to pay some right wing nutjob science denier like the other streaming platform of note. I pay because I love music and want to support what I love. Why isn’t there a similar service for TV and movies? That’s the solution. Let us pay for what we love and make it easy. Apple figured it out with music. Valve figured it out with games.
I think they don’t want to solve the problem. I think they want to solve a different problem. I think they’re making this a problem so they can push legislation to protect their profits.
Why isn’t there a similar service for TV and movies?
Because Steve Jobs died before he could hypnotize the executives into do it.
Only half kidding, people forget that’s how we got all the music labels together, it was Apple iTunes Store which later became streaming.
There were a few weird awkward music stores but Apple did it better and this was early 2000’s when their brand was barely recovering from near bankruptcy.
Netflix streaming didn’t launch until 2007 and didn’t really take off until 2011, the same year Jobs died.
Netflix was the only one that was positioned to do it but they couldn’t pull it together because they didn’t have the reality distortion field that Jobs had. Netflix had to push into original programming instead to survive and the brand has long since enshittified.
Can’t help but wonder if whatever pitch Jobs used to sell record labels couldn’t have been reworked to convince the movie studios.
Here’s what’s wild though. At first with music streaming it was largely just American, Western, popular music. I left Spotify for Apple Music because the latter had Japanese music and I was tired of sideloading it into Spotify. Now Spotify has Japanese music too.
The Japanese music market is super weird. Anime is to Japanese music in the 2010s and 2020s what MTV was to western music in the ‘80s and ‘90s. It’s the international hit maker. So anime is bringing western eyes to all this music, not you go in YouTube and a lot of them have “YouTube edition” videos that are like half the video. Because they don’t fully trust us I guess? Sometimes the video is on Apple Music though.
I know Japanese music is more expensive than ours. I mean like the cost of a CD. So when bands would release a Japanese album, they’d add bonus tracks to help increase the value. Western bands do it too. Look up an album you know on Wikipedia and see if there’s a Japanese version with some bonus tracks.
I’m wondering how Apple Music and later Spotify more or less tamed the Japanese music market but TV and movies are so much harder.
Why isn’t there a similar service for TV and movies?
Because the Artists involved don’t see the royalties in those industries. They’ve already been paid and the rights holders want to extract every drop of profit possible. and the sad truth is that splintering streaming worked for a very long time to this end.
As a musician who sees royalties, I thank you cos apple actually fucking pays out
Absolutely. But to clarify, Apple Music pays more per stream than Spotify and others. Spotify trends to cut bigger checks to popular musicians because they have more subscribers.
Also — someone feel free to fact check this — I’ve heard that if, say, you put an album out on BandCamp but not streaming, and I buy it and sideload it into both services, and you later add it to both services, Spotify won’t pay you for my streams because I’m streaming the sideloaded copy whereas Apple will match it. I keep the metadata if it’s different but you’d get paid for the streams because it matches it.
Alright, kinda fucked that everyone here is just like “AI generated news articles! Yay!” and not questioning the validity at all of an LLM. bruh.
Nobody reads the articles.
AI is piracy by corporations, kind of makes sense that this community doesn’t care so much.
Oh how could this happen? who knew…
the problem is that we haven’t been sticking to the plan! - mgmt
Is the original post an AI “original” or an AI summary of an existing article?
You have to click through the reddit link to find the “original”, which is a perplexity AI generated “article”. It’s all AI slop.
deleted by creator
We may put up our hats for a while, but we never pull in the sails.
Translation: I’m more than happy to pay for a fair service, but I’m not stupid enough to believe it will last.
Oh noes! Who could have seen this coming?
/s
sarcasm aside, literally, our lord and savior, Gabe Newell.












