Warner Bros. Discovery is telling developers it plans to start “retiring” games published by its Adult Swim Games label, game makers who worked with the publisher tell Polygon. At least three games are under threat of being removed from Steam and other digital stores, with the fate of other games published by Adult Swim unclear.

The media conglomerate’s planned removal of those games echoes cuts from its film and television business; Warner Bros. Discovery infamously scrapped plans to release nearly complete movies Batgirl and Coyote vs. Acme, and removed multiple series from its streaming services. If Warner Bros. does go through with plans to delist Adult Swim’s games from Steam and digital console stores, 18 or more games could be affected.

News of the Warner Bros. plan to potentially pull Adult Swim’s games from Steam and the PlayStation Store was first reported by developer Owen Reedy, who released puzzle-adventure game Small Radios Big Televisions through the label in 2016. Reedy said on X Tuesday the game was being “retired” by Adult Swim Games’ owner. He responded to the company’s decision by making the Windows PC version of Small Radios Big Televisions available to download for free from his studio’s website.

  • Melmi@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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    8 months ago

    So this is just a thing now? Removing media from the world?

    They found out it works so now it’s gonna become a trend.

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      That was always the point of digitizing the world. It’s crazy to me that people didn’t see it coming, but it’s nice that people are actually taking notice now.

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          Sure there are good uses for it, but not the way we’ve been aggressively shoving it into every space we possibly can, consequences be damned.

      • Catsrules@lemmy.ml
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        I disagree, digitizing is what is saving a lot of the media. You can save hundreds of thousands of hours of videos and many games in a single 20TB drive today. You couldn’t do that without digital technology.

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          In fact, the lack of digital storage is why, to name an infamous example, the only recordings of most episodes of the original Doctor Who show are from the private collections of viewers: the BBC, lacking both funding and storage space, were forced to record new content over episodes with no backup.

          I hate it when luddites pine for the days of my childhood and early adulthood where the storage, transfer, and use of every single type of media was so damn impractical compared to now.

          It’s like wanting to go back to horses and walking being the only forms of land transportation because some trains are loud 🤦

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            Yeah, it’s bizarre reading people say they want physical games because if it’s not physical steam might remove it. Bro just download it and don’t delete it from your device, steam is offering a re-download service but nothing is stopping users from just downloading the game and keeping it in their disks.

          • Fubber Nuckin'@lemmy.world
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            It’s more like wanting to go back to horses and walking because some cars have started driving themselves to the manufacturer to be scrapped in the middle of the night, but i have to agree with you.

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        Weve lost far more pre-digital copies of games than we have digital.

        Physical media breaks and degrades, once they stop selling it in a store and your copy doesnt work anymore its gone forever.

        Like you’re just so utterly wrong it’s mind boggling to see your comment upvoted by so many.

        • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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          You can make copies of physical media. Disk imaging isn’t some archaic sorcery lost to time, you know.

          • SkyeStarfall@lemmy.blahaj.zone
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            Well, you can make copies of digital media too.

            Sure, there’s DRM, but it doesn’t matter whether it’s digital or physical in that instance, DRM can be added either way.

            • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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              It is far easier to make an iso work than to crack a compiled program open and edit out its securities, and anybody who says otherwise has no idea what they’re talking about.

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                  Because it in its entirety can be run with a disk reader and associated hardware. At most it might ask for a license code, but otherwise any physical game or video that needs online connection via a proprietary app is just a digital good with extra steps.

        • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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          I think SaaS with fallback licenses is a good deal for everyone. But those are rare so I agree

      • FiniteBanjo@lemmy.today
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        I was talking about how this would happen for about a decade, since the decline of popularity of physical media. Nobody listens.

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      They’ve been trying for at least 30 years, probably closer to 50-60 TBH.

      One of the concepts they(RIAA/MPAA) were looking into for the entire CD/DVD era was the idea of a time-limited disk that would only work for a short period of time before becoming unreadable.

      By the time they got it working, Steam was already a thing and distribution through physical media was on the way out.

      Now they control movie theaters through streaming. They stream the movies to the theaters, the theaters rarely get physical or even digital copies anymore. It just gets streamed right to the projector.

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        They also monitor outbound streaming. I’ve twice had a documentary movie I was watching at a theatre stopped because so one was supposedly live streaming the movie to the internet. The second time it happened they stopped the movie until the person doing it stopped, only it turned out they made a mistake and no one was live streaming it at all - they just interrupted the movie for fucking ages because of wanky attitudes. What made it even more stupid was that it was a special screening for a one off event AND a pretty niche documentary that most people wouldn’t give a fuck about let alone pirate 🙄

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      At least the developer for Small Radios Big Televisions is handing it out for free now. Looks like a pretty decent game.

      • Grimpen@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        The developer of another game distributed by WB, Fist Puncher, commented on the Ars Technica story about this.

        Found it, it’s the “Promoted Comment” now.

        therealmattkain I’m one of the creators and developers of Fist Puncher which was also published by Adult Swim on Steam. We received the same notice from Warner Bros. that Fist Puncher would be retired. When we requested that Warner Bros simply transfer the game over to our studio’s Steam publisher account so that the game could stay active, they said no. The transfer process literally takes a minute to initiate (look up “Transferring Applications” in the Steamworks documentation), but their rep claimed they have simply made the universal decision not to transfer the games to the original creators.

        This is incredibly disappointing. It makes me sad to think that purchased games will presumably be removed from users’ libraries. Our community and our players have 10+ years of discussions, screenshots, gameplay footage, leaderboards, player progress, unlocked characters, Steam achievements, Steam cards, etc. which will all be lost. We have Kickstarter backers who helped fund Fist Puncher (even some who have cameo appearances in the game) who will eventually no longer be able to play it. We could just rerelease Fist Puncher from our account, but we would likely receive significant backlash for relaunching a game and forcing users to “double dip” and purchase the game again (unless we just made it free).

        Again, this is really just disappointing. It seems like more and more the videogame industry is filled with people that don’t like and don’t care about videogames. All that to say, buy physical games, make back-ups, help preserve our awesome industry and art form. March 7, 2024 at 12:51 am

        https://arstechnica.com/gaming/2024/03/its-kind-of-depressing-wb-discovery-pulls-indie-game-for-business-changes/

        • amanaftermidnight@lemmy.world
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          IIRC Steam lets people who purchased (or rather add to their library) a game access to it indefinitely. A famous example was second party side-scrolling half-life game named Codename Gordon. It’s delisted but still available with the right steam command. I personally also have a source mod on steam on my account where it had been delisted due to potential lawsuit but I can still play it if I wanted.

          • tal@lemmy.today
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            IIRC Steam lets people who purchased (or rather add to their library) a game access to it indefinitely.

            That has definitely been the case with at least some games in the past that publishers removed. I am not aware of any cases where a game that someone purchased stops being available.

            That being said, I kind of suspect that if it’s not possible to buy it any more, an existing player probably isn’t going to be getting much by way of any fixes at that point, but that’s gonna be the case for any game at some point.

  • mudle@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    Time, and time again, they prove how piracy is literally THE only option when it comes to preserving media.

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    Whoever takes games down without license problems is a gigantic dickhead and makes no sense, even from a economic perspective its idiotic.

    • Redward@yiffit.net
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      That’s because they are gonna succeed where others have failed, lunch their own game store /s

  • Blackmist@feddit.uk
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    8 months ago

    Products no longer available to buy should fall into public domain.

    WB are an absolute cancer. Suicide Squad fails spectacularly due to being a multiplayer live service game that nobody asked for, and their immediate response is to go all in on multiplayer live service games.

    Because heaven forbid the executives could be fucking wrong.

    • lepinkainen@lemmy.world
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      If I can’t buy it, I will pirate it with zero moral issues.

      I own over 1000 DVDs and a couple hundred BluRays, but will pirate anything that gets removed from streaming or isn’t available in my region for some shitty licensing reasons.

    • at_an_angle@lemmy.one
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      Look, I’m not outright disagreeing with your first point. I think going that way will be a massive legal headache for just about every business.

      Mainly because of patents, copyright, and all the BS, but that’s a whole other thing. I’m mainly thinking about software.

      New software v1.0 is released and then updated to v1.1? Is it a new product? If so, does that mean that v1.0 should be free if they only offer the updated version? What constitutes software not being available in a legal sense?

      • Hootz@lemmy.ca
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        This is not a matter of versions. If the content is not available for purchase then the only choice is piracy. But at what point does piracy end and it just become public domain (not even legally just them not giving a fuck to go after anyone)

        • at_an_angle@lemmy.one
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          But the version does matter. We all have a game that was updated that either broke it, removed content, or changed it so drastically that it’s like a completely different game. And if the older versions aren’t available, but the game is still being sold… should the older version be public domain whole the current version is being sold?

          These are important questions.

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        8 months ago

        They’re probably betting on the majority of zoomers being too tech illiterate to know how to pirate having raised them on streaming.

        I guess we will see if they are right.

        • ilinamorato@lemmy.world
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          Millennials were raised on VHS tapes and we could figure out Limewire. I doubt this is going to work out well for the studios.

          • BearOfaTime@lemm.ee
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            Meh, many X, Millennial and Z that I know are clueless - they only know what the lock-down mobile device let’s them see.

            It’s pretty sad, especially since X grew up before all this stuff.

              • Breezy@lemmy.world
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                You can teach kids to use tech though, i was taught how to break drms on dvds when i was around ten then how to burn it onto a dvd. It was litteraly rent a movie from hollywood video put it in the computer, open up one program and select movie hit go. When it was finished hit save, replace the movie with a blank disc, then open another program select what was saved and hit go again. Very easy, i didnt understand a thing of what i was doing and it was set up by my uncle but clearly you can teach stupid kids to do anything.

        • JDubbleu@programming.dev
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          I’m a Zoomer with a Dell Optiplex running Ubuntu server, an 18 TB HDD, and 35 years of combined seed time. I’ll let you fill in the gaps. Many of us are extremely tech literate and often share our Plex/Jellyfin instances with friends. Many of these not-so-etch-literate friends ask how they can do this for themselves using their computers and we shoot them over instructions.

          Piracy is infinitely easier/more accessible than ever. It’s spreading like wildfire and thanks to the FOSS community anyone with a spare evening can get themselves up and running very quickly.

          • Someone64@lemmy.world
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            You’re forgetting the part where you’re the extreme minority and so you don’t really matter much to the market.

        • Kalysta@lemmy.world
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          I learned how to use bit torrent in an afternoon on summer break in high school. Zoomers will figure it out and there are enough of us older millennials around to teach them as well.

    • halcyoncmdr@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      In the wise words of Gaben: "One thing that we have learned is that piracy is not a pricing issue. It’s a service issue.”

    • Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml
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      Step 1 - Push people to piracy.

      Step 2 - Complain to lawmakers about rampant piracy.

      Step 3 - Get governments to outlaw and shut down piracy sources, compatible technologies, and generally force more authoritarian standards and laws.

      Step 4 - P2P starts to die. Piracy starts to condense around large hubs.

      Step 5 - Make money suing the only large hubs of piracy that still exist, and shut them down.

      Step 6 - Profit from lack of competition and ability to force DRM into everything.

        • Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml
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          Problem is that one day, it will. I’m old enough to be able to see the difference in how much freedom has been lost online.

          It’s not impossible. North Korea exists. There’s nothing stopping the rest of the world from adopting the same authoritarian regulations and technology bans.

          That’s why people need to be involved in their governments; elections, local regulations, and what have you. It’s easy to complain that things aren’t perfect, or that you don’t like any of the options; but being part of the process, long term, is the only real way to fix that. The more people that give up and say they don’t care, the faster corruption infects everything and ruins what good is there. And trying to be clever and say that “one side is just as bad as the other” is not only a selfish lie people tell themselves to feel better about not doing anything, but it actively helps the authoritarians claim power.

          The only thing that staves off corruption and authoritarianism is when the people being governed get involved and stay vigilant. Even small things like school board elections matter down the road.

          You want to have a free internet? Then vote in school board elections. Seriously.

        • FrostyCaveman@lemm.ee
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          Because of Step 3.

          Anti porn laws, “child protection” laws, cryptographic attestation of client devices (windows 11 TPM requirement anyone), it’s all headed in a very scary authoritarian direction

        • Wes_Dev@lemmy.ml
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          It already is. For example, it’s basically impossible to run your own email server these days, because most big email providers just block residential IPs to reduce spam.

          Lots of ISPs block or heavily filter things like torrents.

          Your ISP might decide you having a personal server at home is against their terms and force you to make a business account. They don’t want people uploading, only downloading.

          Some countries are trying to weaken or ban encryption across the board.

          And this is only slightly related, but things like websites that let you watch movies or shows are dying. They either all share the same server for video, or they just copy the files from each other. If you find one and watch a video with a little glitch, you’re likely to find that same glitch in all the other websites too. Think things like TV logos, audio suddenly changing language for a few seconds, scan lines on old VHS or TV recordings, etc… There used to be a lot, but now all the small players are being sued or shut down, and only the largest ones are still alive. The noose is tightening.

    • SeaJ@lemm.ee
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      Abandonware has been a thing for a long time.

      • moody@lemmings.world
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        This is not abandonware. The devs haven’t abandoned their games. This is an active and purposeful fuck you from the publisher to the devs.

        It costs them literally nothing to keep those games up, and yet they’re taking them down against the devs’ wishes. In fact, they refuse to be the least bit convenient to the devs, making them jump through hoops just to relist their own games.

    • 4am@lemm.ee
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      There should be a law in the United States - if you stop selling it, 1 year later you lose your copyright and it becomes public domain.

      • NoSpiritAnimal@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        If you can remove content from the marketplace for a tax write off, the removed content should become public property.

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        It exists, but isn’t 1 year. Closer to 20 I think? There are also deals that require constant usage, like Sony’s hold on spiderman. Quick search says 5 years 9 months for them to hold on to it.

        Back to copyright, there was a game Wizards of the Coast acquired from Gygax’s company that a neonazi and one of Gygax’s sons tried to use claiming WoTC abandoned it. It was blatantly racist so one of the few times people were rooting for WoTC to win. WoTC hadn’t made a new game, but claimed they were still selling manuals digitally.

        Edit might be trademark rather than copyright.

        • GreyEyedGhost@lemmy.ca
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          It could be trademark, certainly isn’t copyright. Trademark is use it and defend it, or lose it. Common trademarks that were lost are kleenex (tissue) and band-aid (bandage). Patents vary somewhat by industry, but in the computer world last 20 years. I think copyright is up to life of the creator plus 70 years, or 70 years if it’s owned by a company. This is why we hear about JRR Tolkiens kids having lawsuits about stuff related to LoTR, and why Steamboat Willy only recently went public domain.

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        Yeah. I’ve heard multiple times how entire careers are made supporting abandonware. The US military I believe pays microsoft millions a year to add security updates to their own version of Windows XP so old software can keep working.

    • Z3k3@lemmy.world
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      But despite the fact we don’t want money for it we hate the idea of you getting it for free more

  • AlexWIWA@lemmy.ml
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    8 months ago

    … why? They’re complete products that just sit there and make money for almost no effort

    • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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      I think we’re in a slow burning culture war that is trying to erase everything but one single mindset of thought.

      Discovery channel felt it early, and now that same sentiment is spreading everywhere. Cut away the vibrant ecosystem for a single channel, controllable narrative.

      And it’s across every fuckdamn media.

      • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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        Sometimes I feel I’m fortunate to have ADHD. Until I think about my life not on the Web.

        • mods_are_assholes@lemmy.world
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          As an aside: I’ve begun to think that ADHD and some other neurodivergences are actually evolutionary responses to the exponentially increasing amount of data processing that modern humanity does on a daily basis, just not having long enough time for natural selection to smooth out the rough edges yet. Give it a few hundred thousand years or so.

          Like we are those prehistoric transition mudskipper-like fish things that traded part of their swim control for the ability to absorb oxygen through their swim bladders, they couldn’t swim as well as swimmy things, couldn’t walk as well as walky things today, but at that moment it was the only chordate to be able to hunt the shore.

          We’re species transition in action maybe.

          • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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            As an aside: I’ve begun to think that ADHD and some other neurodivergences are actually evolutionary responses to the exponentially increasing amount of data processing that modern humanity does on a daily basis, just not having long enough time for natural selection to smooth out the rough edges yet. Give it a few hundred thousand years or so.

            N-no, it’s happening too fast to be explained by recent evolution. It’s been there, just psychiatry has only recently become interested in people without hallucinations, inability to speak and murderous impulses.

            I’d rather imagine that a population needs a certain proportion of explorers or people behaving more chaotically.

      • Socsa@sh.itjust.works
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        This is honestly the only reasonable explanation. Adult Swim was millennial counterculture, and now there is an effort to undo it and erase it from mainstream history.

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          That seals it, digital piracy is the freedom to shape our culture in the face of greedy corporations. A moral good.

    • ReallyActuallyFrankenstein@lemmynsfw.com
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      8 months ago

      From what we have seen from Zaslav, I wouldn’t be surprised if they’re going to claim another creative tax write-off for the non-depreciated value of the assets.

      • CitizenKong@lemmy.world
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        WarnerBrosDiscovery is in massive debt (40 billion) to AT&T, which is itself in even more debt (138 billion). They are trying to make as much money liquid as quickly as they can to pay off the debt, long term profitability be damned. I wouldn’t be surprised if WBD is bought by an ever bigger player in a few years (Apple, Sony, Disney or Microsoft).

              • rottingleaf@lemmy.zip
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                8 months ago

                Normies at this point are trained like Pavlov’s dogs to ignore the very possibility to treat these big companies as they should be treated by law.

                They are irrationally afraid that Earth will split in half and become infested by goblins if there’s no Apple, just separate Apple Computer, Apple Mobile, Apple Music, Apple TV, Applesoft - I want to see this - and so on, no Google, just separate Google Search, Google Mobile, Googlesoft - ok, not as funny, - etc, Microsoft is a small company and there are also Microhard and Microcloud …

                Apocalypse didn’t happen when AT&T was broken up. Nokia wasn’t broken up by regulators, but that didn’t lead to an apocalypse too, while still was a bad thing. DEC or Sun going down didn’t cause apocalypse.

      • Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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        8 months ago

        Making money by destroying/burying digital media. What a backwards world we live in…

        • CitizenKong@lemmy.world
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          Even worse, only to appease shareholders that are only after short term gains and might even bet on the company failing.

    • Altima NEO@lemmy.zip
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      8 months ago

      I think they’re trying to close adult swim games. If that happens, the money from sales go nowhere, so they’re delisting the games too.

      The whole Warner Bros thing is such garbage.

  • brax@sh.itjust.works
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    8 months ago

    Cool, then they won’t have any problems with everybody downloading them for free.

    If they want to cry about lost revenue, then they can turn around and sue themselves for making the games unavailable

      • CileTheSane@lemmy.ca
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        8 months ago

        I believe the text here is:

        “Pay for our product”

        “Make your product available for purchase”

    • dzervas@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      exactly that, INCLUDING server-side binaries to re-create any online features

      I could argue that the source code should become public domain as well but we already sound like crazy people

  • OldWoodFrame@lemm.ee
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    8 months ago

    I honestly don’t understand the math of not releasing movies and un-releasing games. People say tax purposes but I’d think streaming is essentially pure profit, hard to imagine not being able to make 20% of your money back or whatever credit you get for taxes.

    • PrettyFlyForAFatGuy@feddit.uk
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      8 months ago

      if you write it off as a tax write off you get to lie about “expected viewership” rather than actual viewership

      • ✺roguetrick✺@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        You can’t write off expected future profits. That would essentially make income taxes meaningless. You can use a depreciation schedule for movies that you’ve produced and spread your tax savings out if you want(and you can avoid doing that by cancelling the movie all together and claiming it on your taxes now as a deduction), but that only matters when you’re actually making future money for the movie that you want to reduce your tax burden on. WB is losing a hell of a lot of money in the future to save money right now.

      • wazzupdog@lemmy.ml
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        8 months ago

        You clearly have no idea what a tax write off is. If you get 50$ profit spend 25$ on your business and pocket 25$ you pay taxes on your pocketed 25$ not the companies expenditures. That is a tax write off. A “company” doesn’t pay taxes.

        • SkyNTP@lemmy.ml
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          8 months ago

          The second part of this comment doesn’t make a lot of sense.

          My understanding is that the tax system allows for the declaration of depreciation in assets as a business expense. This is fine for assets with transparent market valuations.

          The part where this system could be abused is in willfully withholding the release of a movie, overvaluing the expected revenue, and then subsequently declaring the lack of revenue as a depreciation in assets which is then declared as a business expense to reduce the tax burden.

          A clearer example of this, with very obvious fraud, might be:

          • I paint a picture, spending about an hour of my time and 30$ of paint and canvas.
          • I then organize a silent/shady auction for my painting, and secretly bid $1,000,000 for my own painting
          • Then I decide to not pay for it and at the same time I decide to retract the sale instead of opening it up.
          • On paper I have a $1,000,000 asset that has been depreciated by $1,000,000 which allows me to deduct $1,000,000 from my other taxes.

          So obviously this example was fraudulous. It’s possible that the expected revenue on the cases involving movies was estimated transparently and was fair, because of market forces.

          Maybe something more scummy was at play?

          Who knows.

    • kuraitengai@programming.dev
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      8 months ago

      Think of it like Russian nesting dolls.

      You got the production company that pays $100 million to make a movie. The production company is owned by a studio. Production company licenses the movie to the studio that owns it for $200 million. But it’s all the same ownership and no money changed hands. It’s just on paper. So now the $100 million movie cost $200 million. Then the studio licenses out the movie to the marketing company, which the studio also owns, for $300 million. Again no money changed hands and the value is all on paper.

      Do that a couple more times and that’s how a movie that literally cost $100 million and made $500 million at the box office “barely broke even”.

      Might be off on the layers, but I heard that description of movie accounting years ago.

      • Landless2029@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Nice write up. Crazy how fat cats find ways to milk the cash cows.

        I’m reminded of how the freaking NFL of all things is considered a non profit somehow. Simply due to the fact that they pay themselves so much money.

        • boeman@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          The NFL is a non profit, the teams are not. It still doesn’t make it right, though.

      • 50MYT@aussie.zone
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        8 months ago

        It’s also how the studios fuck over anyone involved who had “profit share %” in their contract.

        The marketing costs eat up 100% of the profits, movie makes no money, yet the marketing company the advertising was sold to made half a bill…

        • kuraitengai@programming.dev
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          8 months ago

          Exactly. I left that part off since I thought it was already a long description. But completely true. Can’t pay out an actor that takes a percentage if it never made any money on the “official” paper.

    • TheGalacticVoid@lemm.ee
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      8 months ago

      They are losing money on streaming. It was so bad that they took their cash cow HBO and grouped it with their streaming divisions to improve their financial report. WBD is making insane decisions because their #1 goal is to increase free cash flow to pay off their debts, whereas most companies’ #1 goal is to “increase shareholder value.”

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      Gotta get you hooked on the new drug that doesn’t have royalties they have to pay out.

      They’re looking forward to all the AI generated crap, and the newer stuff they’ve already fucked the creators over in their contracts.

    • SplicedBrainwrap@beehaw.org
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      8 months ago

      A big part is also residuals, they don’t want to have to keep paying actors, directors, and others involved with production, after the fact on a losing property. If there is zero income there are zero continued payments.

    • harderian729@lemmy.world
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      It’s just a lie told often enough it became true.

      Don’t believe everything you read on forums and try to research things for yourself.

  • Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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    8 months ago

    This practice feels like something that should be illegal. Effectively it is destroying art that hundreds or thousands of people worked hard to make, for the sake of fiddling the books of the owning company that commissioned it.

    If you “write it off” to be worth zero, it should either become freely available abandonware, or can be claimed as the intellectual property of those that worked on it. Otherwise it is evident that there is some value to be had and therefore tax fraud to claim it has none.

    • Scrollone@feddit.it
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      8 months ago

      I agree with you. If a company writes off something in order to make it with zero, then that thing should immediately fall into the public domain.

      • Corkyskog@sh.itjust.works
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        8 months ago

        You would have to have another law that says that anything significantly devalued must be able to be purchased for the stated value. Otherwise they will just say it’s worth $1.

        • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          It’s crazy that WB is getting away with blatant tax fraud. I can’t claim my house is worth $0 in order to pay no taxes yet WB can say, “This media is worth $0 for tax purposes.”

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      8 months ago

      i wonder if devs would rather have their work eventually erased like it never existed and never pirated or preserved and appreciated by people

      • TheHarpyEagle@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Back when WB threatened to block the release of a finished series on HBO Max (Summer Camp Island), the creator more or less threatened to leak it herself. I think most devs would feel the same. At least I would. Not like it’s making them any money either way.

    • Guntrigger@feddit.ch
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      8 months ago

      If he gets $223M a year for being a detriment to society, I should be getting at least $446M for being relatively neutral.

    • thesmokingman@programming.dev
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      8 months ago

      This picture is kinda wimpy. Zaslav had led the company through a total stock drop of almost $16 per share yet his comp has gone up almost 100% based on the figures I’ve been able to find. Granted he’s not getting the lucrative options he started with but that doesn’t seem to stop the other comp from going up.

    • nomous@lemmy.world
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      8 months ago

      Physical media is the only way to ensure you retain access to it.

      • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        I disagree. Piracy is the answer IMO.

        • as someone else said, invasive DRM exists on discs too

        • discs can’t store enough data for a lot of modern games, necessitating downloads anyway

        • discs can be damaged, lost, or stolen

        The only way to ensure we still have access to this stuff in the future is a healthy cracking and pirating community.

        • nomous@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          How do you backup the game you pirated so you’ll still have it in 20 years.

          • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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            8 months ago

            Like any media/data you want to store indefinitely: build/buy a NAS with enough storage.

            • nomous@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              That’s what in saying, you store it on media you control. If you need to migrate it every decade or so to avoid loss/degradation so be it. Unless you physically have that data it’s not yours and access can be lost at any time.

              • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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                8 months ago

                I was oblivious to some context in the thread.

                Agreed, a single physical copy can easily be lost.

                Making physical copies often requires cracking/piracy. E.g. in my jurisdiction it’s illegal to circumvent “functional” copy protection, even though the right for a private copy is written in law. The problem is courts consider DVD’s long broken copy protections functional.

                This is why in my opinion physical copies and piracy/cracking go hand in hand. The former isn’t possible without the latter.

                E.g. I bought Lego Star: TCS again on Steam, because it was less work than getting rid of the copy protection on the disk.

          • TheGrandNagus@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Same as you would with any other data.

            Although it’d matter much less if you know you can just pirate it again in the event of you doing no backups and losing the data.

        • dzervas@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          discs are a personal archiving solution (quite a bad one too, unless you’re into m-discs n stuff) and do not solve the data accessibility issue (copying it is labor intensive and needs human interaction, in contrast to a torrent)

      • RBG@discuss.tchncs.de
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        8 months ago

        No, you don’t. Games can include online-checks via company servers. If those shut down, some of your games cannot dial home anymore and will not start. Then you got useless discs lying around.

        Piracy solves that issue, so for this kind of situation, the only way is piracy. I know some people like to stay within legal limits but that’s not a fair playing field at all for the consumer.

        • nomous@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          I didn’t say anything about purchasing the media only that a physical copy is the only way to ensure you retain access. Online checks are trivial to bypass (see: them being bypassed constantly.)

          How do you back up the games you’ve pirated if not to a physical media? Further “physical media” doesn’t mean “only dvds” but means “hdds” as well. Some of you people are just so eager to argue and correct someone you don’t even think about the comment you’re replying to, have fun with that.

          edit: I’m not arguing against piracy, I’m arguing for making backups and not assuming that torrent (or infrastructure to activate software) will always be there. Unless you control the data (physically) it’s not yours.

        • dzervas@lemmy.world
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          8 months ago

          Just a side note that M-DISC exists which is essentially a blue ray disk with a claimed longevity of a thousand years (strong emphasis on “claimed”. there’s a lot of controversy around it)

          but yes the only way to retain access is piracy as it allows people that didn’t have the media to get it

          • nomous@lemmy.world
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            It’s weird to me that apparently nobody backs up their pirated stuff and just assumes they’ll able to torrent it again in 10 years.

            • dzervas@lemmy.world
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              8 months ago

              I get it about stuff that you don’t really care about But if I spend a day looking for a specific movie, I’m taking it to my grave

          • Blue_Morpho@lemmy.world
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            8 months ago

            Thanks for reminding me I need to try mdisc. I have multiple redundant backups but don’t trust any of them for long term. (Hard drive, SSD flash, USB flash)

            My carefully burned DVDs are going bad after 15 years just like you said. (They were checked for pio errors at time of burn using only verbatim azzo 100 year media and stored in my basement in black dvd cases.)

            • dzervas@lemmy.world
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              I really need to test them as well. Being ~100GB each is quite good for me, I won’t need more than 100 for my whole life

      • systemglitch@lemmy.world
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        8 months ago

        Some things have no physical media, thus bringing it back to piracy as the only viable alternative yet again

        • nomous@lemmy.world
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          Do you not back that thing up once you have it?

          edit: it’s assumed you pirated it initially as this is a piracy magazine.

          • systemglitch@lemmy.world
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            I’m not sure I understand what you mean by magazine, feel free to expand. I’ll answer the party I can though… I back up certain media to an additional hard drive, but not everything. Some movies, all music, and some old comic books and magazines (Savage Sword of Conan, and it’s like).

            Every bit of physical media I have is also backed up digitally, because I don’t even watch physical media anymore.

            I dont really have a point to make, just writing out my thoughts.

            • nomous@lemmy.world
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              Magazine is just the nomenclature in the fediverse, this is a “magazine” not a subreddit.

              I back up pretty much everything, I guess a lot of the confusion is based on my phrasing, I was considering a RAID in your closet a physical backup while obviously the media there is being stored digitally.

  • Chewy@discuss.tchncs.de
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    8 months ago

    Luckily Steam will keep Duck Game in my library, but I dread the moment Valve leadership changes. Steam has existed for 20 years, and I naively hope I’ll still be able to play my games in 40 years on my Steck Deck.

    • SirQuackTheDuck@lemmy.world
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      Well, since you retain a license to the content until you or valve closes your account, you should be covered.

      According to their own personal Steam Subscriber Agreement, you only forfit licenses when you end your subscription (like EA Play) or when the main service contract ends (close your account).

      Although they may try, but then you can still sue for breach of contract.

      • Jarix@lemmy.world
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        That’s as things may be now. What we have consistently seen is that company’s can often change their policy whenever they want. It’s happened too many times already to think the current lunch is future proof

      • Lojcs@lemm.ee
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        Steam can remove games from your account. Their definition of a subscription is different than what you think it is:

        the rights to access and/or use any Content and Services accessible through Steam are referred to in this Agreement as “Subscriptions.”

        The clause allowing games to be removed from a group of people:

        Valve may restrict or cancel your Account or any particular Subscription(s) at any time in the event that (a) Valve ceases providing such Subscriptions to similarly situated Subscribers generally,