this post was submitted on 07 Feb 2026
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Odd choice just pirate and teach others how to aswell. Hurts in this case Netflix way more
Pirating can be legally cut off. DVDs can't
let them keep trying, then
I'd say it is the opposite. DVDs can stop being made.
They've been trying for how long now? The pirates always win in the end.
With streaming companies owning the content, buying DVDs is just another way of financially supporting the same companies for worse quality.
Even when one piracy platform is taken down, there are new ones launched in their place. Nothing guarantees that DVDs will continue to be produced in perpetuity, just as digital copies of video games are progressively becoming less and less prevalent.
Matt Damon argued that the loss of DVD sales is why such garbage comes out of hollywood these days.
He also recently mentioned about his new Netflix movie that Netflix said "it wouldn’t be terrible if you reiterated the plot three or four times in the dialogue because people are on their phones while they’re watching."
Buy second hand, rip, sell again.
Yard sales, pawn shops, thrift stores, and the humble library system can help mitigate that money working it's way up to the coked up pedos that run the film studios.
Theres a way to combine the best of both of them :)
Yes but after a while you may start to yearn for some rarer things as well. There’s still lots of pre-lost media out there on rotting dvds waiting for custodianship that I haven’t been able to find online. There’s also some newer HD rereleases having single channel and lower quality or something, so finding the original dvds is better sometimes.
Around here the used DVD market (thrift stores, used book stores) has been collapsing - prices down below $1 per disc, and everybody trying to get rid of their old stock. Selections are getting thin.
How does one keep their system secure with pirating? A large mkv of a new movie seems like an effective container to deliver a payload.
What is the mkv going to do? It is not a executable format.
So long as you are careful about file formats you shouldn't have any issues, but there are a decent amount of measures you can take.
It doesn't have to do with device security, but you should only do downloads over a VPN with a kill switch enabled to stop your ISP from sending you a cease and desist letter. Keep in mind that you are just trading your ISP for your VPN server when you do that though, so you may want to pick one that has been proven to not record logs, I use PIA for that reason, but I have also heard that mullvad also got subpoenad and demonstrated that they didn't hold logs.
Is TOR a practical alternative for VPN? never tried it, but it seems tempting...
I wouldn't consider it so. Imo it has a different intended use case.
Similar to a a VPN's server, if a TOR exit node is compromised, so is your traffic.
However, TOR is significantly slower than just torrenting over a VPN. It speed loss could make a 15min download take 6-8hours. For a movie that could be a few gbs in size it would take even longer.
I'm not too well versed in it, but just based upon how it works I would imagine you would be at greater risk without taking at least as many precautions as the normal internet.
In theory, sure. In practice, we don't see much of that.
Don't run the video player with administration credentials, and keep the video player up to date and it's likely to be fine.
Carefully.
Seriously, I don’t know of any/many issues caused by downloading and playing a legitimate video file (MP4/MKV/AVI).
I feel like, if there are, those are being saved for a nation state level attack and not Fred downloading Shrek 2 questionably.