I know you can buy access to content to some TV shows on the Apple store, Amazon and the Microsoft Store - but these are still subject to geoblocks, not accessible in many countries and only offer a relatively small selection of TV shows anyway (and even then they’re subject to this shit.)
Think about how video games have been fundamentally transformed. You can buy the majority of video games on Steam (or just use other similar apps). They’re all basically released everywhere on day 1. They’re automatically yours forever (until such a potential when Steam goes down - but you can easily extract and secure the files if you worry about that).
The same is not remotely true with TV. I understand that multiple streaming services were obviously going to emerge as TV production expanded. I understand that expecting to be able to watch everything on Netflix for £9.99 a month was never going to be realistic. But alongside these streaming services, a Steam-type client should’ve emerged allowing people to just buy seasons of content on the services. For people who want to legally keep what they watch, paying something like £5-15 per season (with sales much like Steam). No geoblocks. No restrictions.
I say this because in many cases I have had no choice but to pirate to watch a TV show season. It literally was not available to me through any legal source. I could not digitally buy it, nor was any streaming service accessible to me carrying it. This is now happening to Americans more and more (I am not American) with European series being heavily delayed. The last season of Babylon Berlin released in October 2023. It took another year or so for it to get to America. It’s also not accessible in France or many other European countries too.The show has suffered from staggered international releases since it was initially released, essentially throttling its popularity potential (most expensive German series ever made at one point).
As for me? I’m British. I could not, and still can’t watch the second season of Balkan Shadows anywhere legally according to Justwatch. Paris Police 1900 season 2 is also still not accessible for me. This is really quite pathetic when you think about music and video games.
It wouldn’t replace them, it’d exist alongside it.
Why would they do that if they can all have their own platforms instead (and not pay another party a share of the profits)?
From Steam founder Gabe Newell, 2011:
The same can be said of movies/tv – except Steam saw the issue before EA and everyone made their own streaming stores, whereas all the video distributors have splintered into their own services.
I’m not sure where/why Hulu failed to gain the sort of share Steam attained. It existed early on and had … at least 3 big networks (iirc, not cbs? but abc, nbc and fox – then nbc dropped out to just do peacock, I think). Perhaps hulu didn’t pay enough for rights or perhaps Apple, Netflix and Amazon represented too many other players to make the equivalent arguments as Steam made.
Yeah, I mean ultimately muh rights issues aren’t the consumers problem. If the networks and streamers don’t make a TV series accessible on day 1, the internet will.
You would have two ways to watch a show.
Some shows however, completely leave all streaming apps. At least (2) would still remain.
You’re talking from the viewer’s perspective. Why should the company share their profits?
Well, okay, they could sell it like that on their own platform then. But they don’t.
Rights issues are complicated and not solved by creating another platform, unfortunately.
Yeah I understand that, but it’s kinda time this changed really in this day and age. Korea doesn’t seem to have any problem spamming their media to the globe.
Not that I disagree but you have to offer some incentive, that’s what I’m saying.
Well I’d imagine that this system, if set up properly, would in theory reduce piracy by quite a bit might be a good incentive.