> I don't, but even without any DRM you still have the delay between the moment the ripper manages to get the file and the moment it's available for download.
You're missing the streaming option. But alas, watermarking + ContentID + DRM have essentially conquered that realm. Acestream and IPTV are two surviving options, but the barrier to entry is not low for these.
> For movies and TV shows I think I can. It's just so full of holes and broken implementations that it's usually trivial to crack.
I don't know enough about current media DRM solutions to comment here. What I do know is that will likely change once TEEs/enclaves become more widespread on consumer devices.
> If people don't pirate because they don't know how why would they start ripping Netflix streams?
"Right-click > Download" versus, at the very least:
1. Finding a reliable torrent tracker
2. Downloading and installing a torrent client (viruses galore!)
3. Finding a torrent with enough seeders
4. Figuring out which version of the movie/show to download (what's a "nuke"? what's up with the quality (cam)? why is this movie split into 37 .rar files? where are the subtitles? why is the audio out of sync? etc. etc.)
You and I have already gone through all of this the hard way, but it's important to realize that it's not intuitive at all.
You're missing the streaming option. But alas, watermarking + ContentID + DRM have essentially conquered that realm. Acestream and IPTV are two surviving options, but the barrier to entry is not low for these.
> For movies and TV shows I think I can. It's just so full of holes and broken implementations that it's usually trivial to crack.
I don't know enough about current media DRM solutions to comment here. What I do know is that will likely change once TEEs/enclaves become more widespread on consumer devices.
> If people don't pirate because they don't know how why would they start ripping Netflix streams?
"Right-click > Download" versus, at the very least:
1. Finding a reliable torrent tracker
2. Downloading and installing a torrent client (viruses galore!)
3. Finding a torrent with enough seeders
4. Figuring out which version of the movie/show to download (what's a "nuke"? what's up with the quality (cam)? why is this movie split into 37 .rar files? where are the subtitles? why is the audio out of sync? etc. etc.)
You and I have already gone through all of this the hard way, but it's important to realize that it's not intuitive at all.