I’ve never seen a magnet link respond with “this is not available in your country”.
No - piracy, since it always carries at least some amount of difficulty and risk, is easy to compete against. And in fact, paid services, including Netflix, have proven that over and over. All it takes is to offer dependable convenience and quality and to treat customers well. People are always willing to pay a reasonable price for that.
The problem is that piracy becomes difficult to compete against when, as Netflix is currently doing, you shift from a business model of providing good service under fair terms for a reasonable price to a business model of providing crappy service under onerous terms for too much money, because the greedy, selfish, short-sighted sacks of shit at the top want to make even more obscene amounts of money. That’s the point at which piracy gains enough of an advantage to outweigh its difficulties and risks.
And when that’s the case, it’s pretty obvious what the real problem is.
Step one, provide good service.
Netflix: Welp, I guess we should just pack it in.
Weird, Netflix used to compete with piracy so well that many people stopped pirating altogether, by offering a more convenient service at a reasonable price that was hard for even the most stubborn of pirates to refuse and resulted in a massive boom for its own industry. I wonder what could have changed that caused the people to leave Netflix and return to piracy. Hmm. I wonder.
When overpriced streaming services keep becoming worse and worse, it’s hard to avoid piracy
“We keep raising our prices and having content splinter off between dozens of competitors, I don’t understand why the people won’t just pay!”
There’s nothing Netflix can do about content splintering except make their own content and revenge splinter it.
They could’ve paid more for the rights to stream it, especially if theyre price hiking anyway.