7/5/2026 at 6:19:26 PM
I am generally not in favor of adding regulation, but this is a place where I would support it.Anything that you BUY needs to be your property. This means you must have the ability to:
1. Transfer ownership of it (either temporarily as a loan or permanently as a sale). Digital-only doesn't preclude this: the store can have a "transfer" functionality.
2. (Within reason) use it at your discretion at any point after the sale. This means that a company cannot "revoke" your access at a later time. Specifically for content that is DRM locked, if they decide to sunset that service (store, DRM server, whatever), no problem! just offer DRM free (or generally lock-free copies). I have no problem with Sony not offering DRM free versions of games that I can still download and play with the store. But if that goes away -> you must give me a path to local ownership.
(Multiplayer games that require server infrastructure are a bit more complex, and I'd leave aside for now).
This should apply equally to video games, movies, books, music. Any digital content.
by jbombadil
7/5/2026 at 7:54:53 PM
You're not in favor of adding regulation, except when it comes to issues you understand and care about. All the oversight and regulation about everything you don't care and/or know about is big bad government overreach. Every government agency is a useless waste of your tax dollars, except the ones you rely on and the ones where you have friends that work there. Do I have that right?by feoren
7/5/2026 at 8:21:02 PM
I understand his comment as being against dumb regulation that only ads unnecessary bureaucracy or stops/limits progress. But he would support a regulation for this because it's a violation against the property of the buyer.by alecsm
7/5/2026 at 8:10:35 PM
Though your point may have some value, your comment comes across as meanspirited and ad hominem.Also, regulation is not universally supported by knowledgeable consumers. Often quite the opposite, in fact.
by vanviegen
7/5/2026 at 8:14:48 PM
Mean spirited sure, ad hominem, no. It's satirizing the argument, not personal traits unrelated to the argumentby nfw2
7/5/2026 at 7:24:29 PM
I saw something earlier today that showed the Sony agreement specifies you’re only licensing the games, even if you buy it on a disc. So the fine print means no one ever “buys” a game for the PS5. They are buying a license to use the game for some indefinite period of time that Sony, or some other rights holder, will determine at a later date.This is why things really need to be DRM free from the start, and portable (have the ability to back them up, move them, etc). It’s the only way to ensure they can’t pull that kind of stuff.
by al_borland
7/5/2026 at 8:01:55 PM
This has been the case for software since the very beginning. And people have been complaining about it since the beginning. See the Free Software Foundation.by Negitivefrags
7/5/2026 at 7:28:25 PM
enforcement of legality is on the victim in the grift economy.by cyanydeez
7/5/2026 at 8:27:52 PM
There's already a good solution to buying and owning digital media: you pay money to download files that are playable offline.When you pay for content locked to a platform, you're not buying an asset, you're paying for a service. The platforms grow around not only providing a convenient service to the end user, but also to the content creators, who publish on them with the expectation that their content is protected by DRM. Creators are free to choose where they publish, and end users are free to choose which services they use.
I don't think it makes sense for the government to define what it means to own a digital asset or to force every service platform to become a retailer and ownership-tracker. Where there's demand for DRM-free downloads, the market will respond.
by fasterik
7/5/2026 at 8:20:25 PM
> Anything that you BUY needs to be your property.This is obviously absurd as a universal rule. If I "buy" a night in a hotel room, I should own the hotel room? If I order a taxi, I should own the taxi? If I ride a bikeshare e-bike across town, I should own the bike?
Whether rent is appropriate or exploitative for a certain product or industry is a fair question, but to say renting should not exist as a concept at all for anything just doesn't work.
by nfw2
7/5/2026 at 8:35:14 PM
I think you misunderstood, the major issue is that companies are actually "renting", it's just at 100k words long terms of services where they redefine "purchase" as rental.California has actually done something about this, you can longer claim that customers are "buying" when they're actually just renting.
If i claimed i sell a house for 500K but the terms define i actually rent the house for 500K and i can claim the property back anytime, that'd be crime yet it's somehow legal with digital goods.
by MyMemoryfails
7/5/2026 at 8:27:19 PM
Digital sales overwhelmingly use "buy" as the term in their UI, not "rent". Rental is a separate thing, and I don't think roughly anyone is saying rentals should not exist in any form.by Groxx
7/5/2026 at 6:39:45 PM
> I have no problem with Sony not offering DRM free versions of games that I can still download and play with the store. But if that goes away -> you must give me a path to local ownership.I worry about shenanigans where you "buy" the game from a shell company and that shell company "folds" and doesn't uphold it's promises. Same is true for a smaller, but not shell, company. If the non-DRM version isn't already created and held in trust, then it's not trustworthy.
by RHSeeger
7/5/2026 at 6:35:35 PM
I don't see this as "regulation". I see this as extending the same consumer protections that existed in the era of analog physical media to the digital age.by hx8
7/5/2026 at 7:44:43 PM
Customer protection absolutely is regulation. Saying otherwise is a No True Scotsman.Good regulation is good. Bad regulation is bad. Being anti-regulation is dogmatic.
by Fargren
7/5/2026 at 8:18:21 PM
Consumer protection is a type of regulation, but if you can brand a rule as "Consumer protection" it will poll better than "regulation" because that's how marketing works.by hx8
7/5/2026 at 6:45:44 PM
All they have to do then is say that they license you a game, and you're not buying anything, despite paying for it. They already do that with online games.by sph
7/5/2026 at 6:50:50 PM
That is literally what most online digital goods already do, like steam.by jvuygbbkuurx
7/5/2026 at 7:46:56 PM
Sure, but UI needs to reflect that too. I just opened Steam to verify - it definitely says 'Buy {game_name} - Add to Cart'by demaga
7/5/2026 at 6:56:49 PM
One of the unstated points of this particular article is that these rules are ones that we as a society have. If we collectively decide that this isn’t something that should be allowed, we can make it so. There are some powerful interests that don’t want it so it’s not an easy path.by matthewfcarlson
7/5/2026 at 6:48:14 PM
At least that would be honest....by eszed
7/5/2026 at 6:54:13 PM
That is literally in any software since like 90s. You buy license.by krzyk
7/5/2026 at 7:38:05 PM
It's a completely different license. A normal software license gives you the right to use version X of the software on Y computers/seats/users/... You have the original installer on the disc, you can download installers for patch releases online and save them for later, you have the activation key. At any point, you can uninstall the software and give or sell the installer and key to someone else.What games and some software do these days is much worrse. You have a license to use their "software installation service" and their "let me run the game" service until they decide to turn them off. At any point, at their discretion, they can remove your ability to install a new copy or even run it all together.
Very different and quite recent.
by franga2000
7/5/2026 at 7:22:24 PM
right, but back in the 90s, the onus of maintaining a working copy of any software was on you. Now, Sony simply reaches into you home and can deny you access to software/movies you "bought".These are not the same situation.
by eldaisfish
7/5/2026 at 7:36:13 PM
Well, yes. Always online is a problem, but it doesn't change what one buys. A thing that is easy to copy without destroying the original. So they invented licenses to contain the copying part.by krzyk
7/5/2026 at 7:47:07 PM
This looks like a job for NFTsby NDlurker
7/5/2026 at 7:47:39 PM
Then it shouldn't be allowed to call it "buy" they should be forced to call it "rent".by atoav
7/5/2026 at 7:23:18 PM
i am curious - why are you not in favour of adding regulation? The point of most good regulation is to avoid consumer-hostile situations like this.by eldaisfish