Samurai Goomba said:
Since The Escapist already makes quite a sum of money from ad revenue in the banners all around the website and the ads before and after videos (plus the recent introduction of features like captcha that make contributing to the site harder and more annoying), I fail to see why disabling ads is a service worthy of payment.
It may not be worth it to you, but basically, it's a trade-off. The removal of
all ads from the site. (both banner & video ads) means they lose all advertising revenue from anyone that actually pays for the site.
(Not that there aren't some other minor benefits, but you're right, they're mostly not worth mentioning - There was a video series we got to see in it's entirety all at once that everyone else had to wait while they were released one at a time, and we get better quality videos, HTML5 playback as an option, and download links for the videos too.)
But whatever, if you don't think it's worth it, that's fine. I find it preferable to dealing with buggy and intrusive ads, and the other stuff is a nice bonus.
Owyn_Merrilin said:
Samurai Goomba said:
Owyn_Merrilin said:
Samurai Goomba said:
Owyn_Merrilin said:
I hate this mentality so much. People who are unwilling to watch ads before videos are the reason that Hulu now has most of the good shows locked away for everyone but Hulu Plus subscribers. Commercials are not a bad thing, they're what keeps content free for the viewers. Without commercials, we'd be buying Pubclub style subscriptions to every site we wanted to make use of.
Nonsense, Hulu does that because Hulu is a money-grubbing whore. Netflix provides ad-free services for a comparable price with a much greater library. Hulu gets away with its business model precisely because it runs a crappy version of itself as "free" to introduce people to the service, otherwise I have no doubt Netflix would crush it. Again, the price is about the same and Netflix provides more value, especially for movie watchers.
http://www.maclife.com/article/feature/netflix_vs_hulu_plus_who_deserves_your_10_month
Okay, better example: UK TV licenses, paid in addition to whatever fees the cable companies charge, Vs. US style commercial supported TV. In the US, if you don't want cable, you don't have to pay a dime over the cost of your TV set. In the UK, you're paying a fee for it regardless.
Wow, that sucks. I really like that I don't have to pay for cable if I don't plan to use it. Between DVDs, video games and free online video content (like YouTube), plus real life (little things like school and relationships), I hardly have any time to watch regular ol' TV anyway.
Re-reading that, it's a bit confusing. In the UK, there's a fee for over the air TV, which is separate from any fees incurred with a cable company. If you want cable, you pay both. If you don't, you just pay the one, but it still costs more than the free over the air stuff available in the US, which is free to the viewer because it's ad supported.
Yeah, except while that might seem to make sense, there's also ITV and channel 5, both of which have lots of advertising...
And even the BBC, which clearly gets most, if not all the licence fee money has ads if I'm not mistaken. (it's been a while since I've watched any actual TV.)
Speaking of which, there's some fascinating loopholes in the licence fee rules.
The BBC Iplayer doesn't count, so if you watch that, you don't need a TV licence.
The rather confusingly worded TV licence conditions say: "You need a licence if you watch programs
as they are being broadcast"
So, a live internet stream (of something also being broadcast on tv) would require a licence, but the Iplayer and similar 'on demand' services which don't put up any content until after the broadcast has ended are exempt.
Oh, for the simple logic of Australia, where 'free to air' TV is actually free. (even if the ABC is funded by the government.)