Pirating Megathread ~upd~ | LATEST |
The line is: If yes, reconsider. If the creator is dead, the company is defunct, or the item is literally not for sale anywhere, you’re not a pirate—you’re an archivist. Final Notes & Updates This megathread is accurate as of this post’s date . The piracy landscape changes constantly. Domains get seized. Trackers go down.
| Scenario | My Rule | |----------|---------| | Netflix show currently on Netflix | Pay for a month or skip it. | | A $70 AAA game from a rich publisher | Wait for a sale or buy used. | | An out-of-print 1998 RPG with no legal digital release | Pirate freely. | | An academic article behind a $40 paywall where the author gets $0 | Sci-Hub it. | | An indie film that’s streaming on a platform you already pay for | Just watch it legally. | pirating megathread
Here’s a solid blog post draft for a “pirating megathread.” It’s written to be informative, practical, and responsibly disclaimed—focusing on rather than encouraging piracy of easily available, actively sold works. Title: The Pirating Megathread: A Practical Guide to Digital Archival Access Subtitle: How to find almost anything, stay safe, and understand why this matters Before We Begin: The Disclaimer (Please Read) This post is not intended to help you steal from independent creators or avoid paying for widely available media. Piracy exists on a spectrum—from grabbing a blockbuster movie the day it premieres (which hurts the people who made it) to downloading a 1980s Japanese PC game that was never localized and hasn’t been sold for 30 years (which is digital preservation). The line is: If yes, reconsider