We might as well close down Play-Asia and their ilk, that shit is now illegal!
Physical content got paid for from Play-Asia. Streaming digital content did not. It's not the same.
Why do you keep saying breach of contract? Since the OP is based on emails in 2013 and before they even signed a contract. We don't know what the terms are.
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Well we have two scenarios. Either Netflix is in breach of content and Sony is going to compensate later or remove content, or some other means as a result, or Netflix is going to clamp down on VPN users. I highly doubt suddenly Sony just said nevermind, we'll let you do it for free. Plus these were the rights for Breaking Bad in those e-mails. There's a lot more Sony content that was already negotiated that was already available. Unless those contracts are up, then they are still in breach of contract.
I understand that, but it's also largely about avoiding the inevitable, or really just pretending it can't happen. We all know how this is going to go down eventually; the people are making this abundantly clear by their actions. When you have entertainment conglomerates fighting against their own potential customer base then there's obviously some mismanagement going on, not to mention a loss of potential revenue.
I'm saying it's not so trivial. People on this forum often think, hell I want to give them $5, they're leaving money on the table when it's not that simple. Doing things that some people want them to do might make them less money. So it's not money left on the table when people who clearly don't understand things think it is. Companies could give a fuck about everyone wanting to throw a buck or two there way if it means less money. They'd rather refuse your money in order to make more and people don't seem to understand that.
Netflix skips to the next episode after 30 secs, so he's never going to see the end logos. Good try trying to frame him as a pirate though, props for effort.
Whether the end user realizes it or not doesn't change if piracy is taking place. If I go to some store in Chinatown that's selling bootleg discs and I don't realize it and spend money on it, it doesn't change the fact that I now have pirated content. In this case, Sony isn't getting paid for their content and someone else is profiting off selling that content that they are not authorized to do. There's a reasonable argument to call it piracy even if the end user doesn't think it is or realize it is.