Sony Deletes 551 Movies PlayStation Owners Paid For

(reclaimthenet.org)

112 points | by bilsbie 1 hour ago

23 comments

  • nullsmack 3 minutes ago
    We need some kind of modern equivalent to the old proposed Digital Media Consumer's Rights Act but which protects people's rights to digital media they buy. These should never be sold and then taken away with no compensation like this. We need a law that forces companies to treat digital files the same as a physical purchase. They can't take it away and have to allow people to resell and loan out as well. And in cases of online games where you can buy something, and then later they can ban you which deprives you of being able to use what you bought, that should come with requirements that the company must provide full compensation of the purchase price. It should also ban EULA's and TOS from defining these things as only licenses even though they are structured as a purchase in a store.

    I know it'll never happen with the people we have in government these days, and the anti-consumer organizations, like the ESA, that are out there now claiming things like running private servers for Minecraft is illegal and piracy. (Yes, they really said that. Despite the fact that Minecraft has always provided the server and allowed this for 15+ years)

  • bloomingeek 1 minute ago
    Wait, people trusted a corporation and got screwed?!? Why, that's...unheard of!(My wife, bless her, has "purchased" dozens of movies on amazon. I warned her that when the amazon wind changes, she may regret those purchases. I got the look.)
  • eska 1 hour ago
    It should be illegal to have others purchase what you as a company only licensed and therefore aren’t legally allowed to sell.
    • piltdownman 56 minutes ago
      They make it up as they go along. Their 2005 Audio-CD EULA includes provisions purporting to require the immediate deletion of all copies if a user files for personal bankruptcy

      https://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2005/12/summary-claims-against...

    • mmh0000 40 minutes ago
      What's funny is that Sony has done this before![0] I've had a personal boycott against Sony products due to this.

        "The feature was controversially removed by Sony since system firmware update 3.21, released on April 1, 2010.[2] A class action lawsuit was filed against Sony on behalf of users, but was dismissed with prejudice in 2011 by a federal judge. The judge stated: "As a legal matter, ... plaintiffs have failed to allege facts or articulate a theory on which Sony may be held liable."[3] However, this decision was overturned in a 2014 appellate court decision[4] finding that plaintiffs had indeed made clear and sufficiently substantial claims. Ultimately, in 2016, Sony settled with users who had installed Linux or had purchased a PlayStation 3 based upon the availability of OtherOS."
      
      
      [0] https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/OtherOS
      • garciansmith 28 minutes ago
        Yep. I had tons of Sony games across the first three Playstation consoles. I was a grad student with a PS3 at the time and I actually used Yellow Dog Linux on it as a computer to write papers when my laptop broke. Then the update came and I chose to ignore it, but that meant I couldn't play online games. Soon new games required a firmware update (still remember putting in the Dark Souls disc and being stunned I wasn't allowed to play it!).

        And with games it's just getting worse (Sony announced they won't make discs starting 2028; the Switch 2 takes carts but very, very few games release on a cart). If you care about control over the games you purchased, if you care about going back and playing older games, then the only choice is to use platforms that are DRM free. (Or, well, non-legal means.)

        • Fire-Dragon-DoL 14 minutes ago
          Kinda. On Steam I can still play games I bought 18 years ago.

          Still walled garden, but they act way better.

          • garciansmith 9 minutes ago
            True, but Steam still controls Steam and they can change their terms whenever they want. But for now it's ok, at least. And their hardware is happily open: I've played a bunch of games I got on GOG, DRM-free, on my Steam Deck, for example.
            • Fire-Dragon-DoL 0 minutes ago
              I don't disagree with you, but open hardware DOES make a difference, in the worst case scenario I can turn the hardware into a GOG machine, or into a PC. Also if they ever lock my library, I am turning to piracy (I have 1000+ games)
      • gbraad 16 minutes ago
        I boycot Sony since they blocked my PSN account, which got hacked due to them! Purchases I made are not available, ... I really took a disliking before when they refused to fix my Vaio laptop, ... this was the last drop!
    • 404mm 49 minutes ago
      I bet there’s a class action coming.

      And Sony made it easy for them too by using this verbiage: “previously purchased content”

      • bilekas 30 minutes ago
        Because they were purchases, not rentals. Under no circumstances would a customer reasonably assume that their purchase would be revoked for reasons completely outside of their control.
    • cryptonym 1 hour ago
      Agree... if they want to sell it, parent company must agree on forever licenses for each user. Regardless of reselling license getting cancelled.
    • noahbp 52 minutes ago
      Plenty of people purchase digital movie rentals from Apple, Youtube, etcetera because they know they will watch it once, and the lower price in exchange for a temporary license is acceptable to them. I don't think banning this is pro-consumer.

      It should, however, be illegal to tell your customers that they are purchasing/buying media without explicit "Rent" language (which implies a non-expiring license) when you do not yourself have the right to grant non-expiring licenses.

      • etempleton 47 minutes ago
        They often have two tiers, a rental tier and a purchase tier. If you purchase the assumption is it will be available forever.
  • NoSalt 47 minutes ago
    Ever since Apple, Microsoft, Google, etc. started offering "free" online storage for photos, ever since streaming started to be popular, I have ALWAYS extolled the virtues of µSD card slots in phones and owning your own media (i.e., purchasing CDs and DVDs). Many people would give me a hard time about this, calling me a Luddite, but I will never lose access to my photos, music, or movies ... unless it is the end of the world as we know it, which I happily have on R.E.M.'s Eponymous album.
  • windowliker 7 minutes ago
    Content licensing cartels and their flagrant anti-consumer practises are abhorrent. This is the sort of thing the EU should be cracking down on but instead they seem to be more concerned about reading all our private messages.
  • pgwalsh 26 minutes ago
    Not the first time and not going to be the last. Unless you can download it to hardware you completely own and can make a backup, it's not really yours. Online purchases I can get on with, like Bandcamp are pretty good. I bought the new Globular album on CD and it took 10 days to get to me from the UK. I also had access to high quality downloads. That works, these other models do not.
  • bilekas 34 minutes ago
    It used to be that streaming services were an excellent option even over torrenting because of the ease of access and use.

    Now we're not even getting to retain what we buy, this is not a streaming service, these were sold to users individually.

    We've gone full circle where I honestly believe pirating is a far better offering.

    The root of the problem is these ridiculous content licensing agreements, it should be very very obvious to the customer when they're buying that "Hey, you will own this until X date when our content licensing agreement is finished"

    Not hidden by design in some dense ToS.

  • keraf 1 hour ago
    And with more and more content being distributed digitally, and even Sony announcing that physical disks won't be a thing from 2028 [0], the days of media ownership are gone. The only way to "own" content is it being DRM free (rare) or piracy. And ironically, DRMs justify the existence of piracy.

    [0] https://blog.playstation.com/2026/07/01/physical-disc-produc...

  • glimshe 9 minutes ago
    I've heard there's a service called PirateBay that offers movies free of DRM. Maybe people considering being Sony customers in the future should give it a try.
  • giancarlostoro 1 hour ago
    They should at least make an effort to let you sync them into MoviesAnywhere which is supposed to solve the "I have this on iTunes, but not Android TV" problem by unlocking it across platforms if you sync your accounts. They should really let you permanently keep movies on defunct platforms as part of your standard MoviesAnywhere movie collection.
    • zamadatix 52 minutes ago
      Movies Anywhere works by aggregating the active digital access licenses you have participating partner services. The problem here is Sony won't be able to give any active digital access licenses for these movies to users after September 1st, let alone one which allows them to transfer that through Movies Anywhere.

      It's typical "you own nothing" logic to the point the companies selling you that also don't even own it.

      • giancarlostoro 36 minutes ago
        Sure, but its also run and operated by the rights holders, which they never even needed to do.
  • maxverse 1 hour ago
  • c-hendricks 25 minutes ago
    Should mention today Sony also announced the end of physical releases for their consoles, and the closure of the PS3 and PSVita stores.
  • jo4329j5 17 minutes ago
    That's why I pirate content and will continue to pirate content. I'm not hurting artists. I go to shows and premiers and book signings. I'm perfectly fine with stealing from publishing cartels.
    • PUSH_AX 6 minutes ago
      > I'm not hurting artists

      I guess residuals are a made up thing.

  • ge96 46 minutes ago
    No refund?

    I have a similar grief with YouTube movies although in that one, they don't play UHD. Some do like Valerian plays at least in 1080P, most movies are capped to 480P unless you have an "approved device" eg. something probably riddled with ads.

    • mr_toad 23 minutes ago
      1080p or higher is pretty common on the high seas, even for titles like cartoons, which in my opinion is overkill.
      • ge96 8 minutes ago
        They do have Cowboy Bebop in 1080P on YouTube which looks amazing, I bought it

        I don't partake in downloading anymore but I do go to streaming sites

  • raluk 17 minutes ago
    In similar fashon in year 2009 Amazon deleted books from Kindle. One of them was 1984 from George Orwell.
  • jobs_throwaway 19 minutes ago
    This is one reason why piracy is legitimate and important
  • webdoodle 10 minutes ago
    A friend of mine owned the first Ipod, and diligently ripped all his cd's and cut and pasted them too his device. I asked if he had backups, and he said he had the cd's. I told him too make a copy, just in case the Apple mafia came too delete his stuff. He didn't, and then after a move he lost or scratched many of his CD's. His only backup WAS the ripped MP3's. A few years later Apple deleted all of his music claiming he hadn't purchased them. He didn't even know how to download music. Every single MP3 he had he ripped himself...
  • montroser 9 minutes ago
    That "thank you" at the end is particularly classy. Thank you for getting fucked and giving us your money.
  • piltdownman 58 minutes ago
    Sony literally distributed a rootkit in the guise of DRM for Audio CDs back when piracy meant CD-R distribution.

    https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sony_BMG_copy_protection_rootk...

    Anyone remotely surprised at their history of utter contempt for the end-user need only remind themselves of SVP Steve Heckler's remarks to conference attendee's in 2000

    "The industry will take whatever steps it needs to protect itself and protect its revenue streams ... It will not lose that revenue stream, no matter what ... Sony is going to take aggressive steps to stop this. We will develop technology that transcends the individual user."

    https://web.archive.org/web/20090318115847/http://www.nyfair...

    The remarks of Stewart Baker of the DHS admonishing Sony are as relevant today as they were then; namely that "it's your intellectual property - it's not your computer."

    https://web.archive.org/web/20051229031842/http://www.mp3new...

    • azalemeth 45 minutes ago
      I haven't bought a single Sony product since then. I used to have a Sony walkman, clock radio, buy classical Sony CDs (or their sub brands), etc, nearly got an original PlayStation.

      I wrote a letter to them after the rootkit fiasco saying they've lost a consumer for life. Didn't get a real response. Wrote to them last anti DRM day. Didn't get a response.

      Really, this is the only power one has in capitalism -- don't buy their products.

  • steveBK123 40 minutes ago
    Incredible timing with the news they are discontinuing disks in 2028.

    You will own nothing.

  • rvz 44 minutes ago
    Your purchase has been literally deleted.
  • basisword 1 hour ago
    I'm surprised movies haven't yet moved to DRM free on purchases the way music did on iTunes back in 2009. With movie files being so large and people having streaming services integrated in their TV's I can't imagine there is all that much incentive for people to share them anyway. The only thing it does is help prevent situations like this.
  • shadowtree 58 minutes ago
    It is legitimately impossible to purchase certain movies, especially classic, in any format due to regional blocks.

    Simple example: "The Things of Life", a classic French movie from 1970. https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Things_of_Life

    No way to get it in the US. No physical media, no streaming. It is on Apple TV ... in France.

    You can torrent it.

    Utterly brokem model.

    Music is the same btw, Apple Music and Spotify geoblock music. Workaround is to add to your library when traveling in EU. Insane.

    • leafmeal 14 minutes ago
      If you're open to physical media you can probably request it through your library, or similarly buy the dvd from ebay or something.
    • juliend2 42 minutes ago
      And for some non-geoblocked music, if you want to actually purchase the song as MP3, there's no way unless you have a Mac or Windows PC to install iTunes (too bad for Linux users).

      https://uk.7digital.com/ has a lot of songs available in MP3 format, but not as many as on iTunes.