Has anyone actually experienced ear damage because of excessively loud commercials?
What's your point? I never experienced hearing damage from telemarketing calls either, but I sure found them annoying before the no-call list was created.
Has anyone actually experienced ear damage because of excessively loud commercials?
Those analogies aren't good either. Your fast food analogy has my friends and I denying the use of the business to other people so I am actively preventing them from making money from paying customers. My skipping commercials does nothing of the sort.
Sorry man, there's simply no agreement between the TV companies and myself, explicit or implicit, that says I am going to 'pay' them for their programming by watching their commercials. I have a chance - no requirement - to watch those ads. There's just no way around that. I don't owe them any more than I owe a street performer who comes up and puts on a show.
You still haven't shown any agreement either explicit or implicit for me to watch commercials. It's not my fault they have an outdated business model, if it doesn't work anymore they should change it or go out of business. Someone else will fill the void because there is a market for good entertainment.
The TV networks have made a conscious decision to freely broadcast their product to whoever wants to watch it with absolutely zero strings attached. I don't owe them a blessed thing, and they don't owe me anything. If they find they can't make money this way anymore, they should stop doing it. A reliance on charity commercial watching isn't going to get them very far anyway.
I have shown one, but you aren't seeing it. You are repeating the same thing abut blaming the business model that I addressed, so we're going in circles now.
You really haven't. My difference wasn't in any way irrelevant. (denial of use by paying customers is a vastly different imposition on a business) There is no good faith arrangement. None. There never will be. If things have progressed to where their commercial time is no longer effective they will have to change or die. I don't really watch much TV so I don't care either way, but the idea that we should dutifully watch commercials as some sort of payment is the height of absurdity. I have never offered such a service to them and they have never asked.
What part of "good faith", a qualifier EXPLICITLY STATED TO CONTRAST WITH SIGNED CONTRACTS, not being a signed contract is unclear?
It's like I'm saying there's a verbal contract and you keep saying "no there isn't, it's not in writing!"
And the 'denial of service' argument is not relevant, either.
Business one spends $1 million on tv shows to give you on the expectation you watch the ads resulting in him getting the $1 million back.
Business two spends $1 million on a nice drive through for you on the expectation you will use it to consider buying food.
In either case, there's no law against everyone using the services - the shows or the drive through - outside the intended use and putting them out of business.
The two are similar *for the issues under discussion*. The 'denial of service' issue is simply a difference that happens to be the case for one and not the other, but it has no bearing on the issues under discussion about businesses spending money to deliver something and the morality and effect when people find ways to circumvent the expected payment for the service, despite that payment not being an explicit agreement.
I'd rather not keep going in circles. If you want to just say you don't agree, you can have the last word.
Your argument is that tv advertisers have no expectation ads will be watched. OK then.
I don't care to go in circles more as I've said repeatedly.
Do you consider using pop-up blockers to be a form of theft?Those other things are not theft; they're normal, expected behaviors that are built in to the business model, which does not rely on you watching every ad.
But watching NO ads with a DVR giving the advertisers NO return on their spending money for the shows you watch is another matter, and is morally theft IMO.
What magical source of paying the costs do you think the money comes from for shows?
What's your point? I never experienced hearing damage from telemarketing calls either, but I sure found them annoying before the no-call list was created.
If you are using cable TV like most Americans are, you already paid for the programming through your cable bill monthly contract.Dominion, you're just losing me here with the injection of ideological dogma like trying to fit the word 'natural' in to dominate your position.
So, I don't see much room to respond. I laid out my position - there's a simple bargain where people spend money to create and air entertainment for viewers; to pay for that entertainment, viewers watch a reasonable amount of advertising that pays for the costs of the entertainment, and if so inclined, buy some advertised products. Generally the advertising has sold enough product for this to work.
To take the entertainment and bypass the advertising is to take something the producers and transmitters paid for under this business model and not pay anything (and I'm not talking about direct money which they don't ask for, but the advertising viewing that is part of the business model). I'm talking morally, not legally.
Now, you might say you don't want to watch advertising; I'd ask you how you pay for the costs. If everyone did what you're doing, there would be no tv.
That's ok, if you decide not to watch the shows. But to get the entertainment and not pay has a problem.
Again, this is one area I don't do as much as I say people should since I skip ads - despite partial mitigation by making a point to watch some.
When you try to separate a "dick move" from what's "moral" - we're probably at some definition debate about moral I doubt will be useful.
I'll make points about bad things about tv at all (e.g., reduces 'community', harming our democracy in away, etc.), about some shows, quite a bit about some advertising, and more, and also some good points about it (it enhances our democracy in ways, for example exposing some wrongs on shows like Jon Stewarts', Frontline, etc.)
Bottom line here though is that there is an inequity between entertainment provided in a 'free with advertising' model, and then not 'paying' the price - sort of like buying the less expensive Amazon Kindle subsidized by ads and then hacking it to remove the ads. Maybe we need to move to an 'advertising in programs' model or a 'subscription only' model where you don't get ads and pay money for shows, given that technology has allowed breaking the advertising way of funding entertainment.
The moral issue is in taking the product offered in a fair exchange and not 'paying' for it.
I'll defend the starving person who steals bread to eat from those who have more in a society lacking social justice - this is not that sort of 'stealing'.
Do you consider using pop-up blockers to be a form of theft?
What about using ad blockers?
What about using flash blockers?
If you are using cable TV like most Americans are, you already paid for the programming through your cable bill monthly contract.
Where does the "theft" and "immoral" issue come into play for them since they already paid for the product?
People who don't have the luxury of Cable/Satellite TV that are watching regular TV OTA(over the air) local channels that don't watch commercials are committing theft and are therefore immoral?
If you are using cable TV like most Americans are, you already paid for the programming through your cable bill monthly contract.
Where does the "theft" and "immoral" issue come into play for them since they already paid for the product?
People who don't have the luxury of Cable/Satellite TV that are watching regular TV OTA(over the air) local channels that don't watch commercials are committing theft and are therefore immoral?
Who brought up the issue of downloading copyrighted material?That's not how it works. One paying for an internet connection does not entitle one to download copyrighted material without paying for it. Same applies to TV. Ever wonder why public programming doesn't have commercials?
Who brought up the issue of downloading copyrighted material?
Feel free to look at the SEC filings of cable companies Comcast, Dish Network, DirecTV and tell me they're broke.As I said before, my assumption is that the fees to the cable company to carry advertising-sponsored channeld do NOT pay for the channels.
It's kind of like going to a hotel and stealing the towels. Hey, I paid for the hotel, so I'm entitled right?
If that assumption is not correct, it raises questions about why the channels need the advertising if they're being paid - the free market competition not working in that case.
The present argument is about the obligation of an individual to watch a television program while skipping commercials, right? The two are pretty clearly related.
They really aren't. Downloading copyrighted material is a crime, not watching the commercials isn't. One involves using the material in an unauthorized and illegal fashion, the other is using it exactly as intended.
Who brought up the issue of downloading copyrighted material?
Most basic cable TV networks also include advertising to supplement the fees, since their programming costs typically are not covered by per-subscriber fees alone.
