They do, but you can store non-paid-for stuff on there too.Except ITunes pays commissions to musicians/artists etc?
Perhaps iTunes is the wrong example.
But there are other places to store stuff in the cloud.
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AFLW 2024 - Round 10 - Chat, game threads, injury lists, team lineups and more.
They do, but you can store non-paid-for stuff on there too.Except ITunes pays commissions to musicians/artists etc?
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ummm get a job maybe ?
I bought a new wireless fax/photocopier/scanner/printer for $99 last week. The standard of living is better than its ever been.
When i was a kid we were the only family that had a computer (bbc micro) in our whole town, now my 8 yr old niece has a mac, an ipad and an iphone, but none can apparently afford $5-10 to take a kid to the footy.
I dont get it.
Really?
MCG general admission is free for a kid under 6, and $2.50 for a kid under 15, for the H&A season. That's ridiculously cheap.
I don't get the difference bewteen this:
It's illegal for me to bit torrent a tv show off the internet to whatever device I like
But now it's legal for me to watch football in the same manner
anyone explain that?
On SEN this morning they had some media guy on who explained that the phone must be connected to a TV for the user to record.
If this is the case then why would Foxtel not take the manufactures of VCRs, DVD Recorders, PVRs and HDD Recorders to court. They offer the same outcome with there devices.
The fact is if I want football on my phone I don't need to pay Optus $10 a month to do it. People will pay for live footy on there phone but I doubt many would pay for replays when the can get it for free.
Wildly off-topic, but this is why there shouldn't be one set AFL ticket price. North Melbourne play to half-empty stadiums; why not make their games cheaper? You'd get better crowds, better atmosphere, and your labourer could take his three kids and even have enough left over for a pie.A labourer with 3 kids and a mortgage or infact an unemployed parent should still get access to our great game. It is their children too that are the future of footy. All the other associated costs with going to a game these days puts it out of reach of such an example. So when the AFL has been making more money than ever, why has the game become less accessible to all, especially those of lower socio-economic status??????
I don't get the difference bewteen this:
It's illegal for me to bit torrent a tv show off the internet to whatever device I like
But now it's legal for me to watch football in the same manner
anyone explain that?
Wildly off-topic, but this is why there shouldn't be one set AFL ticket price. North Melbourne play to half-empty stadiums; why not make their games cheaper? You'd get better crowds, better atmosphere, and your labourer could take his three kids and even have enough left over for a pie.
The main sticking point is the near live replaying, there is nothing in the legislation that covers this and without modification to the legislation the courts will be forced to treat TV Now as they would VCRs or PVRs.
In the vcr analogy what if you owned the equipment (phone) but paid me to come around and press record for you every time your team played so you could watch it when you come home from work? I'm not on either side really but can see how it's a 50/50.
I don't know the full seating plan, but I'm guessing your tickets were some sort of "premium" tickets. You do pay for that... through the nose. But that's your choice.Fair Enough Slats,
Victoria does look after the punters far better but that is not necessarily the case in other states.
My case of going to see the mighty cats in Sydney is a prime point. Even when you are a member it is a gouge.
Have a look at who is running the NRL.........Isn't Gallop the bloke who was fronting Superleague??????? So with such monies is it now Superleague by default?????
Murdoch's filthy lucre doesn't necessarily make the game better.
Good call.I may be naive here, but using the VCR analogy you could argue that Optus is like a guy who records movies off the tv and then charges people to come over and watch them. And that is not legal at all.
So the debate becomes: has Optus in fact made a recording of copyrighted material, stored it and then sold it? So far the Judge doesn't think so. He ruled that the user made the recording and then watched it, and merely paid Optus for the software/service that allowed him to do this. But if the former was proven it would have major consequences.
Watch this space
A summary of the three-judge panel's decision that Justice Finn read to the court said that one of the primary issues raised in the appeal was who should be considered the maker of the recording.
"The primary judge's answer to this was that the maker was the subscriber - ours is a different conclusion," Justice Finn said.