Found this in the wild. What attracted my attention was the last headline (emphasis theirs):
- Hollywood films, college lessons, amazing streamers and more are on the first media network ruled by you.
I guess they're promoting piracy and a stick-it-to-the-man attitude towards the authorities, as evident by the presence of the Free Speech Flag in the footer.
P.S. Can I do better with the tags?
Maybe? From the FAQ: I'm not sure promoting piracy is their goal necessarily, although they may not be too concerned with it, either. The app doesn't let you choose the install directory on Windows, which is obnoxious. It also seems to rely on a "buy your way to the top" method of finding domains (called claims). If you want to have stuff at lbry://beststuff, you have to have the most LBRY Coins (LBC) put towards it through a combination of your own contributions and purchases/tips from users. Otherwise, you can have lbry://beststuff#claim_id, which is yours forever. Maybe it'll prevent monopolies, but I'm a little skeptical on that point. I guess they're promoting piracy
It might be easier to start with what LBRY is not: it is not just another corporate media service like YouTube or iTunes or Spotify. It is first and foremost a new protocol that allows artists to upload their content to a network of hosts (like BitTorrent) and set a price per stream or download (like iTunes) or give it away for free (like YouTube without ads). What makes this all possible is the blockchain technology developed by the founder of Bitcoin.
They list "Hollywood films" as one of the things one can post on the network. That might not be promotion, but it's at least not discouragement, which I'm sure will tickle some people on their privates.Maybe?
Not necessarily, since they offer the ability to charge for it. Perhaps they're hoping to get legit content producers involved?
Ahh! That makes sense. I wonder how it would perform, being mixed in with the rest of the content. Would it even affect how the audience interacts with the official digital versions of Hollywood films on there?
That's a fair question, and I think that may really hurt adoption if they can't figure it out. We've seen how big companies freak out when their ads are put with things they don't like (all the craziness on YouTube is a prime example). If LBRY is seen as some weird underground thing, it's not going to be movie studios that serve as the early adopters.