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Oppenheimer and the resurgence of Blu-ray and DVDs: How to stop your films and music from disappearing
In an era where many films and albums are stored in the cloud, "streaming anxiety" is making people buy more DVDs, records – and even cassette tapes.
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This article is concerned with movies and music, but with one company aggressively pushing a form of subscriptions and streaming for video games as well, it's something that will become increasingly relevant to gamers in the years ahead.
There is an interesting cultural phenomenon recently as it starts to dawn on people that the reality is you own nothing you cannot physically hold in your hand. As streaming services do regularly rotate content out of catalogs, sometimes never to return, people are coming to understand that ownership of property in the digital age is in fact not real. If you hold it, you own it. If you don't hold it, a confusing mass of licensing agreements between corporations owns it and you own nothing. Also, 4K UHD Blu-ray and regular Blu-ray are vastly superior in picture and sound quality to the streaming services, so I will naturally prefer physical media for those really big blockbuster movie experiences.
This applies to gaming too, and in a much greater significance, as almost all games older than a certain roughly defined era will not be found on any of the available subscription or streaming services. Most really old games must be found either by sailing the seven seas or trading on eBay for physical media in obsolete formats that modern computers cannot even read anymore. Preservation of old games is an ongoing issue, much more than with movies and music where the companies which own vast back catalogs have vested interests in preserving those catalogs. Many games were made by studios which no longer exist and published by publishers which no longer exist, making preservation difficult and of course with the rights to most of these old games very hard to determine much less obtain, they will never be made available on any form of gaming streaming or subscription service.
With the popularity of streaming-only content, there has also been growing concern about what will happen to works that find themselves hauled off the only places they can be viewed.
“There is a danger, these days, that if things only exist in the streaming version they do get taken down, they come and go,” said Nolan, who made news earlier in the week for joking that he put such care into the physical release of “Oppenheimer” on Blu-ray to ensure that “no evil streaming service can come steal it from you.”
In his conversation with Yuan, he explained, “It was a joke when I said it. But nothing’s a joke when it’s transcribed onto the internet,” before diving into the importance of owning media to preserve art.