Talk:Free Studio (DVDVideoSoft): Difference between revisions
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Latest comment: Yesterday at 13:48 by Keith in topic Relevancy discussion
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:While it’s true that older versions (e.g., 6.6.33 and earlier) can still be found on alternative sources like the Internet Archive, the official version currently distributed by DVDVideoSoft is heavily restricted. From the company’s perspective, the shift to a 'free demo' model represents a systemic change in the product experience compared to the fully functional versions previously available. [[User:GujaStudios|GujaStudios]] ([[User talk:GujaStudios|talk]]) 13:13, 19 August 2025 (UTC) | :While it’s true that older versions (e.g., 6.6.33 and earlier) can still be found on alternative sources like the Internet Archive, the official version currently distributed by DVDVideoSoft is heavily restricted. From the company’s perspective, the shift to a 'free demo' model represents a systemic change in the product experience compared to the fully functional versions previously available. [[User:GujaStudios|GujaStudios]] ([[User talk:GujaStudios|talk]]) 13:13, 19 August 2025 (UTC) | ||
::I suppose the difficulty with including this here is that all they're doing at the moment is selling a product for money. They haven't deactivated the products of existing users, you can still get old versions free if you go looking, they (presumably) have not inserted malicious advertising or anything, they're not misleading the consumer or infringing on the user's ownership of the product, it's essentially the same as if they just stoipped maintaining it for free, then went off and sold a new bit of software that does the same thing. | |||
::It's a systemic change in how they sell the product, but from what I can tell the only 'anti-consumer' element is that you now have to pay money for it, which is not really anti-consumer. and providing a buggy demo is just a product quality issue, which is also not really relevant. [[User:Keith|Keith]] ([[User talk:Keith|talk]]) 13:48, 19 August 2025 (UTC) |
Revision as of 13:48, 19 August 2025
Relevancy discussion
Are the older versions still available and fully free?
If not, then ultimately the decision to move from a fully free model, to a 'free demo' model does not really feel anti-consumer, as the consumer did not pay anything for it in the first place. Keith (talk) 13:00, 19 August 2025 (UTC)
- While it’s true that older versions (e.g., 6.6.33 and earlier) can still be found on alternative sources like the Internet Archive, the official version currently distributed by DVDVideoSoft is heavily restricted. From the company’s perspective, the shift to a 'free demo' model represents a systemic change in the product experience compared to the fully functional versions previously available. GujaStudios (talk) 13:13, 19 August 2025 (UTC)
- I suppose the difficulty with including this here is that all they're doing at the moment is selling a product for money. They haven't deactivated the products of existing users, you can still get old versions free if you go looking, they (presumably) have not inserted malicious advertising or anything, they're not misleading the consumer or infringing on the user's ownership of the product, it's essentially the same as if they just stoipped maintaining it for free, then went off and sold a new bit of software that does the same thing.
- It's a systemic change in how they sell the product, but from what I can tell the only 'anti-consumer' element is that you now have to pay money for it, which is not really anti-consumer. and providing a buggy demo is just a product quality issue, which is also not really relevant. Keith (talk) 13:48, 19 August 2025 (UTC)