153 points

in 1999 you had the ability to get into a music shop, load the cd and test listen to it. Or just go through the music charts. Or wish for a specific song on radio.

Also 1999 already had Napster, Morpheus and others.

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51 points

A lot of people still bought whole cd’s because it had that one song from the radio on it.

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38 points
*

You buy the CD because they had a charting single on radio, you’re than disappointed that the rest of the album is a different sound.

Not everyone had internet in the 90s-00s either mate……

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14 points

Then you keep listening to it anyways, and it slowly becomes one of your favourite albums of all time.

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9 points

Chumba Wumba deep-cuts.

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3 points

We call that justifying your purchase. You forced yourself into liking it so you didn’t “waste” the money.

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4 points

Did you miss the whole “you could test listen to the CD in the shop” part?

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11 points
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Nope, not every place had the money to burn on a cd in a jukebox from every artist. Also standing there for 45 minutes to listen to the entire thing? Who actually does that?

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4 points

Sugar Ray surprised many people by being a punk band that had a pop song or two.

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2 points

I bought 3 Monster Magnet albums looking for Mean Machine

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17 points

In the 2000s, some electronics stores where I lived had “jukeboxes” with headphones and a barcode scanner, so you could listen to 30-second snippets of the songs on an album before buying it.

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10 points

I’m old enough to know the pencil trick to fix a cassette that got eaten by the stereo…

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7 points

I still keep a pencil in my car. I know there’s no cassette to play, but my car feels naked with a pencil rolling around the center console or in the little tray on the dash.

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2 points

I also learned how to do this as a child but I am probably a bit younger than you at 18yo.

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2 points

“Old or poor…”

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6 points

God, I miss test listens. My favorite record store was very easy going in this, they’d happily let me stand there listening to most of the CD. The unspoken rule was that if you spend that much time listening, you’re going to buy it anyway.
One of the few shops where I always felt welcome.

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6 points

Also 1999 already had Napster

Only half of it, apparently! I just looked it up to check, and it turns out it launched on June 1 of that year.

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3 points

Never saw a music shop with a communal CD player that allowed you to remove the CD shrink wrap.

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3 points

Kazaa, limewire. One - Metallica.mp3.exe as far as the eye can see.

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2 points

That file was the best. I could have made a collection out of them xD

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1 point
*

Format C:, Reinstall XP

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120 points

You buy a Sony CD and decide to play it on your computer.

Your computer now has a rootkit installed.

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51 points

And these days people just install the rootkit, only it’s allegedly to prevent game cheating.

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21 points

And, when called out, everyone tells you you’re a paranoid, tinfoil hat wearing, organ trafficking criminal

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-2 points

That’s because you guys throw around the word “rootkit” like my parents call everything “woke” or “communist.”

You probably couldn’t even define what a rootkit is yet you’re scared shitless of a thing you can’t properly define.

So yeah, anyone who’s afraid of something they don’t even understand fully is absolutely paranoid.

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7 points
*

yeah maybe just design proper authoritative servers instead?
anticheats are kinda a band-aid solution.

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3 points

Or maybe bring back self hosted servers so you can roll your own

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27 points

“most people who had the rootkit installed on their machine dont know what a rootkit is anyways; why should I care?”

-sony’s response

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23 points

I STILL don’t buy Sony shit because of that. They booby trapped their product and idiots still buy it. There are plenty of competitors who don’t do that.

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10 points

Or they just haven’t been caught yet.

It would be naive to think it’s a singular event.

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8 points

Certainly not singular, but it’s very difficult to get away with this undetected because the end user gets physical access to the hardware.

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48 points

i’m curious now

usually censorship is used to replace a strong word with a milder one, or to change the meaning of the text

what word in this meme was so egregious that OP saw fit to replace it with “fucking”

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41 points

My best guess is that it originally was “fucking,” someone censored it to something like “hecking,” then someone else censored the censor back to “fucking”

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12 points

I kinda love this journey though

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13 points

Who doesn’t love fucking?

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45 points

No wonder piracy was so popular

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28 points

1999 piracy mostly consisted of paying for a pirated copy that someone decided to make profit off; most likely, they weren’t the person to make the (first!) copy, and they’re not even sure what’s on the thing they were selling you. It was mostly bootlegging.

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4 points
Deleted by creator
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2 points

Yeah I think maybe he meant before 1999. Before Napster(99)/limewire(2000)/morpheus(2001) pirating was bootlegged shit you paid (less) for. But yeah after 99 you got that shit for free on the internet.

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3 points

When I was a kid we still recorded stuff off the radio and copied our zx spectrum games on the family hi-fi. I’d say good times but it’s so much better now I can pirate everything in great quality from teh interwebs.

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2 points

My memory is a little fuzzy with dates but I’m pretty sure Napster was going full steam by '99 but even before that we used to trade mp3 files on mIRC or ICQ+CuteFTP, I had hundreds of albums I never paid for which I am still amazed I managed to do over a shared 56k connection

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1 point

Like buying a game CD and a warez copy bypass and the crew doing an ASCII art walk through, bought for $5 from a classmate

Or shareware floppy disks with copyright bypass

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12 points

In the pre-Internet early 90s, CDs were $15-25 (with inflation, about $40 now)…. And for a lot of music, you had no way of hearing it first. Shoplifting was popular.

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4 points

At least later on a lot of shops had these listening stations.

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4 points

Man came here to say this… Hell I was in a class action lawsuit in the early 2000s because of CD pricing. https://www.billboard.com/music/music-news/cd-price-fixing-suit-settled-for-143-million-74008/

Shit was super expensive back in the day.

But as weird Al says… How else is he going to get a diamond encrusted swimming pool?

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1 point

That’s why I always wore my umbro shorts with the inner liner before I went to Walmart

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1 point

For real… I never had this problem before… Currently I’m a proud Spotify user.

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33 points

You listen to it anyway and it grows on you.

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17 points

So much this! I don’t use Spotify, I buy all my music on Bandcamp. Sometimes I buy an album after just hearing the first song because I find it interesting, but then after a few more listens I realize that the album is not what I thought it was. However, I’m already committed because I paid for it, and it now sits at the top of my collection, so I continue to listen to it. Sometimes it turns out I find qualities in the music that I didn’t notice at the first listen, and I learn to like it. Sometimes not, and I ditch it.

This was also the way I discovered music before Spotify even existed, I just never changed my habits (I just used other services than Bandcamp back then). I think more people should try turning off the algorithmic entertainment faucet that is Spotify and try committing a bit more to the music that they listen to. Also, a lot more money goes to the artists this way, Spotify is basically stealing from the artists.

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8 points
*

I buy all my music on Bandcamp.

How much have you spent on buying albums in Bandcamp? It must be a lot if Bandcamp is the your only choice for listening to music.

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7 points

I have 170 albums in my Bandcamp collection. I have a lot more on my mp3 collection which I have bought via other means. Each album is maybe $10 on average, so that is around $1700. I have used Bandcamp for around 8 years after 7digital closed their EU store and eMusic became trash. So that’s around $17 per month. Not a lot of money in my book, music means a lot to me!

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1 point
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