Anzeige: Anti-Hacking-Strategien zum Schutz vor Cyberangriffen

Cyberangriffe bedrohen IT-Infrastrukturen weltweit. Ein intensiver Workshop vermittelt Admins und IT-Sicherheitsbeauftragten die notwendigen Kenntnisse und Techniken, um Netzwerke und Systeme effektiv gegen Angriffe zu schützen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Si…

Cyberangriffe bedrohen IT-Infrastrukturen weltweit. Ein intensiver Workshop vermittelt Admins und IT-Sicherheitsbeauftragten die notwendigen Kenntnisse und Techniken, um Netzwerke und Systeme effektiv gegen Angriffe zu schützen. (Golem Karrierewelt, Sicherheitslücke)

Threatening Anti-Piracy Messaging Fails to Stimulate Intent to Subscribe

A study published this week by researchers in Spain shows how the intent to subscribe to a streaming platform is affected when potential subscribers are presented with stimuli such as advertising-based discounts, loyalty-based discounts, and prosocial anti-piracy messages. When direct threats enter the equation, does the fear factor help or hinder the intent to subscribe?

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

not-credibleAfter years of anti-piracy campaigns, there’s a tendency to wonder whether the secret sauce of success is right around the corner or just as elusive as it’s ever been.

Yet, even briefly considering the perspective of those creating these campaigns can be a fairly sobering experience. There’s a blank sheet of paper and this campaign has to work, what can it possibly say that hasn’t been said before?

Even more important than simply being original, is there a type of messaging that won’t be ignored or ridiculed straight off the bat, yet goes on to deliver real results?

While advertising agencies will always claim to have a great solution, the default for most anti-piracy messaging is negativity, with few campaigns reaching the public without at least some element of fear.

Whether the fear focuses on direct consequences for the consumer or the broader impact on others, it’s often amplified by direct threats.

There Must Be a Better Way

Published on Thursday by researchers at the prestigious Autonomous University of Madrid (la Autónoma), Incentivizing SVOD Platform Subscription Intention through Tiered Discounts and Anti-Piracy Messages acknowledges the challenge piracy presents.

Rather than focusing on the negatives, the researchers argue that a more positive approach, one that incentivizes people not to pirate while acknowledging loyalty, can improve relationships with customers, make them happier, and even lead to improved profitability.

Some platforms offer better prices in exchange for a one-year subscription commitment, but tiered discounts based on subscriber loyalty are much less common. The researchers say there’s almost no public research on their effectiveness. With their study, which also examines two types of anti-piracy messaging, they aim to fill that gap.

Effectiveness and Conditions

Through a nationwide survey in Spain, the researchers asked 883 subjects who subscribe to streaming platforms and make use of illegal sites, to report their intention to subscribe to a hypothetical new platform (‘Flixio’) constructed by the researchers. The study had two objectives:

Identify the conditions under which the intention to subscribe to an SVOD platform is enhanced by four types of incentives (tiered advertising/loyalty discounts and prosocial/threatening anti-piracy messages)

Explore the extent to which each type of incentive and the evaluation of platform content comparatively contribute to enhance subscription intention

So what combinations worked best for Flixio and why?

Tiered Advertising Discounts

In respect of Tiered Advertising Discounts, the study found that users’ opinions on advertising in general predicted to a high degree whether they were satisfied with the tiered offer. For example, the discounted ads tier satisfied users with a more positive attitude towards advertising. The advertising-averse were satisfied by paying the full price and seeing no ads.

“This result can be understood through social exchange theory: SVOD platforms can improve their relationships with users by offering tiered advertising discounts that match the specific dispositions of the different user groups, each of which will perceive a better cost-benefit balance in customized contract terms,” the study notes.

In general, platforms should run ads that users view positively and ditch those they do not. When consumers have a positive attitude towards a platform’s ads, tiered advertising discounts should become more attractive.

Tiered Loyalty Discounts

The study found that the interaction between loyalty level and attitudes to loyalty shows that subscription intention was enhanced by offering tiers with enough variety to satisfy a range of attitudes.

By offering appropriate discounts to those with a positive attitude to loyalty, and offering non-discounted rates still pleasing to the loyalty averse, subscription intention was enhanced along with the opportunity to build stronger relationships with users.

“In addition, this incentive should not only be aimed at retaining subscribers, but also at strengthening the perceived utility of being loyal users, because rewarding loyalty has a well-documented reinforcing effect on loyal attitudes and behaviors,” the researchers add.

Prosocial Anti-Piracy Messaging

The study considers two main types of anti-piracy messaging. The first, prosocial messaging, asks pirates to consider the effect of their consumption on others, such as harm to film industry workers and how piracy compromises the quality of future productions.

The researchers say that confirmation of this approach may help to explain why prosocial anti-piracy messages are sometimes seen as effective and why sometimes they are not.

“The effectiveness of these messages depends on whether the user of pirated SVOD content perceives them as sufficiently credible and has enough sensitivity to justice. If a prosocial message is not believable, illegitimate users will easily criticize its content and continue to justify their unauthorized behavior,” the study found.

“If illegitimate users are not sensitive enough to recognize themselves as perpetrators and benefactors of an injustice against copyright holders, the message will not have the desired effect.”

On a practical level, those deploying this type of messaging should assume that it will be ineffective against lower justice-sensitive users. On the plus side, when messaging contains “highly credible claims and arguments” higher justice-sensitive users are likely to be persuaded.

Even Credible Threats Are Ineffective

The second type, Threatening messaging, asks pirates to consider the potential negatives, such as being caught and having to deal with the consequences in the legal arena.

The study’s findings on the effectiveness of threats surprised the researchers. Even when people found the threats credible and also feared punishment, the likelihood of them subscribing to legal platforms did not increase. The paper mentions two possible reasons for this outcome.

First, while the threats may have discouraged piracy, they didn’t necessarily motivate people to pay for content. Second, the particularly strong threats used in the study may have backfired, triggering a defensive reaction and resentment towards the message sender. This aligns with the psychological theory of reactance, where people resist attempts to limit their freedom.

Overall, the researchers suggest that overly aggressive anti-piracy messages are not an effective way to motivate people to subscribe to legal streaming services.

Conclusion

The study ultimately concludes that, by offering tiered discounts in exchange for advertising exposure, and by acknowledging and rewarding loyalty with discounts supported by prosocial anti-piracy messaging, streaming platforms can improve relationships with consumers and enhance business.

In many respects, the findings in the study boil down to common sense. When companies meet or exceed subscribers’ expectations, customers tend to be happy and in turn, that contributes positively to loyalty. When expectations are not met the opposite is true and no amount of threats will ever change that, or repair any shred of loyalty left behind.

That may be why threat model never goes away; it poisons a generation of consumers and just when it fades, people run out of innovative anti-piracy ideas. Then the cycle begins all over again, with threats that become more exaggerated as the years roll by, with the same predictable results.

Incentivizing SVOD Platform Subscription Intention through Tiered Discounts and Anti-piracy Messages (Ignacio Redondo, Diana Serrano) is available here (pdf, not peer-reviewed)

From: TF, for the latest news on copyright battles, piracy and more.

Lilbits: Intel scraps 20A node, AMD Z2 Extreme chip for handhelds is coming next year

Intel’s next chips will likely be most likely be built by TMSC. AMD is teasing plans for a next-gen chip for handheld gaming PCs. There’s a new Linux laptop on the market (that looks a lot like the previous-gen version of the same laptop). …

Intel’s next chips will likely be most likely be built by TMSC. AMD is teasing plans for a next-gen chip for handheld gaming PCs. There’s a new Linux laptop on the market (that looks a lot like the previous-gen version of the same laptop). And Spec5’s new NOMAD handheld device is a Raspberry Pi 5-powered […]

The post Lilbits: Intel scraps 20A node, AMD Z2 Extreme chip for handhelds is coming next year appeared first on Liliputing.

Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition is a 3.2 pound Lunar Lake laptop with a 15.3 inch, 2.8K display

Up until a few years ago I didn’t find myself writing about laptops with screen sizes large than 13 or 14 inches very often, because the whole point of creating a website called Liliputing was to focus on Lilliputian (little) computers. But a gro…

Up until a few years ago I didn’t find myself writing about laptops with screen sizes large than 13 or 14 inches very often, because the whole point of creating a website called Liliputing was to focus on Lilliputian (little) computers. But a growing number of PC makers have been cramming big displays and high-performance […]

The post Lenovo Yoga Slim 7i Aura Edition is a 3.2 pound Lunar Lake laptop with a 15.3 inch, 2.8K display appeared first on Liliputing.

The Golden Age of offbeat Arctic research

The Cold War spawned some odd military projects that were doomed to fail.

At the US Army’s Camp Century on the Greenland ice sheet, an Army truck equipped with a railroad wheel conversion rides on 1,300 feet of track under the snow.

Enlarge / At the US Army’s Camp Century on the Greenland ice sheet, an Army truck equipped with a railroad wheel conversion rides on 1,300 feet of track under the snow. (credit: Robert W. Gerdel Papers, Ohio State University)

In recent years, the Arctic has become a magnet for climate change anxiety, with scientists nervously monitoring the Greenland ice sheet for signs of melting and fretting over rampant environmental degradation. It wasn’t always that way.

At the height of the Cold War in the 1950s, as the fear of nuclear Armageddon hung over American and Soviet citizens, ­idealistic scientists and engineers saw the vast Arctic region as a place of unlimited potential for creating a bold new future. Greenland emerged as the most tantalizing proving ground for their research.

Scientists and engineers working for and with the US military cooked up a rash of audacious cold-region projects—some innovative, many spit-balled, and most quickly abandoned. They were the stuff of science fiction: disposing of nuclear waste by letting it melt through the ice; moving people, supplies, and missiles below the ice using subways, some perhaps atomic powered; testing hovercraft to zip over impassable crevasses; making furniture from a frozen mix of ice and soil; and even building a nuclear-powered city under the ice sheet.

Read 22 remaining paragraphs | Comments

How did volcanism trigger climate change before the eruptions started?

New dating of a major ancient warming shows warming started before major eruptions.

Image of a person in a stream-filled gap between two tall rock faces.

Enlarge / Loads of lava: Kasbohm with a few solidified lava flows of the Columbia River Basalts. (credit: Joshua Murray)

As our climate warms beyond its historical range, scientists increasingly need to study climates deeper in the planet’s past to get information about our future. One object of study is a warming event known as the Miocene Climate Optimum (MCO) from about 17 to 15 million years ago. It coincided with floods of basalt lava that covered a large area of the Northwestern US, creating what are called the “Columbia River Basalts.” This timing suggests that volcanic CO2 was the cause of the warming.

Those eruptions were the most recent example of a “Large Igneous Province,” a phenomenon that has repeatedly triggered climate upheavals and mass extinctions throughout Earth’s past. The Miocene version was relatively benign; it saw CO2 levels and global temperatures rise, causing ecosystem changes and significant melting of Antarctic ice, but didn’t trigger a mass extinction.

A paper just published in Geology, led by Jennifer Kasbohm of the Carnegie Science’s Earth and Planets Laboratory, upends the idea that the eruptions triggered the warming while still blaming them for the peak climate warmth.

Read 32 remaining paragraphs | Comments