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SkaveRat ,

Downloading a movie only to find out it was actually porn.

Or the other way around.

Glide ,

It might be boring and obvious, but the speeds.

I used to have to plan ahead, set overnight downloads, very consciously and actively manage data rates and in general never plan around getting something. Today, I can get basically ANYTHING in less than an hour on FiOp. Most things, 5-10 minutes. Transfer rate has outscaled data size, and it’s fantastic.

rainynight65 ,

I had lots of time to play games, but not a lot of money to buy games.

Now it’s the other way round.

If I could bring back anything from back then, it’s boxed PC games that can be resold and traded. Covered a lot of my gaming needs from second hand shops.

billwashere ,

Ease of grabbing content. There are so many tools that make it too easy and automated. I mean this has changed drastically in the last 10 years let alone 90s.

LarkinDePark ,

I’d bring back my favourite website from the time:

imaginers.com/iw

Started me on a career, with Macromedia’s product line.

SauceBossSmokin ,

Usenet Newsgroups were a big part of my life back then. Games, MP3s, Software, Movies, TV shows. So many Xbox games that I burned to DVD and loaded onto my modded Xbox. Those were the days. Now I only torrent some movies and TV shows thru a VPN and pay for everything else. My time is worth a lot more to me now than back in the late 90s/early 2000s.

aramis87 ,

omg, speed, why has no one said 'speed' yet? An hour-long tv show was 350mb, and it took three days to download.

some_guy , (edited )

Agreed. I can now download a multi-terabyte file in a matter of minutes or even less.

PetteriPano ,
@PetteriPano@lemmy.world avatar

One of the local secondary schools had a mailserver. No one knew or took security seriously in the mid-to-late nineties. As a result, it also hosted an ftp-server with widely shared credentials that held some 20GB worth of mp3s when it was shut down after three years in service. It was one of the biggest in the country at the time.

Irc and DCC-transfers were huge, too. As CD-writers became common place, a lot of it took place over snail mail or sneakernet. A guy at school had printed lists of all his tunes and took orders to burn them to music CDs.

I think the limited selection and limited transfers/storage made you cherish things more. Today you’ll never finish your library in your lifetime.

Postmortal_Pop ,

In the aughts, pirates bay felt like the library of Congress. If a single commenter on a B tier forum saw it in a guy’s basement in the mid 80’s there was a sure bet at least 3 people were seeding it and one of them had great upload. If it wasn’t there, you had a dozen different sites with their own dedicated fans posting everything you could ever want.

Now it’s maybe 6 sites, they all have the exact same listings, and the only things with seeds came out in the last year of two. It’s like seeing your local library after a fire.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Private trackers.

Cinemageddon, for example, has lots of seeds on almost any worthless shitty B-movie you can think of going back to the early days of film.

Source: 16 years on CG

ArcaneSlime ,

I can never get a CG invite, personally, I’ve basically given up except for that offer in my bio to eternally curse your enemies for one (still standing btw).

Unfortunately they never do sign ups, open or interviewed, and even if they did interview I’m only on IPT, which nobody takes as proof lmao. I mostly use usenet these days unfortunately, but at least it does have it’s benefits, DrunkenSlug accts are easier to come by and it is faster, and they have many things, but unfortunately lack B movies and other stuff I’m really into, but at least there’s IPT, slsk, yt-dl and internetarchive for some of those.

Dagwood222 ,

[off topic]

I remember the golden age of the DVD Man. That noble soul who had all the latest movies on DVD a day after they opened. Quality ranged from someone recording the movie in the theater with a camcorder to perfect copies taken directly from the source.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

I had a friend who put himself through college this way.

deegeese ,

I used to pirate games because there was no legal digital distribution. The pirate version I could get faster and wouldn’t hassle me to put the right disk in the drive before I could play.

Then digital distribution got good, DRM got less obnoxious, and malware got meaner.

I used to pirate music for similar reasons.

I didn’t pirate video because the files were too large, and around the time bandwidth caught up, Netflix got good. Now digital video distribution is awful so I pirate video until they solve the fractured storefront problem.

scytale ,

Having to wait a day or more to download something. Today you can download a movie in seconds.

Davel23 ,

What about those of us who pirated in the early '80s?

The computer lab at my junior high was basically one big floppy copying/trading center. It was great.

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar
SpruceBringsteen ,

This is mid 00s but I’d bring back Oink. And my ratio

SnotFlickerman ,
@SnotFlickerman@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Yes, please. Oink was so good.

tiefling ,

Closing Time is no longer by Green Day

BlueLineBae ,
@BlueLineBae@midwest.social avatar

I KNOW WHOOOO I WANT TO TAKE ME HOME

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