Freemediaheckyeah

(fmhy.net)

98 points | by con 2 hours ago ago

26 comments

  • CobrastanJorji an hour ago

    Note for the hacker crowd: they don't mean free as in speech. They mean free as in beer that fell off a truck.

    • stackghost an hour ago

      When I was coming up, hackers embraced both those definitions. "Information wants to be free" and "fuck corporations" were our guiding principles.

  • with an hour ago

    We need to make all of this so much more popular again

  • hatmanstack an hour ago

    Too much free stuff already and anything new will eventually become free. I'd rather wait or direct money to the projects I support.

  • joshribakoff an hour ago

    Very cool. I have a similar side project for scraping youtube playlists and aggregating open source texts. Mainly materials for computer science, system design, and DSA (data structures and algorithms).

    On GH as joshribakoff/leetdeeper

  • peter_d_sherman 28 minutes ago

    This looks like a reasonably good page (there possibly are better ones) for general AI chatbots, rate limits and sign-in requirements:

    https://fmhy.net/ai

  • mediaconsumer an hour ago

    stremio + debrid had been nice for most things. after a bunch of random stremio plugin outages i built my own little app that just talks to apibay and the debrid back end and links it up to vlc a few months ago and have just used that.

    • dottjt 5 minutes ago

      Which debrid service do you use?

    • BLKNSLVR 33 minutes ago

      Having some knowledge about 'how the sausage is made', the smoothness of a stremio + debrid setup feels pretty close to magic.

  • freakynit an hour ago

    Awesome site. Easy to remember as well.

  • ls612 an hour ago

    The modern bible of online piracy.

  • akoboldfrying 36 minutes ago

    This is great, but I was wondering: Where can I get access to the work that you do? For free, I mean.

    Don't get me wrong -- I think it's great if someone else wants to pay you for doing that work. It's good for you, and it's probably connected somehow to you doing that work in the first place. It's just that, for me personally, I'm not really into that whole side of it.

    For me personally, I just want the value.

    • zetanor 33 minutes ago

      You can find their work for free here: https://fmhy.net

      Just keep it hush-hush.

      • akoboldfrying 20 minutes ago

        Thanks, but I should have been clearer: I meant the work they use to pay for their groceries.

        That's the good stuff.

  • colesantiago an hour ago

    I point to this resource to my friends and family when they want to get stuff for free.

    A great resource as an alternative to hostile and expensive subscription based "services" that shouldn't be businesses.

  • camillomiller an hour ago

    We abandoned piracy too soon. We fell for the trap that enshittified everything. It is time to pirate again.

    • parpfish an hour ago

      In the music space, piracy won.

      After Napster, there was no going back from giving people immediate unlimited access to everything.

      Streamers like Spotify learned that there’s a price point that is low enough for people to “round down” and forget it’s on their monthly credit card statement, but high enough that major label execs are happy. The trick is ignoring what the artists want.

      • eucyclos an hour ago

        Bandcamp does ok without ignoring what the artists want. I think the biggest issue with buying directly from the musician isn't the price but the friction of purchasing online

        • gsinclair 37 minutes ago

          And the friction of storing stuff. I want to listen to music, not manage a collection.

      • k12sosse an hour ago

        Jokes on us, after all has settled. Have you tried to buy a ticket to live music lately? It was $750 for a good seat in more than 1 occasion this past year, and that is first market tickets from the venue, not a traditionally 'scalped' ticket.

        These two equations are tied together. Before, the lucky artists were front-loaded their buckets of cash from the labels. But now the royalty cheques are measured in pennies and the live music enjoyers seem to be the equalization payments.

        • femto 3 minutes ago

          $5 at the local Blues Jam Session. Some of the music is good.

          https://www.facebook.com/groups/berowramonthlyjam/

          $30 or "free" at Miss Celie's. If free, patrons are asked to buy a couple of drinks from the bar.

          https://misscelies.com.au/

          An import playing a stadium is eye-watering, but why bother?

        • jamboca an hour ago

          jesus go to a basement it's like $15 at most and you can meet actual artists

          • parpfish an hour ago

            Most of the people that complain about ticket prices are going to ticketmaster venues to see elaborate productions built by the biggest artists in the world.

            When I tell people that I used to go to at least one show every week on my grad student stipend they are very confused. It’s because I was seeing music by local bands or up-and-coming acts that would charge $10 in the back of a dive bar. Those types of shows aren’t $10 any more, but they are still cheap. And those are the artists that are in the most need of your financial support with tickets and merch. Once an artist is big enough to book an arena… they ain’t struggling

            • atomicnumber3 23 minutes ago

              Lots of local metal shows are in the $15 range, so not too far off

    • idontwantthis an hour ago

      I just bought a bluray drive and I've started ripping movies. The quality is fantastic on an HD bluray upscaled on a 4k tv, and even a DVD looks far better than I thought it would, and far better than it did 20 years ago when DVDs were current.

      • k12sosse an hour ago

        Vinegar syndrome has a couple UHD releases that are on 100GB BluRay. Storage available has been.. ahem, sparse. But you can get a real nice nearly-automated workflow for ripping with makemkv.