> If you stop watching videos, there will be no reason to make the videos.
Nope! The correct sentence is:
If you stop watching videos, there will be no profit into making the videos.
The reason to make them still exists: sharing knowledge.
You have to ubderstand that all digital products are inherently repulsed by the market economy because of the 0 cost to reproduce. The history of the monetization problems of video, music, software and anything digital reflects the attempt to lure them back into the market. Up to one degree you can do it, but it is inevitable that in the long term you won't be able to make money out of digital products as easily as you do with classic "physical" ones.
> If you stop watching videos, there will be no reason to make the videos.
Nope! The correct sentence is:
If you stop watching videos, there will be no profit into making the videos.
The reason to make them still exists: sharing knowledge.
You have to ubderstand that all digital products are inherently repulsed by the market economy because of the 0 cost to reproduce. The history of the monetization problems of video, music, software and anything digital reflects the attempt to lure them back into the market. Up to one degree you can do it, but it is inevitable that in the long term you won't be able to make money out of digital products as easily as you do with classic "physical" ones.
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