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Sony erases digital content from libraries; reminded we don’t own what we buy

arstechnica.comSony erases digital content from libraries; reminded we don't own what we buySony is removing 551 StudioCanal titles from UK PlayStation customers' libraries due to expired licensing agreements, with no refunds offered. The incident highlights that digital 'purchases' are actually long-term licenses that can be revoked when distribution rights expire, not permanent ownership
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Sony is removing 551 StudioCanal titles from UK PlayStation customers' libraries due to expired licensing agreements, with no refunds offered. The incident highlights that digital 'purchases' are actually long-term licenses that can be revoked when distribution rights expire, not permanent ownership.

Teaching
  • Use this as a metaphor for practice ownership: students don't 'own' a posture after one workshop—embodied skill requires continuous renewal and practice, just as digital licenses require ongoing agreements
  • Discuss the difference between accumulating techniques (collecting poses like digital titles) versus developing systems literacy that persists regardless of external circumstances
  • Frame Mysore practice as building internal infrastructure rather than consuming content—what you develop in your nervous system can't be revoked by licensing changes
  • Connect to the idea that showing up daily is how we maintain our 'license' to access deeper states—the practice itself is the ongoing agreement with the body
Writing seeds
  • Essay contrasting digital ownership illusion with embodied knowledge: 'You can't revoke someone's handstand—why practice beats content consumption'
  • Short post on systems thinking: how understanding the licensing model (practice as daily renewal) prevents disappointment when external conditions change
  • Piece on the attention economy: streaming services and drop-in yoga both sell convenience over commitment—what we lose when we optimize for access over ownership
  • Reflection on Ashtanga's fixed sequence as antidote to content churn: the same poses daily build genuine ownership through repetition, not novelty
Idea map
  • Reinforces his systems literacy framework: understanding the actual structure (licenses vs ownership, practice vs poses) reveals how things really work
  • Connects to embodiment theme: physical skills developed through practice can't be deleted or revoked—they're genuinely owned through nervous system integration
  • Relates to attention and method: daily Mysore practice is the opposite of content consumption—it's building internal capacity rather than accessing external libraries
  • Supports his critique of yoga-as-product: just as 'buying' digital content creates false ownership, attending classes without daily practice creates illusion of progress
arstechnica.comRead original ↗

Sony recently informed its PlayStation customers in the United Kingdom that they will no longer be able to watch previously purchased movies and shows from production and distribution company StudioCanal. As of September 1, affected customers will no longer be able to stream 551 titles from the PlayStation Store.

In a legal notice first spotted by gaming news outlet PlayStation LifeStyle, Sony said that affected customers will lose the ability to stream titles including Outrage: Way of the Yakuza, Paddington, Paddington 2, Pan’s Labyrinth, Rambo 3, Terminator 2: Judgment Day, and The Boy in the Striped Pajamas “due to our content licensing agreements.” As of September, Sony will remove any affected titles that UK users bought from their PlayStation library, per the notice.

It’s possible that Sony may still make a deal with StudioCanal by September 1, or even after, that would allow users to keep watching the content they bought. This happened in 2023, when Sony said it would have to pull 1,318 seasons of Discovery shows from customers’ libraries. A few weeks after its announcement, Sony said that it would not pull the content because it had updated its licensing arrangements with Discovery.

Still, affected customers shouldn’t keep their hopes too high. Sony already pulled 314 StudioCanal titles from libraries in Germany and Austria in 2022. More recently, Sony deleted people’s Funimation digital libraries after it decided to merge the anime streaming service with Crunchyroll. Sony has also been scaling down its digital store and stopped selling movie and show rentals and purchases in August 2021. Even if StudioCanal were willing to make a deal with Sony, it’s feasible that Sony has less interest in retaining digital titles than before.

Regardless, the incident is a reminder that we don’t own the stuff we purchase digitally . Instead, digital rentals and purchases are merely long-term licenses that are only valid for as long as the streaming service has the right to distribute said content. Often, that’s a finite amount of time.

Still, Sony’s announcement has frustrated some, including those who believe Sony should offer refunds or who think digital stores should stop using terms like “purchase” for long-term rentals. 

Tuesday, June 30, 2026 · 11:50 am
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