That would be an interesting argument if not for the fact that "Hard Work" is a stupid and useless concept.Samtemdo8 said:In a way, yes. It completely destroys the concept of Hard Work and its something that does not really benefit a nations eceonomy compared to being a farmer or miner or even a chef.
But that's just me.
Work is work.
People cannot be good at everything or have time for everything so the world works in a manner that people specialise in skills and do that work for you in return for a fee.
I can cook but sometimes I don't want to or want something I can't cook so I go out to restaurant. In return I pay them.
I'm not an expert in law so if I need to I pay a lawyer. They'll get paid a lot for their expertise.
I need food but don't have the land/time to grow by own food so we have farmers. They get paid.
The actual difficulty of the work is irrelevant. It's not hard to stack merchandise, file paperwork, deliver parcels or work registers. But it still needs doing and people are paid to do that.
Hell, if we're going to be reductive we can say it's not difficult to program, anyone can learn it (and I am).
You can argue that people shouldn't be paid ridiculous amounts to do certain work like people do with, say, footballers but it's downright daft to say people shouldn't be paid at all or shouldn't care about pay.
I do not have time to play every game and decide if it's good for me. So other people do it professionally and they deserve to be paid for fulfilling that service.
I can understand a hard stance against Let's Players, I think it's dumb considering the proven effects they can have in attention and hype but from an IP protection view point I get it.
But we're not just talking about let's plays, this is about reviewers being hindered in their work by a corporation that is wilfully ignoring Copyright law. Nintendo's Creator program represents a massive conflict of interests in anyone who goes with it and is needlessly hostile to those who don't.
The whole "internet videos aren't a real job" is stupid and only perpetuates the idea that the only meaningful work is one done under the boot of a corporation who couldn't give less of a fuck what's in the best interests of consumers and workers a like.