A lot of your posts come across as the ramblings of an 80 year old with dementia.
Uncalled for. How would you feel if I said:
“Your post comes across as the ramblings of a preteen that snuck onto his parents computer while they were out shopping.” ?
In answer to Ops questions. I see what you are asking. What if say 50 years from now physical games movies etc were ALL considered rare items due to scarcity?
I think we already see this today with things that fell out of fashion:
Vinyl Albums, old consoles, CRT TVs, old games.
I agree with most here that I don’t think mass theft of the scarce items will ensue.
I do think bootlegging, counterfeiting, and limited run remaking will become more prevalent as we already see now with things.
Also, things tend to be trending (in the cities) towards downsizing. So a majority of folks don’t want/need lots of physical stuff cluttering their living space.
So I don’t see a critical mass of physical theft on the horizon simply from the shift to all digital.
Theft of digital is actually a much bigger problem.
I have to physically break into a house that has the item I want. Then I have to find a buyer without giving myself away.
I can rip a digital item of its copy protection and GIVE IT AWAY. Multiple times. For pay or for free.
Why steal your Xbox and library of games if I can get a jailbroken Xbox loaded with games for a reasonable price?
It’s one of the reasons the promise of digital has never been fully realized. Prices were supposed to go way down due to cheaper cost to market. but in some cases they haven’t and have even gone up more because so much is being spent on copy protection schemes and lost revenues when those schemes fail.