Original title: Forbidden
Article
The article is framed as a reaction to Sony’s announced move away from physical game discs, with commenters viewing it as a broader clash over digital entitlement rights. Many argue that purchasing content should include ownership-like rights: transferability, offline use, and protection from later service shutdowns, especially for DRM-locked titles. Others counter that games are licenses, not goods, and that networked titles, subscriptions, and live-service ecosystems cannot be made fully standalone without major engineering tradeoffs. A major thread in the discussion is legal and ethical clarity, with calls for mandatory disclosure of what customers are actually buying and for minimum service terms. Some participants defend licensing as economically necessary, citing used-market impact, development costs, and server dependencies. Others push for stricter regulation, public-interest preservation, or open architectures, while warning that recurring-access models could harden into mandatory subscription-only access. There is also repeated framing of convenience and platform design as accelerants: digital delivery has reduced friction but increased dependence on accounts, storefronts, and patch pipelines. Supporters of physical media emphasize nostalgia, resilience, and resale, while supporters of all-digital systems stress that discs have always had practical downsides and that digital backups and open platforms can offer continuity. Both sides agree the industry has already crossed into a subscription-anchored model and that this shift affects practical ownership expectations. The thread ultimately portrays the issue as not only gaming policy but a structural tension between consumer rights and platform-level control.
Participants express strong excitement about faster model updates and report that some already have access to 5.6-Sol Ultra in corporate Codex environments. They also describe a workplace shift toward stricter token governance, with recent guidance to use cheaper models and track spending despite earlier token-maximizing habits. A major recurring question is whether Ultra is meaningfully different from Pro, with several users asking specifically about availability for individual subscribers. Others argue that 5.5 Pro remains a high-quality option and may be preferred for quality even if it consumes quota more quickly, partly because they believe it runs many parallel agents internally. Overall, the discussion is mixed: readers welcome potential capability gains while demanding clearer information on access policy, pricing tradeoffs, and practical timelines.