I agree with this.
I don't understand why some of us care so much about product of this type or about people who use this type of stuff. The best we can hope for is some of them to actually try the real film, like it, and start using it for their work. But I think that will be a minority.
My take is that if someone likes the look of film and this is how they achieve it, that's a compliment. Many photographers of today will probably not invest in a full darkroom and spend hours and days in it to do what we do. So this is their way of doing what they can with what they have.
I have no problem with this.
The problem about it is that it's all Bullsheet.
First of all, people can't even agree on what's the Tri-X look. A VAST majority can't distinguish a Tri-X print from a HP-5 print, and yet they "hate" HP-5 and they "Love" Tri-X and vice-versa.
These digital "emulations" are completely arbitrary. The developers tweak a Black&White look and then they go "hey, let's call this one Fomapan 100 and when we up the contrast by 25% we're gonna call in Delta400".
The problem with this blatant Bullsheet is that it causes a bigger Bullsheet issue: it makes people think that it's accurate. And then they go on various forums and they spread the bullsheet and are sounding very professional about it. Goes like "hp5 is very woody while trix has long tones and a nice contrast while tmax 100 is digital-ish but delta 100 has a long scale" and so on. And they base their observations on "real-world" observations, because those programs are "real-world".
The only way to cut through all this stinking, global, general bullsheet is to have your own darkroom and to print. Anything else exposes you to severe bullsheet. Even forums (with all the stand-development bullsheet, and so on), is bullsheet.
This is why I do care.