Heh, that's true.Cynical skeptic said:But consoles are the ultimate evolution of DRM.Johnny Cain said:All the DRM says to me is:
"Screw it, go buy the console version instead."
There's some irony in that somewhere
Heh, that's true.Cynical skeptic said:But consoles are the ultimate evolution of DRM.Johnny Cain said:All the DRM says to me is:
"Screw it, go buy the console version instead."
Could you please link me to the article?Cynical skeptic said:They hide it pretty well, but you can make an offline "live" profile for arkham asylum.veloper said:I just found out this shit is nothing new and has already been done by Eidos and M$ without anyone taking notice.
I made the mistake of buying Batman for the PC.
You cannot save that game without an online connection to games for windows live.
Getting this to work is the most frustrating experience I've ever had on the PC.
The reason ubisoft's system was different is there was no "opt out" option for online saves.
The amount of people here who think onlive is possible without magic future technology at every point of the service model (each piece of which would make the webtv guy (yes, its the same guy) billions if he applied them anywhere else) is very disappointing.Careful, this site is very anti-steam. From what I understand, one of the anointed writers (read: this one) doesn't like it, and formulated a pretty crappy argument against it. So everyone around here bleats that argument like demented sheep.Dr_Steve_Brule said:Steam is the only DRM I use, mainly because they're the good guys in the industry.
The funny thing is though, that it didn't stop the pirates, just the consumers.dagens24 said:Not only is the DRM gonna stop people from pirating their games, it's going to stop them from playing them all together.
The entire point of piracy is that it's free, how would the crackers make money?fix-the-spade said:Fine, but there's an elephant in the room.
That assumes hackers are just a bunch of amateurs sitting at home doing it for fun/the challenge/som perverse sense of duty. That there is no money to be made selling advertising space on sites mirroring cracked games.
If 90% of PC players really are pirates, that's tens of millions of hits every time a new game comes out, that's a lot of bandwidth and potentially a lot of money. As in more than enough to be cracking games professionally.
I sincerely think that not matter how dumb, complicated or plain intrusive DRM gets there will be people sat down coding the crack however long it takes, there's money to be made.
That or a corruption of this [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/columns/experienced-points/6452-Experienced-Points-Online-Activation-Is-a-Ripoff].Dr_Steve_Brule said:Could you please link me to the article?
I would love to see that argument.
Edit: is it this article?
http://www.escapistmagazine.com/articles/view/issues/issue_245/7285-Steam-A-Monopoly-In-the-Making
If so, I don't see the way it counters steam.
*puts on computer nerd hat*Seldon2639 said:[Needs Citations]radio_babylon said:imagine the cognitive dissonance thats going to occur when someone finally does implement an unbreakable DRM, and the game STILL sells like crap. youll hear the sounds of executive's head exploding all over the place. meanwhile, indie devs will just tool right along, selling their games without DRM (and save money from not licensing DRM), develop a loyal customer base, and not sweat the "lost" non-sales from piracy just like they have been for a while now.
You're like the Apple commercials touting how Macs don't get viruses, as if some part of the architecture of the machine makes it more resilient. Macs didn't get viruses because they were such a small market that it's not worth it to make a virus.
Indie games don't "lose" many sales due to piracy because they're simply much less popular in general. Lemme put it more simply:
I would wager that there's little piracy of even non-DRM indie games because there's a lot less exposure, and the games aren't as in demand. It's the reason I can simply lock my door, while the bank has armed guards. Yes, people can steal from me, but the reward from stealing from me is much less. Indie developers don't reject DRM because they 'don't sweat' it, it's because it's less of an issue for them. But, a hot property worth millions (or hundreds of millions) of dollars, you protect with everything you have.
Much the same way any site (this one included) makes money, sell advertising space.danpascooch said:The entire point of piracy is that it's free, how would the crackers make money?
And the point is that if they made it take so long nobody cared about the game anymore when it was finally cracked, piracy would be more or less over.
I may have a long memory but I'm not especially skilled at finding old news. I couldn't find the article I read where they linked to exact numbers. There's been articles about indie games with high piracy numbers on this very site but I can't find them right now. Honestly, I don't even care if you believe me or not. I just get tired of your half-assed assumptions.Seldon2639 said:[Needs Citation]. Show me the abundance of indie games which get pirated equivalent to the big-label games, and I'll accept I lost the bet. Bear in mind that I'm referring to absolute numbers, not percentages. Show me the indie game with a million downloads off of torrent, and I'll bow out. So, the 92% piracy rate for Ricochet Infinity doesn't mean much. I don't have the total number of players/pirates, but given that it's the 8,484th most popular game on Amazon tells me that its sales are low.
So, find me an indie game which had half the total number of pirated copies as Spore, and I'll back down. Until then, piracy for indie games is less of a problem because fewer people play them anyway...
Or it is a big problem, and the earlier poster's comments about the developers not caring and not having as much of a problem is false, and pirates are bastards even to those companies who attempt to not screw people with DRM.
Kind of says something, that Richochet Infinity (without DRM) had a piracy rate above 90%, doesn't it? Something in the neck of the woods of "pirates are greedy bastards, rather than people who don't like DRM", eh?
Oh, and you really like making statements of fact without any basis in reality, don't you?
Yeah, but the crackers could never make money that way, because as soon as they posted the crack, it would be stolen (ironic huh?) and put on all the other torrent sites.fix-the-spade said:Much the same way any site (this one included) makes money, sell advertising space.danpascooch said:The entire point of piracy is that it's free, how would the crackers make money?
And the point is that if they made it take so long nobody cared about the game anymore when it was finally cracked, piracy would be more or less over.
There's other, more nefarious ways too, like adding spyware into the crack or taking people's email addresses and handing them to spammers.
Nobody knows the real number, but it's estimated the Pirate Bay pulls in $80'000+ per month, although official (0r officially used) figures run anywhere from $1million per year to around $100'000 per year. Funnily enough they don't publish accounts. Whatever the real numbers may be it's not exactly chump change.
The idea that a few weeks is too long to wait is plain daft. The end users will wait a month or so if it saves them $50 and the originators will see it as worthwhile because there's money to be made. Six weeks to get something for free is nothing, there'll be plenty who've waited.
And the best part is that now that AC2 has been cracked, I suspect that any future Ubi titles will be popped WAY faster than AC2. Skidrow figured out how the DRM works and has now forced Ubisoft into a coding arms race. Ubi will have to alter how it works or deal with the fact that their games will be cracked progressively faster.Nimbus said:I'm betting Ubi made a loss on the PC version. Serves 'em right, too.
We used the same article as a counter-example to the same person. **Internet Hi-Five**LordZ said:I may have a long memory but I'm not especially skilled at finding old news. I couldn't find the article I read where they linked to exact numbers. There's been articles about indie games with high piracy numbers on this very site but I can't find them right now. Honestly, I don't even care if you believe me or not. I just get tired of your half-assed assumptions.
No basis in reality, indeed.
http://arstechnica.com/gaming/news/2008/11/acrying-shame-world-of-goo-piracy-rate-near-90.ars
Your assumption that pirates are all trying to "stick it to the man" is laughable. There are plenty of people who fall under the banner of "pirate" in spite of owning legal copies of every game they pirate. I wonder how this sits with your sense of legality. I'm sure they're all just thieves, right?
Taking numbers of downloads and trying to equate them to theft is speculative at best. I still contend that the entire copyright and patent systems either need a complete overhaul or they need to be expelled like the cancer they have become.
Indeed, I didn't buy (nor pirated as I always buy my games, my cubboard full of dvd boxes and Steam account are there to proove it) AC2 and will stay well clear of Ubisoft games because of it; the Prince of Persia ending mess for PC players was already bad enough, but that drm was just one drop too many.dagens24 said:Not only is the DRM gonna stop people from pirating their games, it's going to stop them from playing them all together.
My apologies if I forget that common knowledge or just plain simple logic requires a Harvard study to be believable to someone like you. (Example: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/100179-Strong-Morals-Make-Strong-Bodies)Seldon2639 said:The distinction you're trying to draw between tangible and intangible property is speculative at best, and without basis either philisophically or legally. You're making categorical statements without any supporting evidence, and which are simply incorrect. To steal labor does not only consist of hiring someone and then failing to pay them, it would also consist of taking a finished product without paying the people who created it, even if you didn't promise to pay them in the first place. You're talking about breach of contract, not theft of labor (or theft at all).
And, you're begging the question. You've stated that it's not theft to "copy" a game, because theft can only happen to tangible objects. And then prove that by saying "it's only theft if something is taken from the original"; "It's not stealing because you can't steal intellectual property, and you can't steal intellectual property because it's not stealing". Awesome.
The attempt to reframe the question as to whether theft of intellectual property is theft of labor is an interesting one, but fundamentally irrelevant. Insofar as intellectual property is defined under the law as undistinguished from tangible property, it doesn't have to be theft of labor to be considered theft. Incidentally, would we not count a copyright violation to be theft? A very direct question is: is it not theft for me to take J.K Rowling's books wholecloth and redistribute them?
And, please, refrain from falling back on the argument that a "product" isn't "labor", or that a company isn't a "person". Both arguments are legally bunk.
Again, if you feel this definition is inadequate, feel free to provide your own. I feel this makes my point about it not being "theft" though I reiterate that I never claimed it wasn't illegal. There's a lot of stuff that's illegal that shouldn't be.1 : the act of infringing : violation
2 : an encroachment or trespass on a right or privilege http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/infringement
You're arguing semantics and you were the one who claimed it was a theft of labor in your original post. If you weren't interested in that line of logic(as fallacious as it is), I have to wonder why you even brought it up.Seldon2639 said:Um... That's not really how it works. The company itself is the entity which owns the game. Let me give you an example from the real world. If you hire a construction company to fix your roof, and then refuse to pay, it's the company to whom you owe the money; the company did the "labor". Corporate law is funny like that. Incidentally, intellectual property is conveyed by contract (depending on the contract) to the employer. Thus, the owner of the property would be the developer, not the programmer.
Again, you're focused on the labor aspect, which is an interesting line of discussion, irrelevant to the question of whether pirating a game is theft of intellectual property, and thus theft.
Anyone can come up with the same thought or idea as anyone else. Being the first to copyright the idea may give you a legal right to it as "property" but just because there is a law for it doesn't mean it is correct. You're basically saying that thoughts and ideas are property simply because the law makes it so.Seldon2639 said:I suppose we're going to have to agree to disagree here.
Ideas and thoughts are property of the person who created them. At a time in the world in which most of what we (at least in the developed world) do is revolving around computers, programs, and ideas and thoughts, it simply is property. Is a book not property? Should I be allowed to distribute (even for free) books which are still under copyright? Or do you believe there should be some protection of the hard work of the author, and the investment of the publisher?
If I acquire a method of making a chemical, and attempt to sell or distribute it (even not for profit), it is a theft of a trade secret. Use whatever word you like, I've stolen that product.
I can't find the quote I was looking for about arbitrary laws. However, Mr. Fair Use has a lot to say about your suggestion that copying from TV to VCR is illegal. http://w2.eff.org/IP/DRM/fair_use_and_drm.htmlSeldon2639 said:If any arbitrary law is unlawful, all law is unlawful. All law draws arbitrary lines. It's legal to buy asprin, but not crack cocaine. It's legal to own a gun, but not certain types of guns. It's legal to own pornography, but not child pornography. It's legal to drink up to a certain limit, and drive, but not beyond that. It's legal to smoke, but only if you're over 18.
It's all about lines in the sand, and here's the difference:
If I copy a CD and give it to my friend (or copy a movie from TV to VCR and do the same), the distribution is still exceptionally limited. Strictly speaking, it's still illegal, it's still theft, but the damage is limited enough that it's not worth enforcing either civilly or criminally. The enforcement is arbitrary, not the law.
Sure, law defines absolutely what is right and wrong. How dare anyone question the ethics of a law. I'm sure that comes as great relief to the victims of the holocaust.Seldon2639 said:Not according to the law. Intellectual property exists, and is protected. It may be high time to get over it.LordZ said:What's silly is your assumption that intellectual property even exists.
You say that as if there's a difference between copying and copying. By the way, you clearly don't pay attention to most of the anti-piracy propaganda because many of them explicitly say that copying is piracy. Many of the publishers would be all too happy to make all forms of imitation (regardless of whether it is intentional or not) illegal.Seldon2639 said:They demonize copying in a way that steals their product, yes. But they don't demonize copying. I demonize shooting a person, I don't demonize shooting a bottle of silly-string (it's awesome). You're making a bit old strawman, and not even making it persuasive.
You really are a fan of apples to oranges hyperbole. I crafted my previous nazi hyperbole just for you.Seldon2639 said:I believe my point was that simply because we demonize an illegal action which can be phrased as being equivalent to a legal one. Don't make this into a silly argument about the war on drugs. My point was only that equivocating by calling "stealing intellectual property" copying, is a bit like calling "injecting heroin into my veins" "taking a pharmaceutical".
It's a bit like saying "I'm going to watch some pornography" when you're really "going to go see a little kid sexually abused". By using a general term which encompasses both a legal and illegal action as a way to say both the legal and illegal variations are morally and legally the same is simply wrong.
Tell me, would you think it is still theft (or even infringement) if the two competing companies with the exact same product created their products independently? It amuses me to no end that you continue to call infringement as theft when the law itself doesn't even define it as such.Seldon2639 said:You really don't see a difference between a company competing with another company with different products (both selling for some price), and the market deciding which was the better product, versus a pirate stealing a product and giving it away for free?
But, let me not take an ethical approach. If a second, competing, company released a completely duplicate game, and sold it, it would be theft. Why is a second, competing, company releasing a completely duplicate game for free not theft? Again, would you be in favor of allowing me to republish the Harry Potter books as my own, and sell them for massive profits? What if I made a duplicate product to the Ipod and sold it?
If the answer to those is "sure, I don't see the problem", I think we're at an impasse in terms of our discussion. And I really hope that no one in a position to make decisions regarding the legality of such actions ever, ever, listens to you.
I noticed that after submitting my post. **Returns Hi-Five**m_jim said:We used the same article as a counter-example to the same person. **Internet Hi-Five**
I read what you said earlier about the copyright/patent system. I agree with you in that the practice of using patents as a weapon to preemptively own someone else's technology is a deplorable business tactic. Throwing out the entire system would be a mistake, I think. The system is there to protect creative people who generate new ideas. Without some sort of protection, small-time inventors would be prey for larger corporations could simply wait for new products to be released, then redistribute them under their own brand.
Because you can infringe on a copyright without actually stealing the intellectual property. It's a difference in damages, severity, and intent. Infringement can be unintentional, usually non-damaging, and not too serious. Theft is blatant "I wanted to make this drug, too, so I took the formula, made the drug, and sold it". To put it another way: theft includes infringement, infringement doesn't include theft. Assault with a deadly weapon includes aggravated assault.LordZ said:My apologies if I forget that common knowledge or just plain simple logic requires a Harvard study to be believable to someone like you. (Example: http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/100179-Strong-Morals-Make-Strong-Bodies)
If you go by the route that it is illegal because the law says it is, sure, I'm not arguing this. However, if copying is theft why did they have to title it copyright infringement instead of just copyright theft?
The argument we're having (or should be having) is over whether it should be illegal. Everything else is at least somewhat off topic. I believe that the misappropriation of creative works without compensation to the creator is simply wrong. Do you disagree?LordZ said:In case you have some delusions about what infringement means:Again, if you feel this definition is inadequate, feel free to provide your own. I feel this makes my point about it not being "theft" though I reiterate that I never claimed it wasn't illegal. There's a lot of stuff that's illegal that shouldn't be.1 : the act of infringing : violation
2 : an encroachment or trespass on a right or privilege http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/infringement
That was a mistake on my part. Mea culpa. I went down the specific path of discussing whether it counts as theft, when our argument has always been about whether it (a) is wrong, and (b) should be illegal.LordZ said:You're arguing semantics and you were the one who claimed it was a theft of labor in your original post. If you weren't interested in that line of logic(as fallacious as it is), I have to wonder why you even brought it up.
It's your property because you made it. If I develop a certain model of car, another company steals the blueprints, and makes the same exact car, selling it as a competitor to my work, it's simply wrong. I did the work to make the model, I should reap the rewards.LordZ said:]Anyone can come up with the same thought or idea as anyone else. Being the first to copyright the idea may give you a legal right to it as "property" but just because there is a law for it doesn't mean it is correct. You're basically saying that thoughts and ideas are property simply because the law makes it so.
Well, there are varying sentences, and I agree we should tailor things a bit more specifically, but...LordZ said:I agree that it is ethically wrong to try to profit (regardless of success) from another person's creative work. I find it equally wrong to punish someone for doing so. Just because something is immoral does not mean it should be a crime. Honestly, I think the entire legal system needs reworking. Prison really isn't even effective. A person does something wrong so we give them an inordinately long time out for it? Is this really how we should be handling things? It would be less cruel to just execute anyone who would normally have to go to prison. Do not misunderstand, I'm not saying it's a good solution to go around executing people for every crime they commit. I'm saying it's a better solution than the current one, as a way to point out how terrible the current solution is.
I should have been more direct. I meant to say that copying a VCR of a television show and distributing it in a competitive way with the actual product would be illegal. Given that piracy is by definition in competition with the original product, I thought the analogy would be more clearLordZ said:I can't find the quote I was looking for about arbitrary laws. However, Mr. Fair Use has a lot to say about your suggestion that copying from TV to VCR is illegal. http://w2.eff.org/IP/DRM/fair_use_and_drm.html
Godwin's Law. But, you're going back and forth. First you argue it isn't stealing under the law, and intellectual property doesn't exist. I assumed you meant that you believed IP didn't exist under the law. I didn't realize we were discussing grand morality. I still think you're wrong, but we're on the same page.LordZ said:Sure, law defines absolutely what is right and wrong. How dare anyone question the ethics of a law. I'm sure that comes as great relief to the victims of the holocaust.
Boy, talk about guilt by association. And few courts I've ever seen would consider an unintentional and completely coincidental similarity between products to be actionable. But, you've not responded to my point. Some copying is legal, some is illegal. Some drugs are legal, some are illegal. Some driving is legal, some is illegal. Some guns are legal, some are illegal. What's the difference I'm not seeing?LordZ said:You say that as if there's a difference between copying and copying. By the way, you clearly don't pay attention to most of the anti-piracy propaganda because many of them explicitly say that copying is piracy. Many of the publishers would be all too happy to make all forms of imitation (regardless of whether it is intentional or not) illegal.
It's not hyperbole to state that your implication that piracy should simply be considered "copying", as a way to try to frame the debate in the way most favorable to your beliefs is just as erroneous as stating that heroin use is just "using drugs", and (by implication) since we accept the use of asprin, we should accept heroin.LordZ said:you really are a fan of apples to oranges hyperbole. I crafted my previous nazi hyperbole just for you.
If such true independence can be shown, most courts would throw out the action. There have been a lot of cases about that. But, infringement is a different beast altogether from the theft of intellectual property. The fact that you can't comprehend that distinction (under the law) doesn't really amuse me much.LordZ said:Tell me, would you think it is still theft (or even infringement) if the two competing companies with the exact same product created their products independently? It amuses me to no end that you continue to call infringement as theft when the law itself doesn't even define it as such.
Because you're profiting on your own work, not on mine. I sold you the seeds, relinquishing my right to those seeds. You then inputted labor and resources into creating a legitimate derivative product. You weren't taking my apples, relabeling them, and giving them away. You made your own apples based on the seeds I had provided. Perhaps (perhaps) if someone decided to make a derivative game from AC2, with different features, different storylines, and new characters, I would accept them using some basic code and intellectual property from the first game.LordZ said:If both you and I farmed apples and oranges but I grew my apples and oranges from the seeds you sold me, would you call that theft? After all, I could grow identical apples and oranges to yours since I got my seeds from you. We could take this a step further and say I wasn't growing them but cloning them. Is it theft now? How is this functionally any different than copying data?
I agree that the system shouldn't allow for suits based on independently-created, but similar, products. But, it's difficult, since how do you prove true independence?LordZ said:I understand what you are saying. However, as someone who has tried to get into the business of making games, I find it terrible that I could unintentionally find myself at the mercy of an onslaught of lawsuits for making my own original game, just because it coincidentally resembles someone else' product. Perhaps abolishing it entirely isn't the right answer either. Unfortunately, the current system is so awful that I can't even conceive a way to fix it.