Juor said:
Having to sit through commercials is a silly reason since even Americans have to do that. Only the super expensive channels or on demand stuff doesn't have them during the movie, and you still have too deal with them before or in between.
I get something being so obscure it never came to VHS/DVD/TV/etc. but really, that's the exception not the rule. I've had to dig for some of my films too, but not every one is inaccessible. I'm not saying you can't watch stuff that super rare, just don't go after stuff you can easily pay for legally.
If all the suits are as asshole-y as you say, then the way to fix it is call them out on it and support the creatives, not steal stuff to give them more justification for cutting other people's paychecks. Plus, while I don't know what you're going to cinema school for, like you I'm in the business. I went to school for theater (and psych), I'm an artist, I've acted on film and I've seen and talked to plenty of other actors and artists who hate greedy SOBs too. But like pirating stuff that's never released they aren't the rule.
It's just too many people make shitty excuses for stealing when they have not valid justification for why they're breaking they law and hurting other people in the process. Entitled little jerks who just want something for free and think they shouldn't have to pay for it because they can just take it. Regardless of reasoning its still breaking the law and reasons have to be really fucking good to break any law or else everything just falls apart. We've spent centuries trying to protect intellectual property to encourage people to invent and we shouldn't let that fall apart just because some twat doesn't want to pay for something because he doesn't want another DVD knocking around his house.
Look, by no means am I attacking you. I don't know you. I don't know your situation. I'm just stating my opinion and what I know about the industry, history, and economics. I don't want this to be a "I'm right and you're wrong" thing. I just think that this sort of issue is really difficult because it deals with when someone is (sort of) morally justified in breaking the law and as such needs to be handled with care.
OK, you made your point. Having to sit through commercials is NOT a silly reason, though. Commercial brakes are a sick evil concept, any decent movie has a tempo and a structure that is ruined by entering commercial brakes. So here we have a shot of Dreyer's Joan of arc crying in front of what she thinks is an apparition of God. Drink coke, buy a car, look at this toothpaste, axe deodorant makes you fuckable, back to Joan of Arc. Nooooo, no way, that is an invention of Satan! Every director I know would rather be pirated than have their films butchered like that. You can butcher Michael Bay films if you want, from a set of flashy explosions to a set of stupid commercials, you can almost not notice the film is actually being interrupted.
Next, again, I don't know about the US, but here is how it works in Spain: we have an association called SGAE, meant to defend intellectual property. These are the same cunts blocking Netflix. They are soooo worried about loosing their share they actually lobby against any form of distribution that may hurt them, be it Netflix (fair prices? egad! Pay 12? for each DVD or screw you) or be it piracy.
Now, every time a Spaniard buys any technology related stuff, be it hard drives, printers, scanners, mp3 reproducers, blank CDs, recorders, and just about ANYTHING that could be used to pirate films or music, they have to pay an extra that goes to SGAE. Like it or not. It's a private enterprise that actually managed to get the goverment to charge us extra tax to get this scumfucks to collect the "share to compensate what is lost with piracy".
Nobody likes them. Now, earlier this year the police stormed the SGAE: a judge found out they have been using this public money for some dark affairs, meaning, corruption and fiscal fraud. Woooo, hold on, madammes et monsieurs, weren't you the ones who were accusing everyone from STEAAAAALING? To the point of enforcing a new tax we ALL have to pay, regardless of the fact we may not be using it for piracy.
So see, in this context I feel it quite hard to feel some remorse. Back in my day, I never pirated a single thing, however when every thing I buy has a tax such as the one described... well, fuck them. SGAE does not only deserve piracy, they deserve to disspaear. Bloody mafia!
so my point is: Corrput organizations, unfair taxes that presume we all pirate, netflix blocking, and no reasonably priced alternatives, goverment aid corruption ...well, of course I pirate. Everyone in Spain has ended up pirating. It's a little hard to see it under such a bad light with the shit-storm over our heads.
The U.S is quite lucky in this. American business is finding ways to adapt to new technologies and demands. Spanish business is finding ways to block new ideas so a few elite of publishers and producers can afford a new Rollex this month.