only when there is no other way to get the product in question.
For example when it's not licensed in you region or out of print.
For example when it's not licensed in you region or out of print.
Not quite.Sonic Doctor said:If people download a pirated game, they are taking and playing without paying, something that doesn't belong to them.bastardofmelbourne said:COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT =/= THEFTVault101 said:if ou dont belive the company is deserving of your money then dont get the product....stealing is childish and petty
HULK SMASH
Taking something without paying, taking something that isn't yours, is theft.
Piracy = Theft.
I just made Hulk impotent.
I can agree that this is a much better way of putting it.Entitled said:The way I see it, the only difference between the two groups is exactly HOW MUCH artist control, and how much individual control they want, with the most important matter of difference would be the individual's right to download digital copies non-commercially, with some other petty sideline issues, such as how long the copyright length should be, or how liberal Fair Use should be (e.g: should single movie scenes be taken down from youtube or not).
Agreed.Da Orky Man said:'Taking' indicates that you are removing something of value from the person you are stealing from. Say I downloaded the movie 'The Wild Blue Yonder'. Now, I rented that film a while ago, and it was shit, so i have no urge or need to purchase it. However, me having downloaded it doesn't deprive the IP owner or any resellers of any monetary gain, does it? Therefore, it is not stealing.
On the other hand, if I took a DVD copy of that movie from a store, then it would be stealing, as that copy was bought by the store with the expectation of selling it. Since I would be preventing them from selling it, it would be stealing.
So, Piracy nq Theft.
While I get the feeling that you are speaking from personal experience, your own logic is no less flawed.Vault101 said:how the fuck is it ok?5ilver said:If it was legal, I think most people would also consider it morally okay- same as what's happening with weed currently.
I make a game called chicken hunters...I put effort into it, I put the game up for sale......everyone loves the game...and majority of people pirate the game
I have no money no chicken hunters 2...great going guys!!!
or scenario 2
I make chicken hunters 2 under publisher FC (fat cats), chicken hunters 2 is a game with a sizable budget....people love chicken hunters 2 but alot of people pirate
FC have alot of money....but they look at the stats and the "disapointing" returns for chicken hunters 2 and shut down my studio
GREAT GOING GUYS!!!
people who advocate piracy seem to lack basic logic
The Netherlands never explicitly legalized or decimalized piracy, the act of obtaining illegally distributed music and movies has simply always been legal. Dutch law forbids distributing copyrighted material without permission of the copyright holder: when you buy or download something that has been illegally distributed, the distributor is at fault, not you.Entitled said:Well, it is, assuming that you live in one of the countries [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/news/view/114537-File-sharing-Remains-Legal-In-Switzerland] such as Switzerland or The Netherlands that either already legalized it, or at least decriminalized it. (...)
My point with the CD is that the action has exactly the same results. Without paying a person, I now own a copy of something they made, and can now enjoy it for free. You may hold that they have no right to words they wrote, or drawing they painted ect, but I would hold that just because something is not a physical object does not mean you don't have to pay someone for it. A good example would be if someone washes your car, you should pay them. I don't care that you didn't get a actual physical object for it, you benefited from their work and then refused to give them their due payment for it. You hold that taking the CD is wrong because the CD is composed of actual material, but what about the content within it? Isn't that the point of stealing the CD? Isn't that what I am trying to obtain? Then how is obtaining it online, again without paying, any diffrent? As for your comment on Free Use, I want to protect the rights of creator's to the things they create, but cultural growth is also a priority. We require a compromise, and Fair Use works. Still, if you benefit from someone's work, and they are still alive, I would suggest paying them, regardless of law, out of moral obligation.Entitled said:That would be more convincing if it wouldn't be a followup to this:Lonewolfm16 said:You don't get to just take things that other people made because you feel entitled to them. And publishers shouldn't have to switch models to recover from people taking things that DO NOT BELONG TO THEM. You have zero, absolutely no, right to somthing some one else produces.
So the IP holders rights need to be compromised, so that I am allowed to things such as Fair Use, to Used Sales, and to Public Domain.Lonewolfm16 said:Of course things need to be within reason. Fair Use is a useful compromise in determining what exactly counts as violating a author's right to his work.
Yet at the same time, I have "zero, absolutely no, right to somthing some one else produces".
So what if I morally feel that I have a right to a 96 year old novel, that just left copyright last year? Do I still have zero, absolutely no right to it?
And what if I decide to pirate a 94 years old book, still in the claim of it's publisher?
What could make one of these acts so obviously immoral, and the other one moral?
In the first example, you took away someone else's property for yourseelf. Leaving 20 cents there, doesn't make it any better, if the owner didn't agree to give the object to you to begin with. No to mention that the act involves breaking and entering to a territory owned by someone else.Lonewolfm16 said:please explain to me how me stealing a CD is diffrent from me pirating it online. Lets say I take a CD from a store, and download it and such. I fail entirely to see how this counts as seperate from piracy in any way. For the sake of argument lets say I stole it from the publishers themselves rather than a store, mabey a warehouse or factory, and also that I left 20 cents to pay for the actual creation of the CD. Now please, explain to me, logically, how this is in any way diffrent from pirating the CD online. I would hold that, morally speaking, it is exactly the same.
The 20 cent part shows your misunderstanding of the concept of property. Theft isn't just bad because it makes you financially poorer, but because it involves violating one's belongings, taking them away from them.
In the piracy example, you didn't take away anything, you made a new string of data from yourself, from the data available on public websites. The only thing that is being harmed, is the IP holder's sense of entitlement to dictate to you what kind of sounds you are allowed to listen to in your own room, with your own computer.
"media" is the name of the deliverance system, and "information" is the data that is being delivered.Lonewolfm16 said:Also, another thing I would like to point out, is that media=/=information. A game, show, book ect is comprised of information but to call it information is ignoring both its purpose and its creation. it is a work designed to entertain by means of the delivery of information.
If you download an ebook, you are downloading a piece of information, presented through a certain media (file format (PDF), narrative format(novel), transmission device (Kindle) etc.)
There is the problem. "Enjoying something that has a value, for free", has never been consistently understood as being immoral. There are many examples of so-called "positive externalities" in the economy, where beyond fulfilling their intended goal, products also end up benefiting others as an extra.Lonewolfm16 said:My point with the CD is that the action has exactly the same results. Without paying a person, I now own a copy of something they made, and can now enjoy it for free.
Oh, I believe that they do hold rights. See my above post to BrassButtons [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/jump/18.398484.16309569]. For example, I think that they obviously have a right to shut down plagiarism, or to stop other publishers from selling their work, because only they should be allowed to do that.Lonewolfm16 said:You may hold that they have no right to words they wrote, or drawing they painted ect, but I would hold that just because something is not a physical object does not mean you don't have to pay someone for it.
So, when you watch a funny short movie clip on youtube under Fair Use, (that Warner would love to get removed), do you feel a moral obligation to pay them? When you download a 96 year old Public Domain book, and you know that publishers are already lobbying to extend copyright to 120 years, do you feel a moral obligation to pay them? When you buy a used game, and you know that EA is trying to erease the used game market, do you feel a moral obligation to pay them the difference in prices?Lonewolfm16 said:I want to protect the rights of creator's to the things they create, but cultural growth is also a priority. We require a compromise, and Fair Use works. Still, if you benefit from someone's work, and they are still alive, I would suggest paying them, regardless of law, out of moral obligation.
I am not generally against taking a small part of a work (like a short clip from a movie or a quote from a book)but if you are going to get full benefite from a work I think expecting you to pay is reasonable. To simplify, if I write a book or make a movie or a game ect ect then I don't think that expecting people to pay you to read/play/watch it is unreasonable. YOU made that, not them and you deserve control over it. It is a product of your labor, and doesn't belong to them, but to you. This is why, when pirates talk about "rights" and "freedoms of information" I am very confused. I must have missed the part of the transition from someone making something to you gaining the right to unfettered and free access to everything that anyone made. You do not have a right to take something someone else made. Period. It is harmful to creators and a violation of their rights to the product of their labors. You are in no way entitled to play video games or read books or watch movies. people have to go out of their way to make those, and if they wish to distribute them for free, good for them. But if they expect money (and since these often take years of effort and millions of dollars that seems reasonable.) then you should pay them before taking the thing they made.Entitled said:There is the problem. "Enjoying something that has a value, for free", has never been consistently understood as being immoral. There are many examples of so-called "positive externalities" in the economy, where beyond fulfilling their intended goal, products also end up benefiting others as an extra.Lonewolfm16 said:My point with the CD is that the action has exactly the same results. Without paying a person, I now own a copy of something they made, and can now enjoy it for free.
If "enjoying something without paying" would be immoral on it's own, then even borrowing video games from a friend would be immoral.
Oh, I believe that they do hold rights. See my above post to BrassButtons [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/jump/18.398484.16309569]. For example, I think that they obviously have a right to shut down plagiarism, or to stop other publishers from selling their work, because only they should be allowed to do that.Lonewolfm16 said:You may hold that they have no right to words they wrote, or drawing they painted ect, but I would hold that just because something is not a physical object does not mean you don't have to pay someone for it.
The problem is, that the public has rights to. As you replied to Fair use, it's also about a compromise between profitability and cultural growth, because it can't be literally expected that publishers should get TOTAL control, forever, over every possible IP-related transaction, that would stifle normal communication on the Internet.
Please notice, that the things that I'm writing, are not on a different paradigm from you. I don't want to destroy ALL IP laws, and make publishers unable to make a living, just as you don't want to give them extra laws and give them even more authority than they have now. It's just a matter of scale, about exactly HOW MUCH rights they should hold, and how much right we should.
So, when you watch a funny short movie clip on youtube under Fair Use, (that Warner would love to get removed), do you feel a moral obligation to pay them? When you download a 96 year old Public Domain book, and you know that publishers are already lobbying to extend copyright to 120 years, do you feel a moral obligation to pay them? When you buy a used game, and you know that EA is trying to erease the used game market, do you feel a moral obligation to pay them the difference in prices?Lonewolfm16 said:I want to protect the rights of creator's to the things they create, but cultural growth is also a priority. We require a compromise, and Fair Use works. Still, if you benefit from someone's work, and they are still alive, I would suggest paying them, regardless of law, out of moral obligation.
Because if you do, that's... weird, but consistent.
But if you don't, then compared to your claims about legality not defining morality, your moral obligations of treating IP are shockingly similar to whatever the letter of the law happens to expect from you right now.
So, what do you think about my right to "take" a novel that someone else made 96 years ago?Lonewolfm16 said:You do not have a right to take something someone else made. Period.
I would hold that that largely depends on if anyone with claims on the book is still around. I would argue that by this point the author has probably made as much money as they will off that work, and entering it into the public sphere could be beneficial, however I would still hold that you should buy the novel from the person who has a legitimate claim on it if at all possible.Entitled said:So, what do you think about my right to "take" a novel that someone else made 96 years ago?Lonewolfm16 said:You do not have a right to take something someone else made. Period.
What would you consider a legitimate claim? Not the original writer after 96 years, I assume.Lonewolfm16 said:I would hold that that largely depends on if anyone with claims on the book is still around. I would argue that by this point the author has probably made as much money as they will off that work, and entering it into the public sphere could be beneficial, however I would still hold that you should buy the novel from the person who has a legitimate claim on it if at all possible.Entitled said:So, what do you think about my right to "take" a novel that someone else made 96 years ago?Lonewolfm16 said:You do not have a right to take something someone else made. Period.