James Joseph Emerald said:
Many of those examples are incidental, in that you couldn't stop them from happening if you wanted to. Yet you should still feel grateful towards whoever it is you are benefiting from.
Many of them, but not all. The newspaper and wikipedia examples were selected to ensure that.
James Joseph Emerald said:
If you met the person responsible, the polite thing to do would be to thank them or buy them a drink.
And I'm willing to accept the same thing about gaming. If a developer has provided you enjoyment, you should do your best to either provide them their own choice of rewards, or at least otherwise be thankful.
However, just as many of my own examples can't be the basis of a
formally enforced reward system, likewise the Internet is moving entertainment in a direction where the right to ban file-sharing is not a self-evident
right that artists have, and they have to make do with a combination of respect, and alternate revenue models.
James Joseph Emerald said:
If someone creates something which you enjoy, and you choose to partake, the moral thing to do is pay them for it. Beyond that, you're just twisting logic to suit your own sense of, well, entitlement.
Well, yeah, I am entitled to some things.
For example, I feel entitled to wander around on the public streets and squares and parks freely. If a street fiddler would decide to try and lock down a large area with the justification that everyone walking past should be paying him for his music, then I would disagree, and walk past that street anyways, and even if it is a "deliberate, conscious decision that goes directly against the interests of him", then too bad, there is a limit to how much you get to limit others freedom of movement for your own benefit.
The Internet is not dissimilar from this analogy. It's a public area, where we share and access information. If some businesses start to lock down large segments of it, well, that might be necessary for our own good, but only in balance with our own rights... entitlements, if you will.
It's not even that much of twisted concept, after all, even copyright law acknowledges concepts like the Public Domain, the Fair Use doctrine, and the First Sale Doctrine, that are limiting whether publishers can still ask for payment in the face of some other public interests.
Well, my own sense of entitlemets are larger than what current U.S. copyright law acknowledges, I believe that the current law is skewered against the public's and the individual's fredoms in favor of corporate benefits.