G
Gill Kaiser
That analogy doesn't really apply, since a meal is a physical object, and by eating it you will have deprived anybody else from the luxury of eating it. Refusing to pay for it would be theft.
Sorry about that. I hit "edit" instead of quote.That analogy doesn't really apply, since a meal is a physical object, and by eating it you will have deprived anybody else from the luxury of eating it. Refusing to pay for it would be theft.
Hurm. Okay. Well, writing something for sale and having it ripped off sucks. Whatever form it's in doesn't matter and it's still a viable product, regardless of the medium.Up until a few months ago I was an impoverished student, but now I'm just impoverished, since they kicked me out of university once I graduated.
Maybe once I begin to forge a career for myself and learn the true value of hard work and how the real world operates, my bubble will be burst and I'll renounce my evil ways? The thought has occured to me, but nobody can know how experiences will affect them before they occur.
I disagree, something has been lost. The value of the product is degraded when people don't see fit to pay for it. Unless the pirate is completely anonymous to the point of not even notching up a counter on a website, then they've had an impact on public perception. People who see other people cheating are more likely to cheat themselves (unless they view the cheater as an enemy or undesirable, but that's a side issue). The more people who pirate, the more likely it is that others will pirate as well.I may be completely self-deluded, and I know I'm reiterating somewhat, but to me it seems that if one knows one wouldn't have bought the product, but is able to acquire it digitally without depriving anybody else of said product, then it's a victimless crime. Nobody has lost anything, since the product was copied, not stolen.
This doesn't really work, though, because you clearly don't consider the game worthless. In the essence, you're denying the publisher the right to get that value back from you in the form of money.Nobody has lost revenue, since the purchase wouldn't have been made.
To which I counter: What about Libraries? They offer books to anyone who wants them for free. A few copies of a book are bought for the entire library system, but hundreds, if not thousands, of people are going to read it over it's lifetime. The people who wrote the book are only going to get paid for the initial purchase, not for each person who reads it. It's basically piracy, only there is a set limit of people who can read the book at an given time. Book Authors don't complain about people reading their books for free if it's from a Library, because they recognize that the public has a right to their material once they've published it, even if they themselves don't pay for it.What do you think about someone writing a book? Should you be able to just take it and read it without paying? If someone scans it in and puts it on the web is that victimless? Dude, it's the same thing! Someone wrote this game and you are stealing it. You played it and didn't like it? Tough crap! You see a movie you don't like you're stuck unless you can get the manager to refund your money.
Just because you have the ability to get it digitally doesn't make it less theft.
To which I counter: What about Libraries? They offer books to anyone who wants them for free. A few copies of a book are bought for the entire library system, but hundreds, if not thousands, of people are going to read it over it's lifetime. The people who wrote the book are only going to get paid for the initial purchase, not for each person who reads it. It's basically piracy, only there is a set limit of people who can read the book at an given time. Book Authors don't complain about people reading their books for free if it's from a Library, because they recognize that the public has a right to their material once they've published it, even if they themselves don't pay for it.What do you think about someone writing a book? Should you be able to just take it and read it without paying? If someone scans it in and puts it on the web is that victimless? Dude, it's the same thing! Someone wrote this game and you are stealing it. You played it and didn't like it? Tough crap! You see a movie you don't like you're stuck unless you can get the manager to refund your money.
Just because you have the ability to get it digitally doesn't make it less theft.
.A few copies of a book are bought for the entire library system, but hundreds, if not thousands, of people are going to read it over it's lifetime.
To which I counter: What about Libraries? They offer books to anyone who wants them for free. A few copies of a book are bought for the entire library system, but hundreds, if not thousands, of people are going to read it over it's lifetime. The people who wrote the book are only going to get paid for the initial purchase, not for each person who reads it. It's basically piracy, only there is a set limit of people who can read the book at an given time. Book Authors don't complain about people reading their books for free if it's from a Library, because they recognize that the public has a right to their material once they've published it, even if they themselves don't pay for it.What do you think about someone writing a book? Should you be able to just take it and read it without paying? If someone scans it in and puts it on the web is that victimless? Dude, it's the same thing! Someone wrote this game and you are stealing it. You played it and didn't like it? Tough crap! You see a movie you don't like you're stuck unless you can get the manager to refund your money.
Just because you have the ability to get it digitally doesn't make it less theft.
To which I counter: What about Libraries? They offer books to anyone who wants them for free. A few copies of a book are bought for the entire library system, but hundreds, if not thousands, of people are going to read it over it's lifetime. The people who wrote the book are only going to get paid for the initial purchase, not for each person who reads it. It's basically piracy, only there is a set limit of people who can read the book at an given time. Book Authors don't complain about people reading their books for free if it's from a Library, because they recognize that the public has a right to their material once they've published it, even if they themselves don't pay for it.What do you think about someone writing a book? Should you be able to just take it and read it without paying? If someone scans it in and puts it on the web is that victimless? Dude, it's the same thing! Someone wrote this game and you are stealing it. You played it and didn't like it? Tough crap! You see a movie you don't like you're stuck unless you can get the manager to refund your money.
Just because you have the ability to get it digitally doesn't make it less theft.
This, so very much.I don't own a single game that I don't love. Why? I did research before buying them. I looked up reviews and asked friends who played them. In some cases, I demoed them through the PSN or developer demos on the PC, but either way, I didn't just run up to the store and buy a game because it was shiney and new. You don't need to turn to piracy to find out if something is terrible before purchasing it.
Buying something without researching it is just plain stupid to begin with.
This, so very much.[/QUOTE]I don't own a single game that I don't love. Why? I did research before buying them. I looked up reviews and asked friends who played them. In some cases, I demoed them through the PSN or developer demos on the PC, but either way, I didn't just run up to the store and buy a game because it was shiney and new. You don't need to turn to piracy to find out if something is terrible before purchasing it.
Buying something without researching it is just plain stupid to begin with.
This, so very much.[/QUOTE]I don't own a single game that I don't love. Why? I did research before buying them. I looked up reviews and asked friends who played them. In some cases, I demoed them through the PSN or developer demos on the PC, but either way, I didn't just run up to the store and buy a game because it was shiney and new. You don't need to turn to piracy to find out if something is terrible before purchasing it.
Buying something without researching it is just plain stupid to begin with.
This, so very much.[/QUOTE]I don't own a single game that I don't love. Why? I did research before buying them. I looked up reviews and asked friends who played them. In some cases, I demoed them through the PSN or developer demos on the PC, but either way, I didn't just run up to the store and buy a game because it was shiney and new. You don't need to turn to piracy to find out if something is terrible before purchasing it.
Buying something without researching it is just plain stupid to begin with.
I don't, could you refresh my memory?I remember that!
See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.Libraries buy in bulk, dude. They don't approach a publisher for 5 copies of Twilight or some shit, they approach a publisher for hundreds, sometimes thousands of books at a time.
The publisher figures out how much money they *might* lose, based on the library involved and their own sales patterns.
Then they quote the libraries a sales figure that will make up for lost potential. Since the overhead for publishers on books is pretty low, they make a ton in guaranteed sales, the library pays less per book, and the publisher still has every chance in the world to sell to those individuals anyway.
Same principle behind movie and game rentals.
They're just trying to rationalize their actions, So they don't have to admit that what they're doing is wrong.If one actually believes no harm is done financially for pirating software then I don't really think that there is a discussion to be had. You are honestly living in a reality so foreign to me I can't understand it.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
It could be a deal with publishers for a set number of books, and then they just pick which books they want up to a limit. That would explain why I've never seen more than 10 copies of a new release in my multi-county library system.I think it's different for each library because each library is funded by the city they're in. Which doesn't lead to a lot in terms of bulk purchasing.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
It could be a deal with publishers for a set number of books, and then they just pick which books they want up to a limit. That would explain why I've never seen more than 10 copies of a new release in my multi-county library system.[/QUOTE]I think it's different for each library because each library is funded by the city they're in. Which doesn't lead to a lot in terms of bulk purchasing.
Sure, everyone does that as well in one way or the other. How many of us speed, etc?Man, I don't rationalize shit. I pirate stuff, and it's wrong for me to do it. But I do it anyways.
A much more respectable position than "It's a victimless crime"Man, I don't rationalize shit. I pirate stuff, and it's wrong for me to do it. But I do it anyways.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
But they're not buying 10 copies of a book, they're buying 5 copies each of 60 books.Either way, 10 (or even 20 copies) of a book, isn't a lot in terms of a bulk sale.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
But they're not buying 10 copies of a book, they're buying 5 copies each of 60 books.[/QUOTE]Either way, 10 (or even 20 copies) of a book, isn't a lot in terms of a bulk sale.
To be 100% fair, I am guessing based on what I know about bulk purchasing for resellers.See, THIS is interesting information. I was not aware of intricacies of the process of ordering books for a library system, which does explain why libraries are allowed to operate in our sue happy society.
But they're not buying 10 copies of a book, they're buying 5 copies each of 60 books.[/QUOTE]Either way, 10 (or even 20 copies) of a book, isn't a lot in terms of a bulk sale.
If I might ask, then, why do you do it anyways? Convenience?Man, I don't rationalize shit. I pirate stuff, and it's wrong for me to do it. But I do it anyways.