Corvuus said:
I didn't misquote you. I paraphrased what you actually said in english. If it is a misquote, it is due to vagueness on your part. So read what you wrote without already knowing what you want to say in your mind.
Here's what I'm saying to take away the vagueness. This server runs Warcraft. That much we can agree on. Causing one person to have to pay for potential profit is an asinine argument, which is what I'm arguing. Those 400K people don't owe Blizzard money. The argument that she has to pay 88 million is rather ludicrous and harsh for copyright infringement. Basically it's like the RIAA going after Jammie Thomas for downloading songs. Which spinozaad has already called attention to. [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/forums/read/7.225965-Blizzard-Squeezes-88-Million-From-Private-Server-Owner?page=13#7732413]
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I did show you that they are being harmed, if you consider them losing even a single dollar as being harmed. If you can't prove that all pirating/private servers are people who would have never even bought/played/gave business to blizzard, then blizzard is harmed by what they are doing, even if it is 'chump change'. It is really quite simple.
Again, this is a losing argument. It's a logical fallacy. Blizzard continues to make money because of the fact that they have the official servers. They are the first to update. The graphics are best on their servers. People continue to play on their servers and the thing that Blizzard has to do is continue to update and keep those people happy or they move to private servers.
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I don't think you fully understand your own post or mine. No one said that 'piracy' doesn't have potentially 'positive' affects in the sense that people can 'trial' a game and then buy it. It is 'nebulous' but it can and does happen. But to claim there is no "negative" affect from piracy at all is silly. And to claim that somehow piracy is good because "hey there are still maybe benefits we haven't figured out yet" is naive. It is like saying smoking is good because "there are probably some benefits we haven't figured out yet" while knowing that it is bad because it will reduce average lifespan/kill you.
Your entire argument always alludes to "They're being harmed because these people aren't paying for Warcraft (Blizzard)". The fact of the matter is that if you google "Warcraft, private server" you can find a nice selection of people who aren't paying for Warcraft but still enjoying the game. Should they pay for it as well? It's the start of a slippery slope argument with a crazy judgement such as this 88 million dollars for supposed lost profits. It's the same as the recording industry's claim that piracy is harming them when it's in fact helping out the music industry as a whole.
I am not, nor have I ever said that piracy doesn't have ill effects. When I quoted you it was mainly your last two paragraphs that I don't agree with:
The discussion is generally about whether or not $88 million dollars is a fair and justifiable assessment of the revenue Blizzard lost to "piracy". I think it is absolutely justifiable given 427,000 people playing WoW for a year (I'm assuming the timeframe, I don't have information about how long the servers were up) while circumventing the subscription fee = 88 million dollars of potential revenue lost, which is what was awarded in damages.
Like I said, I was pleasantly surprised that the number seemed reasonable, and not hyperinflated like the RIAA's lawsuits where they seek trillions of dollars for 12 songs, which I don't believe is justifiable at all.
I fail to see how an impossible amount that could barely be paid by one person, is over half of Blizzard's revenue in 2010, and is mainly statutory damages for not showing up, is going to truly be justifiable as not cruel and unusual punishment. When you look at the 3 million s/he made in donations, I doubt that puts a dent in it. This is why I'm criticizing the entire "piracy = lost profits" deal. It means the money is being spent elsewhere, to which Blizzard isn't entitled to. They want it, they can make it worth my while with other incentives.
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Your private server argument is amusing but it is still flat out wrong. Sure, you can be interesting, unique, offer "4 times experience", better loot drops, etc. and sure you can do other things to advertise, get donations, etc.
The instant the defendant started micro-transactions, then they are wrong. It isn't a 'free private server for enjoyment' or anything else. It is for profit. So if you want to get a somewhat sub-par 'free experience' of a private server, then that is a choice. If someone wants to make money off of you, then it is illegal. You can think of it in terms of anime/manga downloads in relation to U.S./Japan copyright.
Do you mean the DMCA? The Sonny Bono Extension act? I'm aware of copyright law. What you're not understanding is that this actually serves as free advertising in some regards. For example, this one person [http://games.slashdot.org/comments.pl?sid=1754698&cid=33255404] played on a private server, then went to Blizzard.
Again, since I don't know all of the details on the micro-transactions, I won't comment on them. Right now, I'm playing League of Legends and know that with the right amount of money I could buy anything I want at whatever price is asked. It's a choice just like getting the uber sword of Hyper Love +5 equals $500.
If you download/watch/read anime/manga that isn't copyrighted in the U.S. yet then it is 100% legal. Heck, even doing it after it is 'dubbed/ported/copyrighted' over is still a 'pirating' choice that alot of people make. However, EVERYONE (well, i'm assuming common sense) would know and say that it is wrong for someone to try to make profit off of translating and selling 'fansub/subbed work' etc. that isn't their own.
Donation to keep server running is one thing. Helping out is another, and supporting 'fan-translations', etc. .... But flat-out profiting is not acceptable in any sense in any media.
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You do realize this is more a grey area right? Recently there's been a shift in anime and manga where the "official" translators (Viz especially [http://www.viz.com/news/newsroom/?id=617]) have changed their tune on scanlation. Just a small note. Personally, I see scanlation doing two things:
1) free advertising for newer manga/anime
2) focuses a company on what may sell next in the US
The belief that Viz and others have that piracy is killing them ignores the fact that manga/anime are online. They have to put their products online. I went to Viz's place and they're still under a belief that if you give someone 3 chapters online, they'll like the book so much, they'll buy the series online or in a store.
Then there's manga like One Piece. Do you realize it has 50+ books right now? 50 books x $10 = $500 for a series that's only half way done.

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No one is holding a gun to your head (or their head) and yeah, you can steal food, sneak into shows, and do whatever you want based on what you feel you deserve (entitled) to. Just don't be surprised when there are reprecussions based on the fact that it is blatantly illegal to steal which is what you would be doing.
Again, piracy =/ stealing. And the punishment should fit the crime, which it doesn't in this case. It just shows how broken copyright law is along with how broken statutory judgements can be.
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I still don't understand your point of view. Does 400 thousand people doing something somehow make it right or make this an acceptable business practice? Are we supposed to care that there are people who may have, in good faith, donated money towards server cost without realizing it was 3 million + dollars being used in private fashion? That we should let the servers continue to honor their good faith? In an illegal contractual agreement?
I seriously don't see how you could have any training or study of law/copyright and yet believe that the defendant had the right to do what she did.
I criticize the amount because, as I've explained before, it's an excessive amount that has no way of being paid in full for the reasons given. If she were to give up the donation amounts, I would agree with that. If she were to pay a charge for lawyering up, that I can agree with. But this high amount is just ludicrous.
I'm not too sure if this is about the lesser of two evils. In one corner we have Blizzard going against a smaller place that couldn't possibly fight such a titan. More than likely, without Blizzard's interference, the place would have died on its own from the problems that were surfacing.
And after reading the statutory damages clause [http://www.copyright.gov/title17/92chap5.html#504], it seems like a nuclear launch button for going after one person. If anything, the statutory damages, as read, were supposed to be used against a company that was on the same level as Blizzard, not consumers. It's just really disappointing to see our government coincide that this is "fair" to her.