Lem0nade Inlay said:
Hive Mind said:
Owyn_Merrilin said:
Everybody with an internet connection has done at least one of them on accident.
Do you have any proof, or? It's fine if you want to make claims with zero evidence, just don't claim them as fact.
Can you prove you've never pirated anything?
Can't prove a negative.
On another topic - cracking a game you have bought is NOT piracy, you bought the game.
Personally, I think piracy can easily be justified in ONE situation - the product is impossible to obtain legally. Either it has been discontinued or never reached an area. I've pirated a few games that litterally CAN NOT BE BOUGHT. Legal? no. But bung em on steam or something for £5 I will probably buy them.
Then there are plenty of grey areas. Some examples:
1) Lets say I miss an episode of Doctor Who and I miss it on the iplayer. I pay my TV license, I am perfectly entitled to watch the show. Does it REALLY matter if I pirate it and watch it outside their time slot?
2) I have a £100 box set of a TV series, I tell my friend to watch it. He can't afford £100 for a DVD box set, especially not on something he possibly won't like. I can't get the set to him easily. He pirates it to watch it and may or may not end up buying if he likes it.
3) A product you own on different medium. E.g. pirating the PC copy of a game you own on xbox or pirating an ebook you own the actual book for.
By the letter of the law all the above 3 are illegal but you will NEVER convince me that they cause harm to the industry. Especially games which seem to be trying to stop you even lending a game to a friend. Nothing stops me lending a DVD to a friend and libraries have been lending books for years, the industry seems fine.