Yep, this still applies. But if that isn't enough, let's go!Mizaki said:A good bunch of people have better things to spend that money on, and if they could get those things for free, they'd do it then too. Piracy, in its non-idealist form, is not an act of malice, no matter how many moral anchors are tied to it. It simply is, what it is: People who don't feel like paying $20-60 (especially $60) for a box with a disc in it. With that money, they could buy things that they won't regret not renting.
It might tempt some pirates to buy games if they came with neat stuff. An artbook? A making-of? A napkin?
1. Most people who pirate for the purpose of entertainment rather than to prove a point make a whole lot less than the developers/musicia-- record labels/movietypes that whine about piracy anyway, so it's hard for them to at all feel bad for them.
2. All DRM did was add an extra step to the pirating process. It's done nothing to stop anyone, and as long as there are software products and the internet, people will do it. There will be some kind of crack for whatever the companies make to try to stop piracy. They want the product, and don't want to pay for it. They will find a way how to do that.
3. Your visions of right and wrong are not universal. No one's are.
4. Were it not for piracy, alot of games AND music would go completely unnoticed. It's laughable when some band who would be nothing without filesharing gets all angry about a leaked album. I'm sure there's games people only heard of because somebody gave them a burned CD of it because their local store only stocks a couple games.
5. People like free things. No ifs, ands, or buts. The money classes below upper-middle will of course spring on something free as soon as they see it. Who in their right mind who doesn't have alot of money is going to overlook something free, especially one that doesn't deprive someone else of the product? (Please notice I didn't say deprive the company of their money because.. well, the companies don't care about the people do they? Why care about them?)
6. There is NO similarity-- I repeat NO similarity between software and physical objects that usually cost money being taken for free. Y'know.. unless stolen cars can duplicate and when someone steals it, it reappears in the same spot for many other people to steal it. This isn't true. Stop that. Using emotional reasons on one side is just as ridiculous as it is on the other.
EDIT: Wait a second, what does this have to do with censorship?