Sorry Jim, but to me, pedophile burglar sounds like someone who seeks out and steals from pedophiles.
Yes. We have two separate issues here. Some people who advocate against copying will call it 'stealing' in order to strengthen the impact of their point.Raesvelg said:What irritates me is that it's fundamentally an argument over semantics.
Speaking of laughable...Kwil said:When you add bits to your account, no "money" is trasnferred. Nobody's losing anything. Just like piracy. If anything, the bank is *gaining* money, because according to their records, they now have more of these infinitely copiable bits to lend out.
Fair enough, I can dig it. Certain words carry meanings that can taint an actionCrono1973 said:Hacker has always meant the same, even when it was a Hollywood favorite. Fag has a different definition in different countries so let's not pretend it's interchangeable. If you are in the US, fag doesn't mean cigarette.
Stealing bread is still theft, it's just more justified than holding up a bank at gunpoint and shooting a clerk. Theft is theft and copyright infringement is copyright infringement. If they were the same then they would both have the same terminology. Terminology is so important, I don't think many people realize just how powerful words are. Take the word "rape", that word has more power than "forcible sex".
Whether or not it was co-opted by Hollywood, there's little arguing that the definition of the word has expanded through its re-use. Hell, type "hacker" into Google news search, and with the exception of some article about Facebook, most mainstream (and not so mainstream) media clearly uses the word a different way. Whatever the etymology of the word, it has since advanced.Hacker has always meant the same, even when it was a Hollywood favorite.
What if you don't use paypal?FelixG said:No no no, that is the WORST thing you could do, if you wanted to do it properly you would buy one bundle for $100.15 and give out the download links to your friends.GeorgW said:Love the new intro/outro.
I've been saying it since the first video, those bastards that pirated HiB deserve whatever they get. It's mind-boggling how cheap/evil they are.
What if I have 20 friends, and I like 5 of those friends more of the others, so I buy 15 $.01 bundles (and always make sure it goes to humble bundle) and 5 $20 bundles? I would love for them to add that option, it makes me feel so bad every time I see that "Need money for food" picture >.<Ziggy said:humbel indie bundle: DON'T PAY ONE CENT. they will lose money
But yeah, you're right, don't pay $.01, they deserve more.
Each time you push that .01 "donation" you are actively COSTING the humble folks money, because Paypal charges more than that for the transactions
Whereas their opponents are equally dishonest, attempting to avoid a word with a strong negative connotation in order to evade the moral responsibility inherent to their actions, instead choosing to frame their crimes in terminology more neutral and less visceral, so that the general public will be less inclined to castigate them for their wrongdoing.dbenoy said:The former, however, is also intellectually dishonest. Sometimes it seems like the word 'theft' is being systematically undermined so that the ignorant or stupid can be tricked into conflating the two distinct meanings together in their mind.
This is similar to when I tried to equate piracy with counterfeiting money, but I've since given up as 'copyright infringement' is what it is, and that's why those words are used.Kwil said:When did theft come to mean that somebody lost something?
You go in and add a bunch of zeros to your bank balance, then buy a bunch of games on debit.
The bank didn't lose anything, no physical object was transferred, the store got paid. Are we going to argue there was no theft there.
Theft has been widely understood, since basically the dawn of history, of someone taking something that doesn't belong to them.
That the other person no longer had it was simply a side-effect of physical reality, but was never the point of theft.
Not until pirates started thinking, "How do I justify my douche-baggery?" anyway.
You're full of shit, you can't just make money appear out of thin air.Kwil said:Me personally? That I'm honest. I know, that might be hard for you to understand the concept, but there it is.Crono1973 said:Whatever, I doubt that anyone can just add zeros as they see fit and then go shopping and no one will lose anything. If that's your argument then what is stopping you from doing that?
In general? Excellent hacking protection, essentially, working DRM.
Apples are not oranges. If you refer to apples as oranges you are wrong. If you persistently misrepresent apples as oranges in order to sway public opinion in your favor, you cannot justifiably claim the moral high ground.Stickfigure said:From a non-legal standpoint, I'm not certain what makes people so insistent that piracy not be called theft. From the perspective of someone who is not prosecuting or defending anyone in a legal battlefield, the sentiment is still the same. You take something that is being offered one specific way by a developer, tell them that you know better than them when it comes to how their work is distributed, and then create a scenario where they receive no recompense for their work. While the specifics don't necessarily fall in line with theft, the spirit of harming someone else financially for one's own personal benefit is still fairly similar.
Really guys, you're not in court, and while you can perhaps defend certain acts of piracy, things like this can't be gussied up by changing the word.
Except that copyright infringement and theft aren't the same thing so those who are saying that are simply telling the truth. That's not dishonest. What is dishonest is trying to use a stronger term that doesn't apply just to make it sound worse.Raesvelg said:Whereas their opponents are equally dishonest, attempting to avoid a word with a strong negative connotation in order to evade the moral responsibility inherent to their actions, instead choosing to frame their crimes in terminology more neutral and less visceral, so that the general public will be less inclined to castigate them for their wrongdoing.dbenoy said:The former, however, is also intellectually dishonest. Sometimes it seems like the word 'theft' is being systematically undermined so that the ignorant or stupid can be tricked into conflating the two distinct meanings together in their mind.
Let's both be honest here: the people who are all up in arms about how copyright infringement is not theft aren't doing it out of some bizarre grammatical crusade.
Fair enough.BanZeus said:Apples are not oranges. If you refer to apples as oranges you are wrong. If you persistently misrepresent apples as oranges in order to sway public opinion in your favor, you cannot justifiably claim the moral high ground.
The analogy breaks down when you get into juice/cider territory...
Not only has it (probably) been on the Escapist before... it's in this very video. (4:02)vxicepickxv said:I think this is the best way to explain how this works. Yes, it's been on the escapist before.
*image*
If that penny is eaten by PayPal or credit card fees, then what difference does it make? You aren't helping the devs by giving PayPal or Visa a penny.Jimothy Sterling said:The "one cent" thing is acknowledged, though it still dodges the actual issue in an attempt to make torrenting seem more noble. Just pay the minimum to keep them afloat. Something tells me those pirating it don't exactly care who loses money in this equation.