This, to me, seems like a reason to dismiss any arguments in favor of piracy. You can try to justify piracy in any way you want, but ultimately you have to realize that video games are not a necessity. There is no need to play them. There is no need to buy them. They are a luxury, something you buy if you can afford it. So when you pirate a game you are taking something you don't need. If piracy was not an option, you wouldn't do it and would be able to survive without it. This is why I can never really understand the justification for piracy. You're trying to justify breaking the law for something that is a luxury.Baby Tea said:Because Jack doesn't have any right to games.numaiomul said:so with all those things taken into consideration why are people so hateful on people like jack? :-/
They are a fluff 'extra' in life, and if Jack can't afford them, then too freaking bad.
There are plenty of things I would like that I don't have, but you've got to live within your means. It doesn't give Jack, or anyone else, the right to just steal something they'd normally have to pay for.
Poverty isn't an excuse for things like video games. You don't need them to live, and the fact that Jack might be able to afford 1 after 5 months of working should only make him thankful that he isn't one of the thousands dying from preventable diseases and starvation every day.
Jack can't afford games? Well boo-freaking-hoo. I can't afford a BMW. Oh well, life goes on.
Jack: Get a new hobby, or treasure the few games you can afford. But you aren't 'owed' anything, you don't 'deserve' games, and you have no 'right' to them. Either pay for them like a regular person, or do without.
If you truly, honestly believe that 'a human life is worth very little' to you, then you have some serious thinking to do about life.Onyx Oblivion said:So, being broke justifies piracy?
I gotta say...I hope that Jack dies.
Call it extreme...but hey, a human life is worth very little to me. Even a non-pirate, or even myself.
I don't see how they are similar, really. There is no need to bring in drugs to a piracy argument, it's a stretch to prove a point that doesn't really matter anyways, as you have seen the majority opinion people have on both subjects.Marq said:A criminal who spits on someone for breaking the law? Sure seems like hypocrisy to me. Drugs and piracy are very hot topics here. Not a false analogy, they are actually very similar in terms of petty crime by the user.
And sure one opinion isn't hypocrisy. Two conflicting is.
Definitely this, especially concerning games. You can usually find films and music in stores long after their initial release date but games aren't exactly on that same level. I actually ended up buying a lot of my classic games like Shogo: Mobile Armor Division, Tiberian Sun (before it became freeware), etc second-hand from previous owners, and if I couldn't find them I would've just downloaded them regardless of whether or not it was legal for me to do so. All abandonware is, to me, perfectly fine to be downloaded if you can't find it in stores anymore. You might say that I should pay for them anyway by buying them second-hand from their previous owners but no, I don't have to do that unless I particularly want a physical copy of the game to add to my collection. Nobody's missing out if I download abandonware instead of buying it second-hand, because any money I did pay for it would go to the previous owner, not the developers.Cid SilverWing said:Piracy should at all times be legal for products that aren't available in retail or otherwise anymore. Music, games and movies alike.
You always have a say in the price... games go on sale, you can purchase them used... then again, used games don't go to the developers either... I will still stand by my point that piracy just raises the prices for those who do pay.Snacksboy said:Piracy is a crime, but it is not theft. Of course some people believe it should not be a crime. I really can't think of any reason for why it is a crime. I mean unless someone manages to prove that piracy->reduced income for creator(s). And don't go "That's totally logical and intuitive", it might seem that way but even so you have to prove it.
I think Piracy is a reaction to the current market. See, buying and selling used to be a deal right? You would go out into a market and see something you like and then you would haggle, until you reached an agreement both sides could agree to(or you'd fail and walk off). Nowadays, you can only get the extreme cases: Buying regularly, in which case you have no say in the price, or pirate, in which case you have all the say. The former is good for the producer/retailer, the latter is good for the consumer.
What's with all the banhammer fear? Surely we are allowed to freely discuss a subject of major importance to the gaming industry without tiptoeing?
If its empty apart form my car how am i actually preventing anyone form using it legitimately?? Answer I'm not.Flour said:Again, the car park lost something. Even if it has always free space, it's still taking up space for someone who would have paid for it.Petromir said:If you want to be pedantic then a pay car park, that alwyas has spaces in it, its still theft to use it. Theft can be of an idea, of an object or a service.
They did not lose the book but you did not pay to take the book home and read it either. What is the point of walking into a bookstore and reading the entire book with no thought on purchasing it? If someone does not want to buy the book they could just as easily go to their local library and check the book out.shadow skill said:No it isn't a false analogy. The underlying point is that you enjoyed the product and did not buy it. By the time you have enjoyed the product all that needs to happen has already happened. The content provider hasn't lost the book have they?RathWolf said:That's a bit of a false analogy. Piracy is more akin to walking into a bookstore, picking up a book, making a copy of each page, and then walking out.shadow skill said:Obviously not. If you walk into a book store pick up a book on the shelf and sit down and read the whole thing you are not a thief. Oh and for the record no content creator or distributor can be said to have the right to make a profit.aps1984 said:Calling Piracy stealing is just hype for effect. I thought we'd sorted all this out. Can people be a bit more mature and stop doing this maybe?
Also, what? You're saying people who work hard making content don't have a right to be rewarded for their effort?
Way to miss the point buddy.Sober Thal said:So we can go back to the bookstore excuse. It's not ok to make a copy of a book at a bookstore and walk out with it right? You didn't take anything away, but it shouldn't be called theft? I admit I am no saint, but I think it's theft, and wrong.aps1984 said:theft: 'the act of stealing; the wrongful taking and carrying away of the personal goods or property of another; larceny.' Dictionary.com. It is not theft if nothing is taken away. It is still wrong in some cases, but not theft. In a lot of cases, piracy is victimless and therefore, as far as my morals are concerned, perfectly ok in those.Sober Thal said:When and where was this sorted out? Link please.aps1984 said:Calling Piracy stealing is just hype for effect. I thought we'd sorted all this out. Can people be a bit more mature and stop doing this maybe?
Explain how thinking a pirate isn't a thief makes us more mature too please.
And because in the more mature, intelligent debates about piracy even the people who are strongly against piracy in all forms accept that piracy is not theft. Conceding to this does not mean you are saying it is ok.
To answer the second question: a little of both.ClunkiestTurtle said:If piracy was eliminated tomorrow would people like me who rent games and buy second hand be the new immoral??
Is it the fact that it's illegal that makes it wrong or that the people who have made it aren't getting money for it?
Ok, if you want to get into the pure technical definition of it... but it's still immoral and illegal.secretsantaone said:1. Piracy is NOT theft. Piracy is piracy. No physical game is taken from another person, a copy is made.
If we can't make the assumption that a pirated copy is a lost sale then you can't make the assumption that it isn't a lost sale. The fact remains that a reasonable percentage would likely buy the game because they obviously like it enough to want to play it. It's certainly not 100%, but it's certainly not 0% either, and that is still lost money for the devs.secretsantaone said:2. The apathy factor. If someone pirates a game, it does not necesarily mean they would buy the game if piracy wasn't an option, they wouldn't feel stongly enough to spend money. Thus not all incidents of piracy would result in lost sales.
Except for the fact that rental retailers have to PURCHASE copies of the games, meaning more sales for the Dev. rental retailers also acquire copies for re-sale and provide another advertising outlet for the devs. This arrangement is still mutually beneficial.secretsantaone said:3. Piracy has the same effect on game developers as renting games or buying used games, they don't get a single penny from them. These two are perfectly legal.
So you're basically countering your own point #2 then?secretsantaone said:4. Some pirates use piracy as a demo, particularly on games that lack one. Many pirates later buy a copy of the game to support the devs. Not all piracy results in 'lost potential sales'.
You're preventing someone from standing in that spot. Which does not happen with a copied game(your copied car would be floating above that spot allowing another car under yours).Petromir said:If its empty apart form my car how am i actually preventing anyone form using it legitimately?? Answer I'm not.Flour said:Again, the car park lost something. Even if it has always free space, it's still taking up space for someone who would have paid for it.Petromir said:If you want to be pedantic then a pay car park, that alwyas has spaces in it, its still theft to use it. Theft can be of an idea, of an object or a service.
Because he seems to think that it is perfectly ok to steal stuff because he doesn't have the money to buy it, maybe? Has he tried to get a job? Probably not. Well, I can't afford to live on my own, drive a nice car, or have the insurance for a nice car. Using Jack's logic that means it is perfectly ok for me to go steal a nice car and have a nice house without paying for any of it...numaiomul said:why are people so hateful on people like jack? :-/
Yes, piracy exist, thanks for telling us something we already know. So does rape, murder, genocide, and many other things, but does that mean we have to be open to discussion about them? No.numaiomul said:piracy EXISTS and if we're not open to discussion about it and treat it like a virus it will be forever there to haunt us because it's always easiest to break a protection then to build one.
So you haven't received anything by reading the book? They were not compensated for your reading the book either.RathWolf said:No, the difference is, you gained a copy of that product without paying for it. While the content provider may still have the original, that does nothing for them. The content provider has received no compensation despite you having received something from them. This is wrong.shadow skill said:No it isn't a false analogy. The underlying point is that you enjoyed the product and did not buy it. By the time you have enjoyed the product all that needs to happen has already happened. The content provider hasn't lost the book have they?RathWolf said:That's a bit of a false analogy. Piracy is more akin to walking into a bookstore, picking up a book, making a copy of each page, and then walking out.shadow skill said:Obviously not. If you walk into a book store pick up a book on the shelf and sit down and read the whole thing you are not a thief. Oh and for the record no content creator or distributor can be said to have the right to make a profit.aps1984 said:Calling Piracy stealing is just hype for effect. I thought we'd sorted all this out. Can people be a bit more mature and stop doing this maybe?
Also, what? You're saying people who work hard making content don't have a right to be rewarded for their effort?