It's a shame that there're still people who use what's coded in written law to define morality. It's like child-molesting preachers who say it's okay because it's not explicitly defined as a sin in the Bible.SenorStocks said:I don't call it stealing because under the law it's not. Common sense really. Using steal in this context is just plain stupid.Sansha said:I'm fully aware of the difference, but I still call it stealing, by definition of using a roundabout method to get something for free that you should be paying for. You wouldn't happen to be one of those people who's just afraid to admit it, would you?SenorStocks said:Sounds like you're not just a really shitty friend but you also don't know the difference between stealing and copyright infringement. Good job.Sansha said:Honestly, damn your friend. Report him, and if he gets questioned or fined for it, flatly reply "Perhaps you'll reconsider next time you decide to steal a game."
'I don't want to pay for it' - that's just insanity. I don't know how anyone with a properly adjusted personality and lack of head trauma can honestly idealize that as a legitimate excuse. I didn't want to have to pay for my apartment, car or food this week but that doesn't mean "Oh, well, by all means, go steal it sir."
I'm not going walk past the ticket counter in a movie theater, and when stopped reply "Oh, I didn't want to pay for it. I wasn't going to anyway, so you didn't lose a sale.", and be let in on those grounds.
I've always been impassioned about this subject. I can't stand people who pirate games, movies or music and don't even have the balls to admit, even to themselves, that they've stolen something.
Unless, of course, your conscience is niggling at the back of your head and you only did it because you're too afraid of real-world consequences rather than, y'know, morality and goodness.
So report your friend. I would.
Also me being a shitty friend is a moot topic; I don't make friends with freeloaders, swindlers and, again, people who can't admit their own moral shortcomings.
I absolutely hate people who steal games. Even I have trouble comprehending how much.
What I'm effectively hearing here is that doing immoral things is just peachy as long as your law - and conscience - doesn't specifically tell you it's wrong.
I could convince somebody to commit suicide and even drive 'em to the local harbor bridge. I wouldn't get slammed with murder or even arrested. But I'm not going to do it because it's wrong.
Honestly I probably wouldn't mind so much if you'd just be a man about it and admit you've stolen something. Why is that so impossible a moral conundrum for you to overcome?
Even if you still don't, you've still broken the law. Stealing or *fingerquotes*copyright infringement*fingerquotes* shouldn't matter: you broke the law anyway, so why bother hiding from your conscience? Do you feel better thinking you broke a less serious law, or safer knowing if caught you'll be facing a much less serious penalty?
Buretsu said:He took a copy of the game that he had no legal right to take.
I love how people prefer to harp on the syntax used to refer to the crime, and handily gloss over the fact that it is indeed a crime.