So you cannot share a thought? Is it cloning if you and another person come to an agreement?Generic Gamer said:Only if you all use the same copy, otherwise it's cloning.Kair said:So you say that it is impossible to share information?Generic Gamer said:Sharing is when several people all share the same item, not when several people pay for one item licensed to one person and clone the item, giving each of them an item of their own.Kair said:And the capitalists wish to do what to stop people from sharing?
I'm going to stop you right there, because you're describing a dead business model.Generic Gamer said:In what way are artists entitled to 100% of the profits if a distributor
True, in a sense, but largely irrelevant to the debate.AndyFromMonday said:TO ALL THE PEOPLE WHO QUOTED ME, ALL TWENTY SEVEN OF YOU:
I CANNOT spend another few hours attempting to debunk everything that has been said. The comments are to long and it's becoming a chore. I'll just quote Dowling v. United States, a 1985 case regarding copyright infringement:
"...interference with copyright does not easily equate with theft, conversion, or fraud. The Copyright Act even employs a separate term of art to define one who misappropriates a copyright: ... 'an infringer of the copyright.' ...
The infringer invades a statutorily defined province guaranteed to the copyright holder alone. But he does not assume physical control over the copyright; nor does he wholly deprive its owner of its use. While one may colloquially link infringement with some general notion of wrongful appropriation, infringement plainly implicates a more complex set of property interests than does run-of-the-mill theft, conversion, or fraud."
It's not that anyone doesn't realize it, it's that many people disagree with it wholesale. There's no evidence that DRM hurts sales, or that piracy doesn't (much less that it acts as an "advertisement" and "demo").Incarnatos said:What most people fail to realize is that, while piracy means you obtain something without paying for it, and thus hurting the creators of said product, many people wouldn't waste money on said product, either due to not having disposable income, or due to it not being worth the price.
So restricting piracy in most cases, won't increase sales to any significant degree.
And no, I didn't read the entire thread.
Wait, I'm stealing it?Generic Gamer said:Don't you understand? It DOESN'T matter how much that music is worth to the artist and distributor, you're still stealing it! You have no right to take something that isn't offered to you by someone with the right to it. Theft is still theft, even if you prefer to call it 'advertising'.
The word is correct for both instances, your attempts to change the meaning of the word in favour of the ownership of information is futile.Generic Gamer said:OK, you're talking about an 'idea' now and not'someone else's copyrighted data that they have committed to recording' but no, you cannot 'share' a thought, you can give a copy of that same thought to someone else, you can't share it because the thought is still in your head even if the other person is using it. And an agreement is two people agreeing, not sharing data.Kair said:So you cannot share a thought? Is it cloning if you and another person come to an agreement?
Let's get that straight, data isn't ephemeral like a thought or a colour, 'data' is something that someone has made.
The reason I'm kinda skimming over what you're saying is because you (and every single solitary anti-piracy advocate) skims over the part where obtaining an exact copy at no one's expense is anything other than copyright infringement and how that in any way, shape, or form, equates to theft beyond a purely hypothetical sense.Generic Gamer said:-snip-
1) I just told you the reward is a completely different matter. It is all subject to the alternative, and the alternatives to profiting from limitation are many.Generic Gamer said:Holy shit, you're right! You're so, so right, I should have realised that you always have the right to copy the ideas of others!Kair said:The word is correct for both instances, your attempts to change the meaning of the word in favour of the ownership of information is futile.
Humans have always shared information, it was what made Homo Sapiens survive while the Neanderthals became extinct.
Information is free. Information is an endless resource. Endless resources are available to everyone and should be distributed such. To put a price tag on information is to limit the resource unnecessarily.
The work put into the development of information are a whole other matter. The limitation of information for profit is another unfortunate product of the consumer culture and market forces of the obsolete and tedious capitalist system.
And I do assume bias will get the better of you and you will contradict my every argument. But assumptions are some of our worst enemies, and I can only hope you are of the few who set aside pride for an open mind.
...
Nah, I'm shitting you.
Now you're succumbing to my favourite logical fallacy, that blindly agreeing with someone else makes me open minded. open-mindedness is a willingness to consider new ideas, not an immediate adoption of what everyone else says. "Be open-minded, think what I want you to think." Don't assume you're right just because you're you.
it's nothing to do with consumer culture you understand, it's to do with wanting people to come up with new ideas. the only way to do that is to let people be rewarded for it, just look at the economical, technological and media stagnation in the Soviet Union. If people don't have an incentive to work hard they won't.
Now let's get to the crux of this, you feel you have a right to copy other's data without paying because you know you'll never make anything that anyone else wants. That's where socialist theory falls down you know, it's easy to preach free sharing of everything when you've got nothing but I bet if you spent two years writing a novel you'd not want everyone to have it for free.
haha oh that's so cute. do you still leave milk and cookies out for santa on christmas? cause if you believe the government follows its own laws, you must do that as well!samster284 said:But.... Creating viruses is illegal too, isn't it? And the government has to follow laws too.PrinceoN said:Here's the answer to piracy:
Have the government hire some people to create virus's in the shape of downloadable songs, albums, movies, and games. Have said people post their files on torrent and P2P sites. People who download everything they can get their hands on will obtain the viruses and lose everything on their computers. Fair punishment.
But the common people (like say, most of us) who just don't want to fork out 13 bucks for a cd just to get ONE DAMN SONG FROM IT (or 8.99 for a single that has one damn song on it, remixed 3 times with programs that it took someone all of 5 minutes to use), or people who want one song from a cd that a company DOESN'T SELL ANYMORE will probably be perfectly fine.