Do4600 said:
Mr F. said:
If the game/media is so censored and broken in your country as to be unplayable, pirating is jutified. Why would you buy a broken product?
It's never justified. You never need media. You don't die without it. All of these excuses stem from an incredible sense of conceited torpor, nothing else. What makes you justified in taking that media even if it is censored to the point of being broken? What gives you the right? I'll tell you what gives you that right, your own sense of self importance and the obscene immediacy which you ascribe to your own cravings; which are so grossly inflated that it makes you think that you should be justified in breaking the laws of your own country and indeed international laws to acquire intellectual property because you just cannot live another moment without an uncensored version of that new Lupe Fiasco single. Sometimes you don't get what you want. Most people just grow up, discipline themselves, and realize this, others create ways to get everything they want, all the time. In society they are called criminals, which is exactly what you are if you don't own the licence for your media. Who knows, maybe protesting that you can't import the media would actually change the country for the better. If every person who pirated that media in your country instead stood up against the governing body for the right to own that media your country might not be in the situation it's in.
Firstly, your point about protest.
I do believe that protesting within a Muslim Dictatorship about the inadvisability of banning all imports of uncensored foreign media would be a very, very stupid call. At the minimum, you would be promptly deported. Worst case scenario you would end up spending a long time in an Arab prison, not something which the average person would enjoy over much.
As for the rest of your points?
You are approaching this from the other side from which I am approaching this. I believe that all forms of media should be free, from music to artwork, and that as long as everyone involved can still afford to eat and live a moderately comfortable life, no crime has been committed. Truly, Piracy is a victimless crime, it can even be argued to be a crime which is beneficial for the state. From the functionalist perspective upon society, all crime has purpose and is required for society to continue functioning successfully. From the Marxist perspective, all forms of crime are acts of rebellion against the state. Either way you can see that two key sociological theories support acts of crime.
I am not a pirate. Partially this is because I am currently studying sociology at the University of *REDACTED* and they have a closed internet system to prevent people from pirating. Whilst I am willing to make a protest against the state, I am unwilling to do so in a way which would jeopardize my education. You, ser, are being deliberately antagonistic and insulting my good person, my morality and my sense of self, simply because we disagree on a few points about the minutia of Copyright law.
So, Ser, Kindly take your opinions and put them where the sun does not shine. I am entitled to my opinion that property is theft, that Piracy is a victimless crime that can be shown to benefit society and the economy as a whole. If I live somewhere that has banned a particular piece of art, a particular book, and I acquire this through other means I am doing so to continue my own enlightenment. Yes, I have pirated copies of such things as The Communist Manifesto, Das Capital, Animal Farm, 1984, you name it. Other political and important works which allowed me to further my education.
Piracy is not just about games, songs and movies. It is about freedom, freedom of expression and freedom to view artwork of any kind. Sure, you can safely argue that a lot of things do not fall into the remit of Education, such as Death Race, or quite a lot of music. But if I want to listen to a piece of classical music that is banned because it was written by a Jew, if I want to read a history book that has been banned because it mentions the holocaust, if I want to read a book which has a depiction of homosexuality, if I want to listen to music that is critical of our current economic model, I should have the freedom to do so.
So, Ser, I bid you good day. Take your opinions on copyright law, your reverance of the Free Market, your belief that I am any your lessor because I have acquired certain medias without paying for them, either because they are banned, impossible to import or, in some cases, I believe that I should not pay for them (Propping up an international publisher in order to buy a copy of The Communist Manifesto would make Marx turn in his grave), and shove them where the sun does not shine.
I will not stoop as low as you and attempt to insult you. I disagree with your opinions but I do not think you are my lessor because you hold them.