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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
I appreciate your time and effort in posting this, but you can't mean that stealing AND distributing information that has the distribution rights owned by a person/corporation is not considered stealing? I an not saying your incorrect, I just can't seem to wrap my mind around the fact that if my sole income was a line of applications unique in nature that I developed and sold is ripped off, and distributed widely for free is not stealing!
I don't know the inner workings of developing/distribution, but it seems certain rights, and (for lack of better term) copyrights would be affected here, and from what I DO know of copyright law, that is wrong. Besides, you contradicted yourself arguing there is nothing wrong with piracy, but it is still wrong....you can't have it both ways, either it is right or wrong!! |
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
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It is wrong because you have not been given permission by the person who owns the rights to the software. Theft requires physical property. This is why if you steal a CD you go to jail. If you offer, for sharing or download, copyright material the RIAA, <insert organization or developer here>, takes you to court for a monetary judgement and there is no jail time involved. It is simply not theft by the legal definition of the word. To call it theft and to call pirates thieves is an attempt to play on emotion, an emotion which the pirates likely care little about, and it is also a bad use of language. When you speak of legal concepts you should be clear on the concept. Infringing copyright is wrong. It is not wrong because it is theft. It is wrong because the person, organization, or so on has not granted you permission to use their non-physical data in the manner in which you are using it. This is not theft but rather infringement. You have not stolen any property from them. You could make a case for stealing their right to control their ideas but that is also not theft. You do not call someone who infringes on a civil right a thief because they have done so. Much like pirates infrginge upon the creators right to control distribution. It is an infringement of rights not a theft. My argument is for the developers to make a coherent argument and not use inflated numbers to prove losses that, in all reality, do not exist. TO be perfectly frank I use the GiMP for my photo editing needs. I cannot afford Adobe CS 3. If I did download it and use it could not be a loss for Adobe because I am incapable of purchasing it to begin with. That is where my argument is based and not in that piracy is wrong but it is not wrong. Piracy is wrong because it is an infringement of rights and not because it is theft. There doesn't have to be any monetary loss at all for piracy to be wrong or for rights to be infringed. My argument is against the namecalling and the leveling of inaccurate terms in the debate. The namecalling has happened right here in this thread, and it always does in this debate, as has the argument: Quote:
I hope I have cleared up any misconceptions about the argument I am trying to make. For the record every piece of code I have ever written is under the GPLv2 and freely available. However I am not an OSS bigot. I fully support the right of any developer to close his source and try to make a profit. I think that business model has seen its day based purely on the laws of economics but anyone is free to try and make it work and likely still can for a short while (please note: the "short while" referenced is a reference to history and not meant to say that the software industry will fall apart in the next decade). The argument may better be illustrated through an OSS example. My code is available for anyone to use with the sole restriction, for the most part, that they have to share the code they changed, added on, etc. If someone were to take my code, against the license, and roll it up into a closed source piece of software they have stolen nothing from me. They have violated my right to control how my code is used. There is no monetary value attached to my code because it is GPL but I still have rights. My rights as a developer are still violated in exactly the same manner as the developer of closed source software having his programs pirated and yet no theft has taken place. I am rambling again. I am pretty sure I summed up everything a couple of paragraphs up so I am going to stop before I go too deep into the rabbit hole. |
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
You did explain it a bit better, I do see where your coming from, basically your agreeing with the original intent of this thread....piracy and warez are wrong, but like most things, something developers and us have to deal with (unfortunatly spyware and viruses as well, but thats another thread LOL!!!).
P.S. I would love to see what typw of apps you develope, if you would like to post a site, or something, I am always curious as to what is out there!!! Thanks |
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
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I also failed at writing a cdg/mp3+g player for Linux because I gave up. I have the decoding done but the interface never seemed to be inspiring enough to work on any further. Last edited by flesh99; 05-27-2008 at 11:42 PM. Reason: Adding a little bit... |
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
That is more than I have been able to fathom of actual app programming....skinning is one thing, but my hat is off to the actual original developers!!
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
The reason why they take piracy to civil courty, is that it is much easier being awarded monetary damages in civil court vs criminal court, and that is the heart of the issue. If you don't own it, it's not yours to take or use without consent of owner. Piracy arises when someone does not purchase the right to USE the product. You really never own the product, just the right to use for personal use. When you purchase the software, you always must click that you agree to their terms before it will download. Pretty simple, but of course people think they can come up with a loophole to justify in their mind that their actions are legitimate.
Last edited by darster; 05-28-2008 at 10:33 PM. |
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
Many people visit the Warez sites because of the ease of downloading a CAB to use as a trial. If you are looking for a particular program you may have to join several different sites to download what you need to try. With a good Warez site I only need to use one site to find what I need. I know that this is my strategy. I do purchase what I like but most of the programs I use are freeware.
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Re: Piracy, warez and You.
For all the people who are trying to justify piracy, think about it this way.
You work a job, 40+ hours a week, you get your check at the end of the week and it's about 25-40% short, you ask why. Your HR department says "some pirate on the internet took your money, nothing we can do it about it and it will continue to happen." Think about it this way, then sit back and ask youself why you do it. People need to feed their families too. Would you create a business just to not make any money ? I'm not a developer, and not perfect on this subject but, this is the way you should look at it... Last edited by DavidinCT; 08-19-2008 at 04:42 PM. |
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