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This also (sort of) applied to games.
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Only a fool would buy a DVD or CD.
So . . . what about the artist who performs the song, the writer who wrote it? Presumably, you get paid for your work. You don't think they should be paid for theirs? That's what people are doing, in my opinion, when they pirate a CD or a book-on-CD: they are stealing from an individual or a group who have worked very hard to produce a product in a hugely competitive field.
So . . . what about the artist who performs the song, the writer who wrote it? Presumably, you get paid for your work. You don't think they should be paid for theirs? That's what people are doing, in my opinion, when they pirate a CD or a book-on-CD: they are stealing from an individual or a group who have worked very hard to produce a product in a hugely competitive field.
You're absolutely right -- it is a different and interesting time in which artists/writers can profit and thrive but simply getting their product out there, bought or stolen, if they also do concerts or have some retail outlet. However, you know full well that pirating a song or a book is stealing. It's not about conscience or ethics, it's about facts. The hallmark of ghettoization is the ability to rationalize
Shit there's someone at the door. I'm not off my high horse yet by god
A number of artists have released for pay-what-you-want albums and have been successful with them. They get their music known and heard without getting cut into by the marketing and distribution. Other bands make it worth buying the CD by bundling it with another product like a shirt or autographed picture or something. A lot of Indy bands are grateful for the ability to get their music out and heard by many many more than if they had to wait for a record co. to get them out on the airwaves....You're absolutely right -- it is a different and interesting time in which artists/writers can profit and thrive but simply getting their product out there, bought or stolen, if they also do concerts or have some retail outlet. However, you know full well that pirating a song or a book is stealing. It's not about conscience or ethics, it's about facts. The hallmark of ghettoization is the ability to rationalize
Shit there's someone at the door. I'm not off my high horse yet by god
well if they are an artist then I believe that they are more orientated towards expressing a message to the most amount of people possible. in this case peer to peer sharing of their work would more than likely please them than aggitate them... oops there i go again getting all ghetto
also, the new model of business is to give away free products via downloading on the net in order to bring in new customers. lure them in with the free material and upsell them a more advanced product..
information sharing is here to stay, if the creator of a product is that concerned with "pirating" then the should keep their product all to them selves and never let anyone see it.
You are either naive or disingenuous. I covered the expanding-the-market-gambit-through-pirating in my previous text, then you lapse back into into "They are artists, they should be willing to give it away" which is simply another lame rationalization to comfort your lack of ethics or your inability to see a bigger picture. Presumably, you work somewhere and create a product or fill some service role and, hopefully, take pride it in. Would you donate your time, your service, your product, because you have a calling, because you produce something for it's own worth? No. Not if you have bills to pay and a family to raise -- or unless you are very wealthy, which you may be. If you have convinced yourself that stealing is okay, then at least have the balls to admit it. When you pirate a literary or musical product you are stealing. You are stealing from the mega corporations who also hammer the artists, and you are, worse, stealing from the artists themselves.
You are either naive or disingenuous. I covered the expanding-the-market-gambit-through-pirating in my previous text, then you lapse back into into "They are artists, they should be willing to give it away" which is simply another lame rationalization to comfort your lack of ethics or your inability to see a bigger picture. Presumably, you work somewhere and create a product or fill some service role and, hopefully, take pride it in. Would you donate your time, your service, your product, because you have a calling, because you produce something for it's own worth? No. Not if you have bills to pay and a family to raise -- or unless you are very wealthy, which you may be. If you have convinced yourself that stealing is okay, then at least have the balls to admit it. When you pirate a literary or musical product you are stealing. You are stealing from the mega corporations who also hammer the artists, and you are, worse, stealing from the artists themselves.
They can do concerts, sell their music to movies ect.So . . . what about the artist who performs the song, the writer who wrote it? Presumably, you get paid for your work. You don't think they should be paid for theirs? That's what people are doing, in my opinion, when they pirate a CD or a book-on-CD: they are stealing from an individual or a group who have worked very hard to produce a product in a hugely competitive field.
I agree with a lot of what you're saying, but please explain to me how it's stealing? Stealing entails taking something from another, thereby depriving them of it. How does that equate to copyright infringement?
Is it stealing when one pirates a CD? It depends. If one intentionally circumvents a system designed to protect a piece of original music, writing or art, yes, it is stealing. A couple of other posters insist that they, and others, have the right to determine how a writer/musician distributes her/his unique, personal property (and that's what a copyrighted work is, by the way -- it is, in most cases, one human being's personal property.) This is the most common and childish way of rationalizing unethical behavior. I've read other posts from some of these writers, and they strike me as too smart to fall for this sort of prosaic bullshit if it were fronted by someone else, yet they are ready enough to shovel it themselves when challenged. It would be disappointing if this were anything other than a fun, public forum -- but's that what this is, isn't it? I don't expect to change anyone's behavior; I have done far worse things in my life than a small-time rip-off (through duplication) of another person's property, and I'm done ping-ponging this back and forth. But here's the deal: there are men and women out there working their butts off to succeed in the hugely competitive businesses of writing, music and films. Contractually, most receive a tiny (and I mean tiny!) percentage of the gross retail price of the final product -- income they have earned fairly, and depend upon to pay their bills. However they, the mass of small time thieves, justify their behavior, the behavior is still petty, unethical, and a little sad, frankly. Compromise oneself to save a few dimes? Taking another man or woman's personal property without their permission, and without just compensation, is stealing.
They can do concerts, sell their music to movies ect.
Depriving one of money they have justly earned