The ability to change features, prices, and availability of things you’ve already paid for is a powerful temptation to corporations.

  • @[email protected]
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    1 year ago

    People want at the same time that wages are higher but they also do not want to pay, for example, software developers appropriately.

    No one wants to be part of the problem, though. So some people justify their copyright infringing by claiming it’s some sort of movement for justice and rebellion against corporations.

    • calm.like.a.bomb
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      81 year ago

      Have you ever bought something online (movies, games) that you can’t save/download and then the company you have the money to removed that? That is stealing from you. Simple.

      • @[email protected]
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        -41 year ago

        No, actually I never was in that situation. Is there another incident like that apart from Sony and the Discovery channel?

        And how does that mean all digital products are now okay to pirate?

      • @[email protected]
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        -61 year ago

        If Sony openly stole from these people, a class action case against them should be a no brainer.

        But you won’t see one because we both know it isn’t theft. They’re still garbage and trash, and so I have no problem pirating content, but calling what they did “stealing” is either incredibly ignorant or incredibly disingenuous.

      • @[email protected]
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        1 year ago

        Pirating software is stealing as well. That’s pretty simple. I know people who have stolen their entire gaming library. That’s thousands of hours of work and dedication people put in. Why don’t they deserve to get money for it?

        The same goes for other software, music and movies.

        • Iapar
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          121 year ago

          They deserve to get money for it. No pirate is against that.

          If we would exchange money for the product all would be fine. Some people would still pirate because they have no money or just don’t want to pay but the majority would pay.

          But as we buy just a license that can be revoked for any reason consumers feel that the system is rigged against them.

          So it is a natural reaction to try to fuck over a system that is fucking you over.

          • @[email protected]
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            -31 year ago

            People pirate software that is buyable on GoG, itch.io or movies that are on disc all the time. Just because some platforms offer the product with just a license shouldn’t mean it’s now morally justified to pirate it.

            But I see people bringing the statement because of platform like Steam or Netflix.

            • Iapar
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              61 year ago

              Why shouldn’t it mean that? Seems fair to me.

              And it is not just about licenses. Often the pirated version is just better because they took out things like DRMs that make a Game run slower or movies where you don’t have to wait trougth CSI warnings and the likes.

              Piracy is a service problem. People will always choose the way of least resistance and that seems to be piracy for the moment.

              And as i said, some people will pirate stuff anyway no matter what. But those are people we don’t need to talk about because they wouldn’t pay anyway.

              • @[email protected]
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                21 year ago

                Piracy is a service problem. People will always choose the way of least resistance and that seems to be piracy for the moment.

                I said this elsewhere and there are many, many examples of this. For example, in the age of streaming music services where you can pick between a decent handful that have basically everything on each, and that are pretty reasonably priced, how many people are still pirating a ton of music? I know there are some, but if I had to guess, peak music piracy has been gone since the mid oughts. On the other hand, peak video piracy probably hasn’t happened yet and probably will continue to grow until a similar situation is reached. Like, there is no way that Sony/Discovery didn’t just create another wave of piracy.

                But those are people we don’t need to talk about because they wouldn’t pay anyway.

                And oft-overlooked, but lots of them couldn’t pay. Especially today, arbitrary spending is limited for a lot of people, and I’d hazard a guess again that the vast majority can’t afford eight streaming services. They’ll buy a couple they find the most value in, and then when they’re out of money, how is anyone harmed if they just download content on some of the others?

              • @[email protected]
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                -31 year ago

                With what money do you suggest people who make the games or the movies should be paid? The way of least resistance is an incredible weak argument to justify taking the work of others without paying for it.

                • Iapar
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                  31 year ago

                  The money that their employer gives them?

                  How is it weak? And why do you ignore the other thing i wrote about the better product?

                  • @[email protected]
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                    -11 year ago

                    And the money grows on trees? You do realise that the money comes from people purchasing the product?

                    Slower software because of DRM is an issue for, I estimate, perhaps 1 % of the software that is pirated on a regular basis. If even that.

                    The few seconds of a screen you “have to wait through”, no, I do not think that justifies not paying for an entire movie.

        • Patariki
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          71 year ago

          I do agree that the workers should be paid, but they have absolutely no say in what the company does at the top. It might be that a lot of them don’t agree with the company’s actions. Only way to remedy that is to democratize companies.

          • Sway
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            1 year ago

            When tech companies say they want to “democratize” they typically mean they are making a service more widely available to the consumer. The democracy bit is that the consumer “votes” with their wallet. A notable early adopter was Amazon, and I would hardly think that the public, today, see that organization as a paragon of virtue. So, in this sense of the word we’re somewhat failing ourselves here.

            In the context you present, the companies themselves become little democracies internally. This sounds nice but would ultimately lead to chaos and ruin for those companies. I think this would lead to highly unstable, unprofitable businesses that no investor would ever give money to, or at least not expect any returns from.

            Furthermore, I don’t necessarily think it would benefit the consumer in the end. Maybe the employees mostly vote to have a good solid ethical company, or maybe they vote in their own best interests to bring home higher wages and/or just keep their jobs safe. One could argue we just witnessed one such example of this with the recent OpenAI debacle with Sam Altman. Board fired him for potentially going against the stated charter of the company (one that has an ethical basis of essentially putting the security and well being of humanity above all else), at the risk of destroying an $87billion company, yet the employees staged a mutiny forcing the board to reinstate him.

            But I digress. At the end of the day I think the most we can ever really expect from companies is that they will, inevitably, find new and creative ways to extract ever increasing amounts of money from us, until such time that we simply cease giving it to them.

            Edit: spelling.

        • baltakatei
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          31 year ago

          I would argue the original theft was when the publisher coerced creators to sign away their copyright power due to the monopoly the publisher has on the market: i.e. if you don’t sign your rights away, you can’t play.

          In theory, creators could punish publishers by going on strike, but publishers abuse copyright law to remove potential competitors striking creators might flee to. The DMCA’s overly broad application of DRM that also prevents creators from freeing their content from publishers also inhibits competition by increasing switching costs for customers who build up a library or DRM’s content that they cannot transfer to another publisher.

          Breaking up monopolies by restoring anti-trust law to a pre-Reagan state would prevent the original coersion-theft of rights from creators since creators could reassign copyright from misbehaving publishers, enabling customers to transfer their purchased libraries to another publisher.

    • @[email protected]
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      21 year ago

      I don’t have a problem with it morally because for things like what happened with Sony where people reasonably believe they bought something and would have access to it forever, but no. So fuck these companies I don’t give a shit about them.

      But you’re absolutely right, and you’ll be downvoted for it. I want a luxury good and don’t want to pay the price, so I take it. It’s the same for virtually every other pirate. It’s not justified, it’s just morally ambiguous. But people need to convince themselves that they are justified, because they don’t want to admit they are commiting a bad act. Literally someone else in this thread is arguing its moral imperative to pirate. Lol

      • @[email protected]
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        21 year ago

        I want a luxury good and don’t want to pay the price

        There are certainly aspects of this, but the primary reason I pirate is not because of this, and I suspect there are quite a few people for whom this is also true. In the early oughts once I started getting some money and in basically the infancy of the digital media age, I did try to buy stuff the corporate way. And I got burned by it too many times (probably 3-4, but really once is probably enough.) So now I don’t ever even attempt to “buy” something that is digital and DRM encumbered, and I’m more than fine “demoing” a game or whatever. By the time iTunes started selling movies and TV, my purchasing of content I expected to own was limited only to places that released DRM-free.

        These days, I have a little more money that I could be spending on this type of content, but Sony just demonstrated exactly why I -never- will (and they’re just the latest in a long line.) You know that there were people that bought stuff that were still in the middle of watching it or just bought it a few minutes ago who Sony/Discovery effectively just robbed. I’m sure Sony/Discovery just created a many, many pirates with this action.

        Further, there is far more content than I could possibly purchase, so the money I do spend on digital goods, I do so either with the expectation it’s ephemeral (like a subscription service - it’s impossible guarantee they’ll even stay in business) or that I actually own it, eg: DRM free. If I’m out of money to spend, I can’t find a moral or ethical reason that makes piracy wrong, and I think actually it’s likely that it benefits everyone. When I was younger especially, I couldn’t afford much, but I pirated a lot. In Doctorow’s case specifically, I’ve bought some of his books, but that’s only because I was able to download some of the earlier work and then spend the money when I had it. With bands in particular, I can guarantee they have made far more money from me than in a world where piracy didn’t exist.

        If you apply this type of concept to basically anything else, no one would buy it. If you go to Target and grab a t-shirt, and someone whips out a contract -after- you’ve paid which they demand you sign before you can have the shirt that they can come to your home and take it whenever they want, no one would do it. Or that you can’t wear that shirt into a Walmart without getting sued. Or that you can’t cut the sleeves off or turn it into a scarf later. If you went back a second time and bought another shirt and they come and take them both, everyone would look at you like the sucker.

        So yeah, if by some magic piracy stopped existing tomorrow, I wouldn’t suddenly be a Sony/Discovery customer, I’d just take up woodworking or some shit. While some piracy is probably always going to exist that’s as you describe, piracy is a service problem.

        • @[email protected]
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          -11 year ago

          That was just a long winded way - s very long winded way - of demonstrating my point. Don’t get me wrong, weve followed a similar path and probably a major reason why we both say “fuck these assholes” and don’t feel bad about it.

          But at the end of the day you said nothing to change the point that this is a luxury good you want, but don’t want to pay the price, so you take it.