worrywort, on 01 December 2011 - 11:33 AM, said:
Mea Culpa. That's not to say the slogan is wrong, however, is it? The implementation of extensive surveillance and the use of that slogan to cover it are separate from the principle it represents. Personally, I see nothing wrong with cameras on every street corner, as long as the footage is treated as private, confidential, and destroyed within a reasonable time frame.
While I grant any such system is open to massive potential for abuse, it isn't *wrong* in and of itself. The people who use it, however...
Morgoth, on 01 December 2011 - 11:34 AM, said:
Oh I agree with most of that. Mind you, receiving different punishments for the same crime is the consequence of having hundreds of legal systems around the globe. It's the same with every sort of crime, not just pirating . An international set of laws governing the internet would certainly not be bad, but it's also rather impossible to implement when China, the US and the EU have such radically different point of views. As such you pretty much have to accept that you'll be governed by the legal code of the country you live in.
The problem here though is that people are not committing these crimes in isolation to their own country. It would be closer to have a bunch of people commit a bank robbery in Germany, then flee the country to France. Under whose legislation are they to be tried? Standard practice (if the crime was large enough) would be extradition. That, obviously, does not work for piracy with a dollar value in the hundreds at most, when the people in question were also not, at the time, in the nation in question.
Additionally, they didn't take anything from the producer. This is not corporate theft, this is Person A making available a copy of Item A to Persons B, C, D, and E, in part to each, so that each may then share that part with the rest in exchange for the other parts. Kinda. So while these people are technically depriving the producer of Item A of income, they did not, in fact, take anything from the producer - so what exactly are you charging people for? Receiving and transmitting illegally copied data? That crime could conceivably be tried in your country of origin, but bear in mind that it was truly an international crime committed with the aid of the other Persons, at the facilitation of Person A, and affecting the producer, who may very well be in a different country altogether! So who are you fining, where is the money going, and how do you place a value on it? Very, very hard to do.
worrywort, on 01 December 2011 - 11:43 AM, said:
Macros, on 01 December 2011 - 11:31 AM, said:
People need to stop thinking piracy isn't theft, I'm not sayign I do or don't participate but I don't try and claim bullshit moral high ground that my D/ling something free when it's copyrighted isn't stealing. it is, point and case.
and don't bring up the lending CD's bollocks either, if you loan your friend a CD then you no longer have it, so can't listen to it. <--- thats a fullstop
Well, if you burned yourself some backup copies, perfectly legally, you certainly can listen to it while your friend is borrowing the original. You no longer have the physical product, but that's all. And If you downloaded it in the first place, legally, you still never had the physical product to begin with. Even downloading something illegally deprives nobody else of that product, including the content creator; it simply avoids the monetary transaction that perhaps ought to have gone with it. That's not a pro-piracy argument, but as a matter of fact, stealing a car or even a physical CD from Best Buy, and downloading that album for free, aren't particularly comparable acts. Illegal or no, they're simply two different things.
Also, this. Breach of copyright is NOT theft. If you could magically duplicate someone's television, and take that duplicate, it would not be theft. The crime is breach of copyright, the practical or material component of that crime is depriving a company of their 'rightful' money, as exchanged for their product.
Anyone who calls 'piracy' theft, stealing, or anything else is BS'ing as much as someone who says they aren't doing anything wrong/breaking any laws. There's a very real, very relevant distinction. Especially seeing as nothing is actually be taken from anyone, as worrywort points out. You're denying a company the money you kinda-sorta-technically owe them, which is not theft.

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