|  03-25-2012, 08:15 AM | #166 | |
| Wizard            Posts: 3,418 Karma: 35207650 Join Date: Jun 2011 Device: iPad | Quote: 
  You are, IMO, are making a distinction without a difference. While I agree the reported cost of piracy is way over inflated, it is a crime and it does hurt content producers. DRM is the wrong tool the solve the problem, but the problem is real. We are going in circles about this, and I will drop out of this debate now in order to cease in playing a part in producing a never ending thread filled with, "no its not" ... "yes it is"... "no its not"... "yes it is"   | |
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|  03-25-2012, 08:24 AM | #167 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 2,227 Karma: 12029046 Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: UK Device: Kindle, Kobo Touch, Nook SimpleTouch | 
			
			Ok.  I'm off to get myself a TV.  (I do agree that it is a crime, and also that it is morally wrong, btw.) | 
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|  03-25-2012, 08:45 AM | #168 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,594 Karma: 21245891 Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Libra h20, Paperwhite 2017, Phone & Tablet w Moonreader | 
			
			I was listening to a CBC radio podcast where the Irish band "Fred" was playing and being interviewed.  The interviewer concluded with "If you like their music, buy a cd, go to itunes, or download illegally, because these guys believe in it"  The band said, "yeah, we do".
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|  03-25-2012, 10:04 AM | #169 | |
| Stercus accidit            Posts: 330 Karma: 513878 Join Date: Mar 2012 Device: Nookpadle 6 | Quote: 
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|  03-25-2012, 10:15 AM | #170 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
 Is the real issue "consuming entertainment without paying the creators"--in which case, libraries are immoral--or is it "creators have a moral right to demand limits to their readership?" Saying, "but you COULD email an ebook to a thousand people, so you should be penalized just as much for emailing it once," is like saying, "you COULD use that kitchen knife to murder someone, so you should face attempted murder charges for waving it around in your living room." It's talking about crimes that haven't happened, that are possible with the same tools. | |
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|  03-25-2012, 11:21 AM | #171 | 
| cacoethes scribendi            Posts: 5,818 Karma: 137770742 Join Date: Nov 2010 Location: Australia Device: Kobo Aura One & H2Ov2, Sony PRS-650 | |
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|  03-25-2012, 12:03 PM | #172 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
 I think handwaving past the inflated reported costs is a mistake--without accurate numbers for damages, even if they're rough estimates, we can't establish how *bad* the situation is, and therefore what kind of measures are appropriate to take against it. If digital piracy is costing the entertainment industry billions of dollars, strong measures should be taken. If digital piracy is costing "the entertainment industry" *nothing,* and instead just shifting payments around among authors, game providers, and musicians, that's an entirely different problem--potentially fixable with different licensing and subsidy arrangements among corporations and bypassing the end purchaser entirely. Solutions need to be designed to fix the problems. And they need to take into account that nobody is guaranteed an income; nobody is guaranteed a successful business model. The methods that worked fifty years ago aren't promised to work in the future--if the real issue is "with such an abundance of books, movies, games, music, and other entertainments, people are less interested in the new ones released this month," that's not fixable by stronger DRM or million-dollar lawsuits. If the real issue is, "people want to treat digital files like they've always treated entertainment--something they can freely share with their friends and family," again, that's not going to be fixed by DRM. The backlash against "your spouse should buy a second copy" is going to be much harsher than the backlash against "you may not upload this file to your public Dropbox folder & post a link on Facebook." Sorting out what damages exist and how the new technology blends with consumer culture are essential issues, not sidelines to the question of "how can media corporations continue to raise profits in every new market?" | |
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|  03-25-2012, 12:11 PM | #173 | 
| Addict            Posts: 233 Karma: 256666 Join Date: May 2008 Location: Italy Device: iLiad, PRS-T3, Kobo GLO HD, Paperwhite 2, PB Ultra, Ony Boox Max | 
			
			DRM is a bad thing: it discourage honest reader and doesn't stop piracy. Did you ever noticed that the most part (almost all) of pirated ebook are from scanning paper book?
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|  03-25-2012, 12:19 PM | #174 | |
| temp. out of service            Posts: 2,818 Karma: 24285242 Join Date: May 2010 Location: Duisburg (DE) Device: PB 623 | Quote: 
 With such a logic applied I'm damn happy I haven't been accused of raping somebody - based only on having the tools to do it. | |
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|  03-25-2012, 12:46 PM | #175 | |||
| Connoisseur            Posts: 65 Karma: 2409168 Join Date: Mar 2011 Device: kindle | Quote: 
 All of the pbooks you have purchased were created and distributed by the parties legally entitled to. If the publisher does a print-run of 50,000 copies then there are that many copies in existence. A library can loan out a single copy a hundred times but availability is still limited by that single copy and borrowers are bound by the established rules and availability limitations. You have the ability to photocopy a pbook as many times as you want but that takes time and paper, both of which are inconvenient, limited, and result in an inferior product. Illegal digital distribution creates a brand new copy whenever a new downloader wants one. There is no way to compare this to pbook copyright infringement. Quote: 
 Quote: 
 I agree that the crime of "piracy" is overstated and incorrectly applied to individuals downloading something they want for free. DRM and punishing downloaders are lame attempts to address this perceived crime. The prime benefits of digital content are also its Achilles' heel. The creators benefit from an infinite and zero-cost supply of their products and instant delivery to customers anywhere on the planet. These benefits come at a price, though. The only way to truly hinder digital copyright theft is to not digitize your product. If publishers/creators decide to digitize then piracy is just a cost of doing business and should be factored in when creating the product, pricing it, and coming up with a marketing strategy. We can decrease piracy of our content by providing value-add, making the content inherently better than the best the pirates can provide, reasonably pricing it, and making it easier to just buy it than it is to steal it. Hollywood and publishers of records, books, and software would be much better off focusing their energies on decreasing piracy in those ways than slapping handcuffs on their customers or using archaic, consumer-unfriendly methods to lock down that which cannot be locked. Last edited by Muckraker; 03-25-2012 at 12:48 PM. | |||
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|  03-25-2012, 01:07 PM | #176 | ||||
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 5,187 Karma: 25133758 Join Date: Nov 2008 Location: SF Bay Area, California, USA Device: Pocketbook Touch HD3 (Past: Kobo Mini, PEZ, PRS-505, Clié) | Quote: 
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|  03-25-2012, 09:08 PM | #177 | 
| Resident Curmudgeon            Posts: 80,727 Karma: 150249619 Join Date: Nov 2006 Location: Roslindale, Massachusetts Device: Kobo Libra 2, Kobo Aura H2O, PRS-650, PRS-T1, nook STR, PW3 | 
			
			If I download an eBook that I was never going to pay for, who have I hurt?
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|  03-26-2012, 06:24 AM | #178 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,538 Karma: 264065402 Join Date: Jun 2009 Location: Taiwan Device: HP Touchpad, Sony Duo 13, Lumia 920, Kobo Aura HD | 
			
			You download an ebook that you have no right to get --- for you the end result is exactly the same as for a thief. You wind up with something that doesn't belong to you. It is different from theft only for the copyright owner, for him/her it may or may not be a lost sale.
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|  03-26-2012, 06:31 AM | #179 | |
| Gnu            Posts: 1,222 Karma: 15625359 Join Date: Jul 2009 Location: UK Device: BeBook,JetBook Lite,PRS-300-350-505-650,+ran out of space to type | Quote: 
 Of course over here in England you can shoot a Welsh person with a bow and arrow in Chester, inside the city walls and after midnight. So let's not get too picky about these things (So if your a Wrexham fan make sure you've made it outside the walls after the next York game - It seems to be a little unclear if the Welsh person has to be inside the walls or your OK if the person firing the bow is inside, so I'd steer clear of the Keystones pub as well).   | |
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|  03-26-2012, 07:03 AM | #180 | |
| Stercus accidit            Posts: 330 Karma: 513878 Join Date: Mar 2012 Device: Nookpadle 6 | Quote: 
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