|  02-21-2012, 01:57 PM | #106 | ||
| Wizard            Posts: 4,896 Karma: 33602910 Join Date: Oct 2010 Device: PocketBook 903 & 360+ | Quote: 
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 On top of that you have 25% of all responders didn't buy music in the last year. Out of these 33% are pirates and only 7% of them don't buy music making up 2.5% of the total. The rest of 22.5% are from the 67% that don't pirate. That comes up to 33.6% of those that don't pirate also don't buy music. | ||
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|  02-21-2012, 02:09 PM | #107 | |
| Zealot            Posts: 107 Karma: 1226339 Join Date: Jul 2010 Device: Kindle (4th gen) | Quote: 
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|  02-21-2012, 02:14 PM | #108 | |
| Guru            Posts: 826 Karma: 18573626 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Nexus 7 (2013) | Quote: 
 No one is saying that they have a right to watch Game of Thrones (or whatever), but it's a business reality that people will find the content they want, whether it's available legitimately or not. If HBO decides they only want cable subscribers to have legit access, that's fine, but then increased piracy is going to be one of the costs of that decision. People do like "free shit", but more than a few pirates would be willing to buy if they could, or if the legitimate version was comparable to the pirate version (i.e. without DRM). Research fully backs this up, regardless of what your gut feelings on the issue happen to be. Last edited by Ninjalawyer; 02-21-2012 at 02:19 PM. | |
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|  02-21-2012, 02:21 PM | #109 | |
| Youngsta            Posts: 202 Karma: 1041786 Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: San Diego Device: kindle | Quote: 
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|  02-21-2012, 02:25 PM | #110 | 
| Feral Underclass            Posts: 3,622 Karma: 26821535 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Yorkshire, tha noz Device: 2nd hand paperback | |
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|  02-21-2012, 02:31 PM | #111 | |
| Youngsta            Posts: 202 Karma: 1041786 Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: San Diego Device: kindle | Quote: 
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|  02-21-2012, 02:35 PM | #112 | 
| Guru            Posts: 826 Karma: 18573626 Join Date: Jun 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Touch, Nexus 7 (2013) | 
			
			I don't want to harp on this too much, since it's not anything to do with your main point, but I suspect sharing an HBOGO account and using a torrent are equivalent evils from HBO's perspective; neither one has you paying HBO for the content, which is all HBO cares about.
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|  02-21-2012, 02:42 PM | #113 | |
| Youngsta            Posts: 202 Karma: 1041786 Join Date: Jan 2012 Location: San Diego Device: kindle | Quote: 
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|  02-21-2012, 04:24 PM | #114 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,812 Karma: 26912940 Join Date: Apr 2010 Device: sony PRS-T1 and T3, Kobo Mini and Aura HD, Tablet | 
			
			Life just isn't fair.  DRM is way down on my list of life's unfairness. After all their are 8 year olds who know how to remove DRM and are IMO more mature than those who justify it by using evil, infested, virus to refer to DRMed ebooks, or refer to themselves as liberators of ebooks. The 8 year olds are mostly unaware of the implications and just do it because they can. As a single person I pay the same medical premium as the guy in the next office with 6 dependents. I also pay higher taxes. I will reap on average less benefits before and after retirement. I should be able to share my benefits in the same way with someone else (non-spouse) legally, but it is not going to happen. Getting upset because I cannot share an ebook with my mother/spouse/friend (which can be done legally in many ways) or because I cannot guarantee access to the book forever on any reader pales in significance. Especially as I cannot access my 8 track tapes or cassette tapes, my computer software from the 70's or 80's, LP records, videos on videodisc, on my player/computer of choice. I cannot even access paperbooks on my ebook reader and have no recourse if they get damaged or destroyed. There is no justice. Helen. | 
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|  02-21-2012, 05:10 PM | #115 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 1,594 Karma: 21245891 Join Date: Apr 2011 Location: Canada Device: Kobo Libra h20, Paperwhite 2017, Phone & Tablet w Moonreader | 
			
			Well, I do consider a book "liberated" when DRM is removed, but indeed, it is low on my list of "life is not fair", issues too, in the grand scheme of things.  My mother died recently, for instance, and that bugs me more than DRM in some book.   But when discussing books, and e-reading, different people have different standards and I respect that. For the context of book buying standards, I do find DRM highly annoying, though, and still take a stand for what I want in my recreational spending. Reading is a recreation, and therefore I have the option and leisure, to buy and use only what works for me. But for the most part, I buy tree books since they work best for my household as a whole. Clearly people who remove DRM from books also don't like DRM, otherwise they wouldn't bother starting kids really young teaching them how. | 
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|  02-21-2012, 05:14 PM | #116 | |
| Loves Ellipsis...            Posts: 1,554 Karma: 7899232 Join Date: Dec 2010 Location: Washington, DC Device: Kobo Wifi (broken), nook STR (returned), Kobo Touch, Sony T1 | Quote: 
 If I had any 8 tracks...I would format shift. I've done the same with all my CDs...but I value my vinyl in its current format so I've not shifted those. And there's nothing wrong with analog (DTBs)...but it can still be shifted, too... | |
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|  02-21-2012, 05:30 PM | #117 | 
| Evangelist            Posts: 409 Karma: 1244354 Join Date: Jan 2012 Device: Kobo Touch | 
			
			Well, this is an e-reader forum, not a "life is unfair in general forum". Of course there are things that are more important than "DRM or no DRM". People are dying from hunger all over the world, for example. Or whole species are getting extinct... if we start that, we will never stop. There will always be things that are more important than other things. But if we'd try to only talk about what's really important... if there was a way to determine what is really important... wouldn't that harshly limit us in what we could talk about? | 
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|  02-21-2012, 06:02 PM | #118 | 
| Feral Underclass            Posts: 3,622 Karma: 26821535 Join Date: Jan 2010 Location: Yorkshire, tha noz Device: 2nd hand paperback | 
			
			I have all my vinyl recorded through an M-Audio Delta at 24bit with a 96khz sampling rate, they sound almost as good as the originals. I also went through a phase of filming the record spinning round to make DVDs from them, but gave up on that.
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|  02-21-2012, 08:14 PM | #119 | |
| Grand Sorcerer            Posts: 7,470 Karma: 44460032 Join Date: Jun 2008 Location: near Philadelphia USA Device: Kindle Kids Edition, Fire HD 10 (11th generation) | Quote: 
 -- If a library has a fixed book budget, whether paper or eBook, having to pay PLR expenses is not going to change the amount they spend on books, just how they distribute it. So it doesn't really affect the degree to which I, a lifelong taxpaper and library addict, am a book freeloader. -- The benefits will overwhelmingly go to prosperous authors who get a lot of readers. The less popular authors who get a large portion of their meagre income from library purchases will be harmed because, after the libraries pay PLR to PD James and JK Rowling, they won't be able to buy as many less popular books. Where you hopefully agree with me is in saying that when you borrow a book from the library, you have compensated the author from your taxes (or university tuition charges), and thus are not freeloading. Last edited by SteveEisenberg; 02-22-2012 at 06:35 AM. | |
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|  02-22-2012, 10:47 AM | #120 | 
| Wizard            Posts: 4,896 Karma: 33602910 Join Date: Oct 2010 Device: PocketBook 903 & 360+ | |
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