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#181 | |
The Night Was Moist
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#182 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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A corrective may be The Big Sort: Why the Clustering of Like-Minded America Is Tearing Us Apart Polarization locks people into the thinking of a group whose ideas they started out only mildly favoring. |
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#183 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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There are undoubtedly average income people, from wealthly countries, who pay US$150 for a book reader, and then, some of them, buy books to put on it when they could get them free from a library. Thus the thread about people who compulsively buy books they can't comfortably afford. But the most plausible explanation for paying good money for entertainment you can mostly get for free is affluence. Of course, in America, affluent people think themselves middle class. Not too many in the 10 percent, or 1 percent, admit to it. Last edited by SteveEisenberg; 07-17-2012 at 10:08 PM. |
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#184 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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People self-segregating into comfortable, self-reinforcing and radicalizing "outlook ghettos" that exclude any ideas that might possibly challenge their world view. Humans are tribal by nature and if all you surround yourself reinforces your starting position, eventually anybody who differs become "other", alien, and by definition, *wrong*. The whole 1%-99% narrative is built off that: just like the piracy debate, among other "controversies" where people "talk" past each other, slinging arguments from their cast-in-concrete bunkers, using selective "statistics" to simplify complex issues out of all resemblance to reality. Faced with contradictory data or opinions, the instant emotional response is to go after the messenger and their motivations to delegitimize their position without having to consider it. And its not a new phenomenon by any stretch; it's just more visible in our age of internet "annonimity". Too much rationalization, not enough rationality. (See above quote-fest.) ![]() Which is one reason I think Goodkind might be on to something; "name and shame" is an emotional attack rather than a coldly legalistic one. Not sure it'll have much of an effect, but when faced with people who instinctively shrug off rational appeals... Surely there must be *some* way to get through the bunker mentality? ![]() Last edited by fjtorres; 07-17-2012 at 10:01 PM. |
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#185 |
Are you gonna eat that?
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i've admitted to my own sailing of the seven seas but this whole thing has made me start to rethink it. i'm not an incredibly social person and i'm far more afraid of being singled out or on the radar/"poop" list of someone whose work that i enjoy than i am of some nebulous laws. the merest whiff of the possibility that something like this could happen is giving me the heebie jeebies just thinking about it. goodkind cut through the anonymity that people think the internet affords them and to me thats scarier than anything and more effective than any moralizing. i seriously doubt most people would want a spotlight pointed directly at them.
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#186 | |
Wizard
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And copying is often percieved as wrong and shoddy behavior even if no physical theft is involved. Copying someones exam answers for instance. As to the caviar statement, my opinion is that only someone who wants his caviar without working for it would harbour such a bizarre opinion. If you are that smart, you should be rolling in caviar. Oh well, keep the Red Flag flying. |
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#187 | |
Grand Master of Flowers
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By contrast, to be in the top 1%, you need an annual income of just over $500,000. Much harder to reach through traditional salaried jobs, but I wouldn't be surprised if a few people on MR made that much. I'm not sure why you think that what you study has no impact on whether you can join the top 1%; there are no guarantees, of course, but there are ways to increase your chances significantly. Median income for specialist physicians is $360,000, for example. Re: Goodkind - I'm not sure where I heard him vilified...but certainly here, to some extent. Last edited by Andrew H.; 07-17-2012 at 10:58 PM. |
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#188 | |
Apprentice Curmudgeon.
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As for choices having little to do with success, that is possibly among the top half dozen of the most ridiculous claims I have ever heard. You believe that someone who chooses not to obtain a high school education, who chooses not to follow that with a tertiary education, who chooses not to work hard in their chosen career path, who chooses not to save and invest wisely, has the same chance of success as a person makes all of those choices? Nothing in the article that you link to supports this. Did you form your opinion based on the fleeting status of blue collar lottery winners? I am curious - what do you base this almost comical claim upon? How can you believe that effort is not "usually" rewarded? Why do you feel that a person's life is controlled by nothing but chance? That those who are successful are simply luckier than those who aren't? My wife and I (I earn well, but she earns more as CEO of her own company) are in the top ten percent of households, but we are not in the US. Being in the top ten percent is not too difficult if you are prepared to plan well and work hard, to delay gratification, to not waste opportunity or resources. If I am to believe you, I might have reached the same status if I had dropped out of university and spent my life surfing and having fun. Gee, if only I had known. (Sorry if I seem a little sarcastic, but that is my natural reaction to your very strange claims.) |
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#189 |
Bah, humbug!
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The tone of this thread has shown that there are obviously differing viewpoints, and no one is going to persuade the other that they are wrong. Please feel free to disagree with a person's opinions, or dispute their facts or data, providing you do so politely. When posting, address your criticisms to those opinions, facts and data rather than the person. Refer to MobileRead's Guidelines, specifically the full text of the very first item. The MobileRead Moderation Team Spoiler:
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#190 |
Addict
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I think Goodkind did exactly the right thing in "outing" his pirate. Writing is hard work, and that Goodkind can profit from it now is only due to years he spent not profiting from it while he learned his craft.
There was recently a kefuffle at NPR regarding an intern publicly boasting about how she pirates songs. It generated a superb response from David Clowery, which points out how piracy shifts the monetary gain away from the artist and to large corporations, namely the file-share sites that sell advertising based on the content they're (*cough*) "hosting." While the article is about music downloads, it seems equally applicable to books. It's well worth a read (link to full article below, and short excerpt): http://thetrichordist.wordpress.com/...gs-considered/ "I must disagree with the underlying premise of what you have written. Fairly compensating musicians is not a problem that is up to governments and large corporations to solve. It is not up to them to make it “convenient” so you don’t behave unethically. (Besides–is it really that inconvenient to download a song from iTunes into your iPhone? Is it that hard to type in your password? I think millions would disagree.) ... The fundamental shift in principals and morality is about who gets to control and exploit the work of an artist. The accepted norm for hudreds of years of western civilization is the artist exclusively has the right to exploit and control his/her work for a period of time. ...By allowing the artist to treat his/her work as actual property, the artist can decide how to monetize his or her work. This system has worked very well for fans and artists. Now we are being asked to undo this not because we think this is a bad or unfair way to compensate artists but simply because it is technologically possible for corporations or individuals to exploit artists work without their permission on a massive scale and globally. We are being asked to continue to let these companies violate the law without being punished or prosecuted. We are being asked to change our morality and principals to match what I think are immoral and unethical business models. Who are these companies? They are sites like The Pirate Bay, or Kim Dotcom and Megaupload. They are “legitimate” companies like Google that serve ads to these sites through AdChoices and Doubleclick. They are companies like Grooveshark that operate streaming sites without permission from artists and over the objections of the artist, much less payment of royalties lawfully set by the artist. They are the venture capitalists that raise money for these sites. They are the hardware makers that sell racks of servers to these companies. And so on and so on. What the corporate backed Free Culture movement is asking us to do is analogous to changing our morality and principles to allow the equivalent of looting. Say there is a neighborhood in your local big city. Let’s call it The ‘Net. In this neighborhood there are record stores. Because of some antiquated laws, The ‘Net was never assigned a police force. So in this neighborhood people simply loot all the products from the shelves of the record store. People know it’s wrong, but they do it because they know they will rarely be punished for doing so. What the commercial Free Culture movement (see the “hybrid economy”) is saying is that instead of putting a police force in this neighborhood we should simply change our values and morality to accept this behavior. We should change our morality and ethics to accept looting because it is simply possible to get away with it. And nothing says freedom like getting away with it, right? But it’s worse than that. It turns out that Verizon, AT&T, Charter etc etc are charging a toll to get into this neighborhood to get the free stuff. Further, companies like Google are selling maps (search results) that tell you where the stuff is that you want to loot. Companies like Megavideo are charging for a high speed looting service (premium accounts for faster downloads). Google is also selling ads in this neighborhood and sharing the revenue with everyone except the people who make the stuff being looted. Further, in order to loot you need to have a $1,000 dollar laptop, a $500 dollar iPhone or $400 Samsumg tablet. It turns out the supposedly “free” stuff really isn’t free. In fact it’s an expensive way to get “free” music. (Like most claimed “disruptive innovations”it turns out expensive subsidies exist elsewhere.) Companies are actually making money from this looting activity. These companies only make money if you change your principles and morality! And none of that money goes to the artists!" |
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#191 | |
Groupie
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#192 |
Addict
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Heh. Of course not. The most interesting point I was trying to highlight with the above quotes is that the "Free Culture" movement fails to note its own hypocrisy in paying regular money to large corporations while depriving individual artists of the royalties they need to support themselves. While musicians can at least tour to earn additional income, writers are primarily dependent on book sales, making piracy of the sort Goodkind outed even more problematic.
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#193 | |
Groupie
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#194 | |
Addict
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And this case in point is very much one of an individual artist, as Goodkind released the book himself, with no media-company in the middle. So the pirate in this generated revenue for tech companies by ripping off an individual. Way to rebel against the system, pirate...err...maybe not. ![]() |
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#195 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Just because you can blow somebody's brains with a gun doesn't mean you should; just because you can "publish" somebody's creation and freely give it away to a few million of your closest friends doesn't mean it is right to do so. We should be aspiring to a more ethical culture were people stop to *think* about the effects of their actions and not rely solely on government coercion by force of law to get people to respect each other's rights. And that last bit seems to be what Goodkind is up to; as a (reported) follower of objectivism, he believes his individual property rights are being infringed and is responding on a direct personal basis. The guy disintermediating publishers in his most recent release chose to disintermediate the government and took his grievance directly to the pirate. Believe what you will about his beliefs, he is certainly being consistent. |
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