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#61 |
Groupie
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What was the topic again?
Oh yeah, the guy who says you shouldn't pirate ebooks, and does. Or did. Well I for one agree with him: piracy is wrong. Do what he says, not what he does. So he's guilty of being a hypocrassacrit. Or whatever. :-) Doing things like breaking DRM and obscuring geolocation are definitely breaking some somebody's policy or TOS, and in some regions, the law as well. There's no whitewashing it. But these don't seem quite the same as piracy, which is actual theft. If I break DRM on an ebook and otherwise legally pay for it and only use it for my use, I'm prepared to pay the rather trivial consequences if a retailer decides to lock out my account. But exactly what fundamental moral law have I broken, in that case? I haven't stolen anything, or harmed anyone. |
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#62 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Are you under the impression that morality/immorality only attaches to the legal notions of harm or theft?
Again ... I'm not trying to be the arbiter of what people should or shouldn't do--or what should weigh on their conscience or not. Maybe there's an argument that breaking one rule (that you agree not to break) is less immoral than breaking another. I'll not dispute it. But in general; deception in order to get something you want (but couldn't get without the deception) has moral implications. Saying you're willing to abide by conditions that you know full-well you have no intentions of abiding by, carries moral implications. You (rhetorical) should be able to personally shoulder the responsibility for such actions without needing validation from others that it "wasn't so bad." I break some rules. Full stop. The moral consequences of breaking those rules are mine alone to shoulder/ignore. You can't absolve me/make me feel guilty. Full stop. No "but if"s. I own it. Last edited by DiapDealer; 04-26-2019 at 11:39 AM. |
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#63 |
Wizard
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#64 | |
Groupie
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You have to have a moral compass, and a sense of due proportion about these things. Note that there's a difference in degree between breaking a private company's rule, like DRM or walking shoe-less into a restaurant that has a "no shoes no service" sign, versus say, running a concentration camp. |
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#65 |
Grand Sorcerer
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No. I'm not (and can we please, please stop with the all the Godwinization?). I'm not saying anything about BEING (or not being) an moral or immoral person. Those are absolutes that I can't define for others.
I'm saying that indicating you'll abide by rules (stupid or otherwise) that you have no intention of abiding by, has moral implications. Willful deception to get something you want (that you could easily live without) has moral implications. The actions may not be grave enough to tip the scales and make you (again rhetorical) an Immoral Person, but to deny that there are moral implications in play with these personal decisions is pointless. Last edited by DiapDealer; 04-26-2019 at 12:20 PM. |
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#66 | |
Wizard
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The other situation was when someone published a pirated version of "1984" on Amazon and when Amazon realized it they deleted those books from people's Kindles. I don't recall if they offered a refund but my guess is they did. They got very bad PR from that and promised to never do it again, and they've kept that promise. That's not to say a lot of cheating doesn't happen. Read the back of any book or the description of any ebook and you'll soon find that descriptions rarely match the contents of the book very closely. Reviews are a much better guide. And we've all read stories about publishers cheating authors. But in the ways ebook companies have dealt with customers money I think mostly they've been pretty honest. Barry |
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#67 | |
Wizard
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#68 | |
Wizard
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As soon as we say killing someone is right we're getting dangerous. If I had to steal food to feed my starving family I wouldn't hesitate. I don't think I'd ever claim it was right. Necessity, morals and legality are different things. Barry |
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#69 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Moderator Notice Hitler/Nazi references stop now! We're not discussing murder, genocide or anything even remotely life or death here. We're talking about ebooks, ebook piracy, and "moral justice" surrounding ebooks and ebook piracy; as mentioned in the GoodEreader article. Please stop with the over-the-top hyperbole and dramatization. |
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#70 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#71 |
Grand Sorcerer
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Fair enough. In that case you probably wouldn't be putting forth any justification/excuses or seeking any validation/acceptance for your particular brand of rule-breaking to begin with. Which is exactly what I'm suggesting should be the status quo. Make your own decision, and leave me and the rest of the world out of it.
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#72 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#73 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#74 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#75 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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![]() I think that morality with regards to violating copyright law really does depend a lot on 1) if one is a letter of the law verses spirit of the law type 2) How one views copyright, i.e. the author's personal property or a government granted limited monopoly 3) if one even accepts the validity of copyright. 4) what one views as the purpose of copyright, if one even cares about the purpose (see rules are rules post above) I tend to view copyright as purely a method of making sure that authors get paid and thus are encouraged to write more books (i.e. "To Promote the progress of science and useful arts..."). Thus my moral approach to copyright violation is predicated on that. As long as the author gets paid, I don't care about violating geo restrictions. As long as the author gets paid, I don't care about removing DRM or making backup copies for archival purposes (both of which may or may not be allowed under the US fair use doctrine). I think that orphaned works should be made available in some way, shape or fashion. For that matter, I think that all copyright books should be available to the buying public at a reasonable price (a technical term). If they aren't available, then the copyright of that work isn't promoting the progress of useful arts, in my opinion. Others may disagree, but that's how I approach the morality of copyright and ebooks. |
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