• TWeaK
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    110 months ago

    I don’t know how much more simply I can put this other than I feel that creators deserve to get paid for the work they create and piracy deprives them of that and is, therefore, theft.

    You’ve explained this many times. Your definition is wrong, because your definition of theft is incomplete.

    Theft requires depriving the owner of something tangible. Not just a potential profit, but an actual loss.

    Copyright infringement only involves the potential profit. There is no actual loss.

    The creator doesn’t lose something from copyright infringement. There is a potential loss, but not an actual loss. More often than not, that potential loss would have been zero compared to if copyright infringement hadn’t occurred - the pirate would not have bought the product either way.

    Digital piracy is not theft, it’s less than that. It may be wrong, it may be similar, but it’s not theft.

    • Zoolander
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      010 months ago

      Your definition is wrong, because your definition of theft is incomplete.

      It is not. The author is deprived of something tangible. They are deprived of the cost that they are asking for the exchange of being able to consume what they created.

      Copyright infringement only involves the potential profit. There is no actual loss.

      We’re not talking about copyright infringement. That is a legal term that only applies to the legality of the action. I am not discussing the legality.

      There is a potential loss, but not an actual loss.

      This is not true and, since you continue to try and argue the legal matter, it has already been determined that piracy is not a potential loss, even though that’s not at all what my argument is about.

      Digital piracy is not theft, it’s less than that. It may be wrong, it may be similar, but it’s not theft.

      We’ll have to agree to disagree. Whether something is tangible or not is irrelevant. What is relevant is whether someone who creates something should be paid by the people who consume the thing they created.

      • TWeaK
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        110 months ago

        They are deprived of the cost that they are asking for the exchange of being able to consume what they created.

        That cost occurs regardless of whether or not copyright infringement occurs. There is no further loss. Thus, you cannot assign a loss to copyright infringement.

        We’re not talking about copyright infringement.

        We are talking about copyright infringement. That’s what “piracy” is.

        I hope you see now that the definition of words really does matter.

        it has already been determined that piracy is not a potential loss

        You’ve said that, but you’re wrong. This is a clear misassociation.

        Whether something is tangible or not is irrelevant.

        It very much is relevant. If an action causes a loss, then the effect has a cause. If the loss occurs regardless of the action, then you cannot assign cause and effect.

        We’re digging down further into the princples of things. I feel like, before long, we’ll be talking about how magnets work.

        • Zoolander
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          010 months ago

          We are talking about copyright infringement.

          We’re not. I’m not making any kind of legal distinction.

          I think we just need to agree to disagree. You’re ignoring the very central part of my argument to try and argue the legal distinctions that are irrelevant to my point. If it’s just going to continue to be a semantic argument then I’m not interested in continuing.

          • TWeaK
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            210 months ago

            We’re not. I’m not making any kind of legal distinction.

            We’re talking about definitions. I say copyright infringement, you say piracy, we mean the same things.

            You say piracy is theft, I say they’re different. That’s where you’re wrong.