Copyright Infringement, Intellectual Property and Pirating

Discussion in 'Politics & Religion' started by Supper, Jun 22, 2008.

  1. northpointaiki

    northpointaiki Guest

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    #101
    That is precisely what Guerilla is saying, that stealing is justified.


     
    northpointaiki, Jun 24, 2008 IP
  2. abdobasha2004

    abdobasha2004 Well-Known Member

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    #102
    i want to know is streaming a radio is illeagal?
     
    abdobasha2004, Jun 24, 2008 IP
  3. lazysloth

    lazysloth Peon

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    #103
    95% of the world wealth is owned by 5% of the population

    thats 5% for the rest of us to scramble over



    So the world is unfair by design,But people are led from the top down

    The top is corrupted and the masses follow
     
    lazysloth, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  4. korr

    korr Peon

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    #104
    According to the RIAA, all radio is a form of theft now.

    Of course, the RIAA has been paying the radio stations for all that promotion for decades. Now suddenly they want to get paid for what they used to pay for.

    In the traditional music model, if you play someone's song you are practically running a commercial for the band. The RIAA screwed up and got rid of all the free commercials they could have had online, and now they want the radio to pay for running commercials for the RIAA!

    What. A. Joke.
     
    korr, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  5. torrentstorage

    torrentstorage Peon

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    #105
    I run a tracker site

    If what you are stealing isn't something physical its not stealing!!!!!!
     
    torrentstorage, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  6. guerilla

    guerilla Notable Member

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    #106
    Uhm, stealing is stealing.

    I think you mean, if you copy something that isn't physical, it isn't stealing. Which is what I keep trying to get at.
     
    guerilla, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  7. wisdomtool

    wisdomtool Moderator Staff

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    #107
    Is it? How about transferring all the balance of your bank account and Paypal to mine? It is not physical and certainly isn't stealing.

     
    wisdomtool, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  8. northpointaiki

    northpointaiki Guest

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    #108
    God, I do love these arbitrary, self-serving definitions, in the self-service of thievery. "Property rights" out the door so long as it's someone other's actual property.

    How about just copying DP in its entirety, and calling it DigitalPunked - Presto! Easy way to riches! Well done, folks! Wonder if Shawn's got a problem with that? :rolleyes:

    Do nothing worth anything, take it wholesale from those that do - a Creed to Live by.

    Not in my world. And not for a good part of recorded human history, for good reason.
     
    northpointaiki, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  9. guerilla

    guerilla Notable Member

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    #109
    Touche!

    Great point WT. I'll have to be careful about defining non-IP as "not physical". However, he's talking about an item which is not scarce. It can be copied as many times as you have drive space, bandwidth and/or media. Your balance cannot be copied. It can only be transferred!
     
    guerilla, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  10. GRIM

    GRIM Prominent Member

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    #110
    Ahh but how about how the government creates currency out of thin air?

    They are copying it as many times as they wish, beyond 'media, bandwidth, or drive space'
     
    GRIM, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  11. northpointaiki

    northpointaiki Guest

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    #111
    It would be nice if someone cut and paste from other than Stephan Kinsella and Lew Rockwell.com to make a point.

    Here's a clue: concepts are defined by Man, for use by Man. Much like the so-called "natural" right to private property (that is anything but natural but constructed, to serve at least some modern societies most optimally), so is this notion that somehow a piece of dirt is property, but what emanates from the genius of Man is good for the commune feeding trough.

    Look - "rights" are so, as they serve human need. It serves no one when an idea that is worked on for 20 years at great personal and fiduciary expense is free to be ripped off by the next parasite, uncreative nemo with a handbook on warez/blacknet scripting by his desktop. who can just swoop in and just rob the creative person blind.

    What a person produces is essential to human progress. That production must include something beyond a dirt clod, with one's brute hand.
     
    northpointaiki, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  12. GRIM

    GRIM Prominent Member

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    #112
    That is nothing more than trying to justify 'stealing'

    If something has a value on any level and is taken, in my eyes that is 'stealing'

    Had you not stolen that software/song/etc it would have had value for the owner of said product to sell it via some method to you.
     
    GRIM, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  13. guerilla

    guerilla Notable Member

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    #113
    That's enabled by legal tender laws. Meaning, it couldn't occur in the wild without being fraud.

    It's also not IP.

    But creative attempt! :D
     
    guerilla, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  14. GRIM

    GRIM Prominent Member

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    #114
    I know it's not IP, but an example of something physical being created out of thin air, copied over and over and over again ;)
     
    GRIM, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  15. guerilla

    guerilla Notable Member

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    #115
    Yup.

    I hear that the same technology can be applied to toilet paper. :)
     
    guerilla, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  16. LogicFlux

    LogicFlux Peon

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    #116
    Brownbacks?
     
    LogicFlux, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  17. korr

    korr Peon

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    #117
    Well the argument against the unlimited duplication of currency is dilution. Same problem happens when you create company shares out of thin air, the value of the existing ones declines.

    Does music suffer the same dilution? I don't think so. For forty-plus years the recording companies have been paying to have their music duplicated and mass-distributed through the radio. The record industry was much more willing to duplicate their content back then, they also made more money. Hmmm
     
    korr, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  18. GRIM

    GRIM Prominent Member

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    #118
    The radio is far different than being able to select at any time which song you want.

    Radio was a tease, a free/cheap form of advertising for the record companies to entice you to purchase the full record/tape/cd, etc.
     
    GRIM, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  19. LogicFlux

    LogicFlux Peon

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    #119
    I don't really see why a distinction should be made between physical products and easily cloneable non-physical products. Why should a physical product be considered more inherently worthy of IP protection?
     
    LogicFlux, Jun 25, 2008 IP
  20. earthfaze

    earthfaze Peon

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    #120
    Tracker sites are not necessarily illegal. It is a means of sharing files, but if the tracker site owner/server,whatever is storing unlicensed copies and distributing it, it may be illegal depending on what country you live in. There are lots of other ways to share files. What is illegal in many countries, is the distribution, especially for profit, of a copyrighted work. Personally I think fines in the US are insane, but I also think their needs to be some protection from having a guy download, rip, and make multiple copies for sale or distribution. The RIAA are a bunch of ambulance chasing guns for hire. Payola ruined radio. There are plenty of free songs legally on the internet, and if you have to have a specific song you can buy them cheap.
     
    earthfaze, Jun 25, 2008 IP