Moderator: Dictators in Training
lyion wrote:There's no way around it, anymore than saying someone who illegally hacks into a bank and adds cash to their account isn't really taking anything. Both are easily and legally shown as false.
Tacks wrote:I can see both sides. What happens when nobody buys anything anymore and everyone just "copies" everything? How are the companies then to make money and stay in business? Stealing games does nothing to help the industry, period. That being said, if I'm not sure a game is good I play the demo. If a company is too fucking stupid not to put out a demo then yeah I'm likely to burn a copy to see if it sucks or not.
Tacks wrote:I can see both sides. What happens when nobody buys anything anymore and everyone just "copies" everything? How are the companies then to make money and stay in business? Stealing games does nothing to help the industry, period. That being said, if I'm not sure a game is good I play the demo. If a company is too fucking stupid not to put out a demo then yeah I'm likely to burn a copy to see if it sucks or not.
Reynaldo wrote:XBox seems to be on the right track by disallowing Xbox live play if any mods are made to the boxes - at least that's how it was last I heard.
brinstar wrote:in lyion's world, all the books at barnes and noble are shrink wrapped
you can't test drive a new honda to decide if you want to buy it
there are no free samples given at the ice cream store
where does it end??
lyion wrote:Way to be ad hocfully polemic in an otherwise rational and good discussion, Brinstar. Good job, sir.
lyion wrote:What in the world are you talking about? I'd discuss it with you, but you are off in left field with nothing really to talk about.
Note Snero's response to you. Your examples are again not relevant to the simple points I've made, also.
Now, go away Mindi.. Er, Brinstar.
lyion wrote:Since he exudes your previous persona's behavior in this thread , I'm glad the two of you are bonding here.
Hey, maybe the two of you can go start your own thread and let the normals here have a discussion. What a thought!
Narrock wrote:Now my second thought is... what do you find so difficult to understand about what Brinstar posted?
brinstar wrote:now that that's out of the way, how about addressing my argument? why is it okay to sample some things before you pay big money for them, but not other things? why is it okay to sit in barnes and noble and read a whole chapter before you decide whether you even want to buy the book? why is it okay to grab a pair of jeans and see how they fit you in the dressing room before shelling out bucks for them? why is it okay to see how the new mercedes handles a curve at 60mph before you sign the dotted line on the lease? people do these things every day. you've done them, i've done them. it's good sense to try before you buy, everyone knows that!
so what makes those things different than downloading a game to see if it's fun and worth the price tag? why can't i sample an mp3 of a band before i spend $14 to buy their CD? where are you drawing the line, and which corporate sponsor has their logo on your pen?
Raymond S. Kraft wrote:The history of the world is the history of civilizational clashes, cultural clashes. All wars are about ideas, ideas about what society and civilization should be like, and the most determined always win.
Those who are willing to be the most ruthless always win. The pacifists always lose, because the anti-pacifists kill them.
now that that's out of the way, how about addressing my argument? why is it okay to sample some things before you pay big money for them, but not other things? why is it okay to sit in barnes and noble and read a whole chapter before you decide whether you even want to buy the book? why is it okay to grab a pair of jeans and see how they fit you in the dressing room before shelling out bucks for them? why is it okay to see how the new mercedes handles a curve at 60mph before you sign the dotted line on the lease? people do these things every day. you've done them, i've done them. it's good sense to try before you buy, everyone knows that!
brinstar wrote:in lyion's world, all the books at barnes and noble are shrink wrapped
you can't test drive a new honda to decide if you want to buy it
there are no free samples given at the ice cream store
where does it end??
IMHO there are two types of pirates:
1. the jerkwads - they pirate stuff they know they want, specifically to avoid paying for it
2. those practicing "caveat emptor" - before they irrevocably cough up $50 for a game (or $14 for an album, to make another comparison), they want to make sure their purchase will be satisfying. see above for perfectly normal examples of Try-Before-Buy
if you're to able to shut down the neocon part of your brain and look at this issue both ways, you'll see that Type 1 Pirates should indeed be punished, and no one has yet posted anything contrary. Type 2 Pirates are simply practicing caution and sense with their hard-earned money.
the problem then becomes: do we carpetbomb the whole countryside, just to get a few Type 1 offenders? of course not, that's tyranny. if it's worth that much money to the software companies, they should spend the amount of money they claim they're losing on piracy protection innovations.
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