• TWeaK@lemm.ee
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    7 months ago

    Piracy is defined as a civil offense, meanwhile theft is defined as a crime. Theft is also defined as depriving someone of something - eg, if I take your bike, you no longer have a bike, but if I copy your bike and build my own then you still have your bike and haven’t lost anything.

    “Potential lost income” is abstract, it doesn’t necessarily exist and the victim of copyright infringement isn’t really losing anything - they don’t even provide the bandwidth you download it with. Ultimately 1 pirated download =/= 1 lost sale, as people download more crap than they would be willing to buy.

    • Zoolander@lemmy.world
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      7 months ago

      I’m not arguing the legal definition of this so everything you’ve said is irrelevant.

      • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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        7 months ago

        The legal definition is THE definition, it’s literally what the word means, and where the concepts of both originate.

        What you’re saying isn’t irrelevant, it’s just completely ignorant and wrong.

        • Zoolander@lemmy.world
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          7 months ago

          The legal definition is not the definition. That is just nonsense. There are an innumerable amount of terms that have a literary definition that is not the same as the legal definition.

          • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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            7 months ago

            You’re trying to say that your definition is the only valid one, which conveniently is one that your argument is entirely reliant upon.

            It isn’t valid, you’re wrong, your argument does not hold water.

            • Zoolander@lemmy.world
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              7 months ago

              That is not what I’m saying. I’m saying the definition isn’t relevant. I don’t care if you call it “stealing”, “leeching”, “pirating”, or any other word. The fact that people are attempting to make a distinction proves that pirating is not a standard acquisition of content. It’s implicitly admitting that it’s stealing from someone.

              • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                7 months ago

                You don’t care what words you use, because you’re talking about something else, an idea that’s only in your head.

                I’m using the specific definitions, because we’re talking about a specific and complicated problem.

                Theft is distinctly different from copyright infringement - even when you set aside that one is a crime and the other is a civil rights infringement. That’s just how the law defines it, and the definition is pretty clear cut.

                When you steal from someone, they no longer have the thing. If I steal a DVD, the store no longer has that DVD. Not only have they lost a potential sale, but they had to buy that DVD, so they’ve lost the money they used to buy it. They’ve also definitely lost a sale, because they can’t sell it to anyone else

                If I pirate something, no one loses anything. They haven’t lost a tangible object, they haven’t even paid for the bandwidth to deliver it - that came from someone else. Maybe they lost a potential sale, but more likely I probably wasn’t going to buy it either way. They still have just as much ability to sell to others.

                The two concepts are distinctly different. Theft is different from copying. You can argue that copying is wrong - and I’d agree with you - but it is different from theft.

                The issue boils down to “two wrongs don’t make a right”, I suppose. However, I put it two you that while this statement is true, it’s also often the case that a 2nd wrong can at least, sometimes, make things better.

                • Zoolander@lemmy.world
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                  7 months ago

                  You don’t care what words you use, because you’re talking about something else, an idea that’s only in your head.

                  I’m not. 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. It’s not theft of their product, it’s theft of the right to be paid for that product. Ingesting/consuming a product without paying the creator for it is theft, unless that creator has explicitly allowed for that (like in the case of physical media where creators understand that it can be borrowed).

                  Theft is distinctly different from copyright infringement - even when you set aside that one is a crime and the other is a civil rights infringement. That’s just how the law defines it, and the definition is pretty clear cut.

                  And I’m not arguing any of the legalities of it. I don’t care about the distinction of theft and copyright infringement in a legal sense. I’m care about the practical effects of stealing something without paying for it.

                  If I pirate something, no one loses anything.

                  This is not true. The creator loses something. You may want to talk about specific situations where a creator is hired on a “for work” basis to create something and we could argue that ad infinitum but then you’d need to make the distinction about where the line is drawn. Is it ok only when it’s work for hire? If so, why is not ok when it’s not? Where do you make the distinction?

                  Maybe they lost a potential sale, but more likely I probably wasn’t going to buy it either way.

                  That’s irrelevant. If you weren’t going to buy it then you’re not entitled to consume it either. The entire problem is that you (and many people here) are trying to make the argument that they’re entitled to ingest/consume whatever it is despite not paying for it. I’m making the argument that that’s theft and that you’re not entitled to it for precisely the reason that you didn’t pay for it. Obviously, this doesn’t apply if the creator is giving away that work for free.

                  it’s also often the case that a 2nd wrong can at least, sometimes, make things better.

                  I have never argued, here or otherwise, that piracy isn’t justified in some cases. I’m only arguing that, even when it’s justified, it’s still theft and that we should be honest about that.

                  • TWeaK@lemm.ee
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                    7 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.