It is illegal and immoral. It steals the rightful intellectual property of directors and developers who are only trying to make a living. If you want to be a thief so badly, then rob a federal bank.

  • MajorHavoc@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    I’m a big fan of paying the people who make things for me.

    But digital piracy is the only thing keeping archive copies of obscure media around today. Even libraries aren’t keeping up. Plenty of media creators have revived their thing that found an audience after decades forgotten - through piracy, and only successfully revived it thanks to archivist pirates, since they had thrown that thing away.

    It’s not black and white.

    Patronage funding, early access, streamlined delivery, and white glove support are the funding models that are working for creatives today.

    • inspxtr@lemmy.world
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      1 year ago

      speaking of libraries, there is also a need for archiving knowledge and information for the public good, such as books and research articles. Especially the latter are usually created and, many times, already paid for by the researchers themselves (often via tax money), many of whom would prefer to have their research disseminated.

      In the global north, many universities can afford such high-priced publisher premium. But in the global south, and many underfunded universities, hospitals, schools in general, such prices are impossible. So in practicality, they turn to piracy for the most part.

    • Favrion@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      That’s even worse. Stealing from small creators. I don’t see how active archiving relates to piracy, nor its connection to fan service.

      • bbmb@kbin.social
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        The Internet Archive, even outside of their Wayback Machine, is effectively built on digital piracy in many ways if anything. The reality is that any sort of media, whether it’s physical media that was destroyed, or digital media that was deleted or had it’s host platform shut down, could possibly never be accessed again unless it’s archived, even if that archival was done with piracy.

        Mother 3 could be considered impossible to play legally in many ways, with most of the cartridges being sold unofficially with the English ROM hack being preapplied, and the originals starting near 75 dollars on eBay, and Nintendo isn’t making any money off it anymore, so in many cases unless you’re a collector, it’s best to just pirate the game with an English ROM translation.

        The Internet Archive also has an archived online library of books that you’re free to borrow from, similar to an Overdrive-like platform of sorts, which is great for finding information that isn’t publicly available, or to read a book that is simply rare used and not sold anymore or where another copy isn’t to be found.

        • Favrion@lemmy.worldOP
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          1 year ago

          I don’t see the comparison. Archiving is beneficial for the freedom of information, but pirating is beneficial for the pirate.

          • bbmb@kbin.social
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            1 year ago

            What I just said was that archiving for preservation often is done with piracy. You need to get the content one way or another to archive, especially with the vast library on there.

              • Viking_Hippie@lemmy.world
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                1 year ago

                Which is sometimes not even an option offered and sometimes licencing rules will mean that no matter how many people pay for it, it’s going to be lost to the world without piracy.

                Btw, it’s cute that you think it’s the author you’re supporting, rather than the exploitative and greedy publisher. Downright adorable! 🥹

              • Stoneykins [any]@mander.xyz
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                1 year ago

                Archiving digital media is making backups and copies. That is what archiving those things is intrinsically, immutably.

                Making backups and copies is also what the IP owners would refer to as piracy.

                You cannot be pro-internet-archive and anti-piracy at the same time, at least not fully. They are contradictory positions.

  • Frub@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    The difference being that money is finite and digital media isn’t.

      • Frub@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        Abundant and infinite mean two different things though. Money is abundant, not infinite. If you had unlimited money, as you said, it’s intrinsic value would be zero

  • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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    1 year ago

    People pirate for different reasons, and the legal definition of it changes nothing really. There’s…

    • People who will absolutely not ever pay for anything
    • People who will pay as long as they get their money’s worth, who may also be open to supporting the creator directly (Patreon, Nebula, Bandcamp, Floatplane, Liberapay etc.)
    • Preserving content in a usable format (e.g. vinyl record plastic breaking down, old 8track players becoming uneconomical to repair and rare to find, playstation magazine CDs that will never be available online despite being susceptible to CD rot)

    I’m in the last two camps personally. I wanted to also share my opinions on the points you mentioned directly…

    It is illegal and immoral

    I think It is illegal and immoral to sell consumers a license to use a product, under the guise of them owning it without explicitly and clearly stating such at the point of purchase, i.e. consumer electronics where you may “own” the device but only have a license to use the operating system, digital game purchases on consoles which can be revoked at any time by Sony/Microsoft or the publisher, services like Amazon Prime Video where a digital box set you purchased (that can only be watched via Amazon’s website) can be deleted by Amazon at any time, leaving you no recourse.

    It steals the rightful intellectual property of directors

    In my opinion, it should not be right for directors at the likes of UMG to profit from music made by artists who have died.

    and developers who are only trying to make a living

    The developers do not make anywhere near as much money as they should for their efforts, and quite frankly they are going to get paid regardless of whether you as an individual decide to purchase or pass on a product.

    If you want to be a thief so badly, then rob a federal bank.

    IMO the people in the first camp probably aren’t interested in money if they have chosen not to purchase their media to begin with


    I’m curious as to the reason behind the post though, has someone pirated your content before?

    • Favrion@lemmy.worldOP
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      1 year ago

      Thank you for an actual intellectual rebuttal. This may actually make me reconsider the morality aspect, but it is still outside of my moral bounds and therefore I can never condone it.

      This started because of a post that I saw about a big piracy community being shut down.

    • AbsolutelyNotABot@lemm.ee
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      People who will pay as long as they get their money’s worth, who may also be open to supporting the creator directly

      The point is, isn’t the producer right to make the price? You can always not consume what they produce. This category is the most obnoxious; would you ever go to a restaurant and expect to decide the prices?

      It’s the very same argument for producers that willingly release their contently freely and let you support them, eventually. It’s their choice.

      Of the three you quoted preservation is the only one I find acceptable. If the producer no longer care to distribute their product, then they probably don’t care to what it happens to it either.

      I think It is illegal and immoral to sell consumers a license to use a product, under the guise of them owning it

      For me the main difference is that nobody is forcing you to accept the transaction. I could accept this kind of argument for drugs for example, where you either take it or die/have serious repercussions. But pirating a movie you would have very much lived without just because is easy to do so it’s particularly problematic.

      they are going to get paid regardless of whether you as an individual decide to purchase or pass on a product

      Except they aren’t. Or at least, of course they’re payed the same, at the moment. But in our economy prices are signals. If a market will appear smaller then it is because of piracy then after some timesfewer developers will be hired, and each of them will be payed less because you’re “falsifying” the signals. Or even worst, the producers will start to use alternative form of monetization. That’s one of the reason the modern web is based off ads or free-to-play games with microtransanctions are so damn common.

      IMO the people in the first camp probably aren’t interested in money if they have chosen not to purchase their media to begin with

      The people in the first category should also think about the allocation problem. Those products which they like to consume but not pay for, still had a cost of production. The problem is they want ti consume, without supporting production, and that’s not gonna work for a society.

  • FlyboyM619@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Shop local, steal from corporate.

    No you shouldn’t steal from small or independent creators. However don’t try to tell me that Disney is going to go out of business because I pirated their latest movie.

    • ttmrichter@lemmy.world
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      … don’t try to tell me that Disney is going to go out of business because I pirated their latest movie …

      Well, not yet, but give us time! They’re huge! It’s really hard to take them down!

    • AbsolutelyNotABot@lemm.ee
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      don’t try to tell me that Disney is going to go out of business because I pirated their latest movie

      The problem is the antisocial behavior and externalities. Piracy has a negative externality on society, it lets you consume a product you didn’t contribute to production whatsoever. If it becomes commonplace then yes, Disney will go bankrupt, but will every producer, small or big or anything in between.

      Rules shouldn’t be arbitrary. People work at Disney too, and you’ll have less artist, animator and stuff, all paid less, it the market shrinks because of piracy

  • nbafantest@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    There is no way to buy media forever. Even DVDs go bad and get worn out, then you’re back buying something you already own.

    Piracy is not immoral, it is the free market pendulum that always forces media to care the tiniest bit of thought toward consumer experience.

    I started pirating stuff I have subs and apps for, it’s simply a horrible experience right now. These episodes of this season are on this one, and these are on another service that I have to switch to.

    Now which service has the other episodes? Oh now they moved to a different app, and I’m still paying the old app.

    The vast majority of time I’ll just go torrent and plex something than chase it to many different apps, even if I have those subscriptions

    • 𝒍𝒆𝒎𝒂𝒏𝒏
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      These episodes of this season are on this one, and these are on another service that I have to switch to.

      This kind of thing just encourages 🏴‍☠️🚢 the rest of the season IMO.

      In almost all cases it’s just easier to just grab the whole box set, pop it on a personal media server and not worry about the streaming service faff - or even look for a modern “pout lock car” equivalent to stream from.

      It was nice when everything was on Netflix and HBO, before all the entertainment companies decided they want a piece of the streaming pie, with prices continuing to increase. I used to follow the cordcutters community back on tiddeR and they were starting to get sick of this too.

  • Kalash@feddit.ch
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    Have an upvote!

    You are wrong of course and “intellectual property” is a bullshit concept. Owning information is what is immoral. It’s also no stealing as you’re making a copy and not taking anything away.

    I’d rather spend another $1000 on harddrives than give a single cent to streaming services or filmstudios.

  • glad_cat@lemmy.sdf.org
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    First, piracy is not illegal everywhere, and a personal copy is the most legal way in almost every country to archive what you have bought.

    As for the morality of it, it’s your problem, not mine.

    And the most important question is: What can I do when whole countries do not sell their music or TV shows? I’m thinking of Poland or Japan for example. I cannot legally buy media from those countries because they don’t care about foreign customers. How can they lose money if they don’t sell anything?

    If you want a concrete example that happened to me yesterday: I want to buy a subscription to https://pilot.wp.pl/tv/. I want to give my money yet they refuse it. What can I do?

  • fidodo@lemm.ee
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    1 year ago

    If the money actually went to the people that made the content then there would be an argument, but it doesn’t, it goes to a bunch of assholes who conned the actual content creators from their hard work.

  • Saint of Illusion@lemm.ee
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    Are people downvoting because this is actually a popular opinion and doesn’t belong here or because they disagree with it?

  • iHUNTcriminals@lemm.ee
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    I hunt criminals. Modern life as a whole is pretty criminal. You realize your tax money has gotten civilians killed right? All tax payers have blood on their hands for essentially paying other people to murder for them so they don’t need to do it themselves and so they can create the apps and movies people pirate. It’s fucked from begining to end. There’s no such thing as holy unless you live in the woods and never touch the rest of humanity.

    We are all immoral with no authentic values. Just indoctrinated to think we’re more special than others and literally pay people to kill for us.

  • Vuipes@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    I can’t get most of the content legally. What is my option?
    When my friend wanted to watch “Breaking bad” a few years ago, he subscribed to a streaming service, it had only the second and third season. He paid for it, but piracy is the only option for him.
    Even if you are in the USA, 87% of video games before 2010 are currently impossible to buy.

  • H2207@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    If I were to do it, I would only do it from large established companies or products that are extremely popular anyway, as the percentage of sales lost due to piracy is probably very little in that case.

  • HipPriest@kbin.social
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    1 year ago

    So on a morality point of view, I’ve downloaded epubs of books of an author where I’ve previously bought copies of their books multiple times, either because the originals wore out or I gave a copy away. I still have copies on my shelf or in storage, I just want to have copies on my Kindle.

    I’ve bought things (or had bought for me) things on VHS and DVD formats and no longer have a player for either. So yeah I downloaded stuff I wanted to watch again

    There are things only available on DVD and not available to stream. There are things that were available to stream which have since been removed and have been taken down. Why not pirate stuff to watch it again?

    For a long time the Beatles weren’t on Spotify etc. I had their stuff on their official paid for tapes growing up, then on CD when I was older. So in the interim I pirated it when I lost the original digital rips I made from the CDs. And until they release their mono albums officially I’ll be hanging on to my pirated copies.

    Notice a trend in the above? I very rarely pirate new media. But I treat the internet like an archive (I’ve not even gone into the stuff that is no longer available anywhere except YouTube or piracy). Quite often I’ve paid the creator('s masters) more than once for their work. I feel no guilt.

  • martinbasic@lemmy.world
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    If the product studdenly stop release, then it sometimes could be count as moral, because, when there are lots of digital products rely on the digital distribution (e.g. online game shop) then suddenly shut down, people will no longer to enjoy the digital products on that specific devices.

    Please search “3ds eshop closeure”

    Edit: “rely on”, not “relay to”

  • hihello@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    Curious, are the people supporting piracy also supporting the writers & SAG strike?

    How can you support writers and actors getting paid fairly when you steal their product?

    • Fosheze@lemmy.world
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      I 100% support the writers strike and I want them to make more money. I don’t pirate content to avoid paying; I do it because the studios make it so damn hard to get their content legitimately.

      As Gabe Newell said, “Piracy isn’t a price issue, it’s a service issue.” I would love to pay for the content but I’m not going to manage 15 different services to do so. Not to mention geoblocking and region specific content make it impossible to get some content even if you pay for every service. Nope, I’ll just download it all and enjoy it all in one place; the fact that it’s free is just a nice sideffect. If there was a paid service that did the same I would happily pay for it. As it is I haven’t pirated a single videogame since I started using Steam over a decade ago because I can just get everything I want there.

      • inspxtr@lemmy.world
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        Not to mention the potential privacy issues that come with registering for so many of these services, which often also bank on selling user data.

      • 0110010001100010@kbin.social
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        If there was a paid service that did the same I would happily pay for it.

        This is what the OG Netflix was. It solved the delivery issue Gabe has so famously talked about. I stopped pirating when Netflix launched and used it for years. Then every company had to splinter out their own streaming service taking a reasonable monthly fee back to cable prices and a fragmented ecosystem. I’ve gone back to solving the delivery issue with a $60 a year VPN and piracy. Am I proud about it? Absolutely not. Am I going to continue until there is a better answer? 100%. We’ve gone SIGNIFICANTLY backwards from where Netflix started.

        And yes, I get I can subscribe to services here and there then drop them but that still comes back to the delivery issue. I have to actively manage services and make sure I cancel them when I don’t need them anymore. This is a huge inconvenience and not something I have a desire to try and manage. Give me back my OG Netflix dammit!

      • phillaholic@lemm.ee
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        1 year ago

        I buy and rip Blu-rays. I also buy digital content on Movies Anywhere from time to time. Streaming exclusive shows are hard, but usually I just don’t watch them as much because of it.

    • JohnDClay@sh.itjust.works
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      They don’t get paid from me going to see the movie anyway, that’s why they’re striking. If they get better residuals, I’ll be much more likely to support them. As it is, ticket price largely only helps the exploitative studios.

    • Alto@kbin.social
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      I can promise you the money I’ve donated to the SAG AFRRA relief fund has done more good than the absolute pittance of money they would get from me streaming legally

    • ninjakitty7@kbin.social
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      I think you can support writers right to strike for better wages/benefits while also believing that the current cable-style exclusive rights subscription model is predatory and taking steps to not be taken advantage of. As is famously quoted on the internet, piracy is a service problem, not one where people are too stingy to pay.

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      This is nonsense. They already weren’t making enough money and needed to strike to try and meet their needs.

      And you are implying there is a fair distribution of the revenue earned from popularly pirated media? Bullshit.

      Writers and actors have always received chump change or less, and never has it ever been implied that they recieve any payment based on sales, but rather work done.

      If you find me any company that garuntees that all actors and writers receive fair extra pay based on sales, then I will swear on my life to never pirate anything from them, and buy the content (if it’s something I want).

    • Kalash@feddit.ch
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      I feel sorry for the couple of good writers of good shows that really deserve better compensation. But looking at the releases of the recent years, that’s not a lot of them.