in reply to Re: Software piracy- what would you do? in thread Software piracy- what would you do?
By using the "cracked" copy of the software, he is indeed stealing from the author, but on the other hand, the actual physical copy of the data cost the developer nothing.
If he cannot realisticly afford the software, then he is not a potential customer you could argue. If you agree with this then you could argue that his illegal use of the software in no way is harming the developer. This is a rather contrived example and not neccassarily the view I subscribe to.
All well and good, and in fact, the author of the software may choose to make "educational" or "evaluation" copies available. And many do.
But in this country, as in most capitalist countries, that's the right of the author
to say yea or nay to. It's not your right as a consumer to make that choice for them,
regardless of the altruistic motives. Really, it's not. And I don't see what's so hard
to see about that.
I create it. I choose the options. Luckily for us, Larry chose "open source"
for Perl. But that's his right, as is the right for Microsoft to chose "closed source"
for Excel. Give people the choice, and give them incentive, and more things
will go open source. But mandate it, and you will kill the creative market.
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
Re: Re: Re: Software piracy- what would you do?
by shotgunefx (Parson) on Jun 05, 2001 at 04:50 UTC
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Hi Randal,
I agree, stealing is stealing. If you don't want to pay for it, don't use it.
I just think it brings up some interesting issues.
In all honesty, when I started getting serious about programming, I was a kid. I used cracked copies of software and when things started actually working out, (ie I turned a buck), I "legitimized" all my software. At the time I couldn't afford it and it was exactly how I justified it. Hell, my development machine, a Pantera Pentium 66 (Step 0) set me back $5,000 and that pretty much ate up my $5.50 an hour (How times change!).
-Lee
"To be civilized is to deny one's nature." | [reply] [Watch: Dir/Any] |
Re: Re: Re: Software piracy- what would you do?
by dstar (Scribe) on Jun 06, 2001 at 19:49 UTC
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Right.
So make up your mind. Do you want to make more money off of it or not?
I'll assume you do. Then you *should* let people have copies for free. No publisher has *ever* lost sales by giving away books. Take a look at the Baen Free Library (www.baen.com/library). Eric Flint states that he's sold 4 or 5 times as many copies as he's 'lost' through having the books available online.
When I was a high school kid, I heard about this new gaming system called 'GURPS'. It sounded interesting -- but I was dead broke. There was no way I could afford the $20 for a copy.
So I borrowed it and made a copy. Shock. Horror. I was stealing from the company who produced it!
In the past 10 years, I've purchased 4 copies of that book (one in hardcover), 8 other books in that system, and 3 books in another system by the same publisher. I've also got a subscription to their online magazine (one of the few that I know of which actually makes a *profit*).
None of this would have happened had I not copied that first book -- because I've almost always been the one to introduce the game to my friends, including my wife. The single exception was a gaming group *that I sought out* because they played GURPS. Wouldn't have done that if I hadn't already liked GURPS.
Now, don't get me wrong -- certainly you still have the right to object. I just object to the idea that it's costing you or any other author money. It's not.
It's giving you money by increasing sales.
Shalon Wood | [reply] [Watch: Dir/Any] |
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Says dstar:
So make up your mind. Do you want to make more money off of it or not?
I'm completely with Randal on this one. I'm writing a Perl book now.
When it's complete, it will be published by Morgan Kaufmann,
and it will also be available on my web site for free to
everyone in the world. Not because I think it will make
more money that way, but because I think it is a good thing to do.
So yes, I did choose that.
Does that mean I have forfeited my right to complain when
someone else in some other country with
no law enforcement copies the entire book from
my
web site and put it up on their own web site? No, I have not.
I do not want that. I want people to get the book from my site.
Partly because I want them to know about me, and mostly because
I want to be able to make corrections and updates and not have
some old buggy version of my book floating around, embarassing me,
but out of my control to fix.
The money here is a distraction. All the blah blahing about whether
it is 'theft' or 'property' or whatever is missing the real point.
If I meet anyone who says
that I am not allowed to care what happens to my book because
I have made it freely available,
or because copying a book is not theft, or whatever
other stupid excuse the people above are using this week,
I will kick him in the ass. I brought up
my book in this discusssion because
it will be available for free, and I think that sweeps away
a lot of proprty-theory garbage and makes the real issue clear.
A book is an artistic creation. The artist deserves the
right to control the disposition of that creation. It
is not right to disrepect the artist's wishes.
If it turned out that someone was mirroring my book without permission
I would be very grateful for someone else to point it out to me.
I find it astounding that MeowChow
or anyone else would consider this
to be butting in on my business (or the other
person's business), and therefore bad.
There is something deeply sick about this point of view.
When you see someone being
wronged, someone being treated disrespectfully,
when you see someone's trust being abused, it is perfectly correct to try to help them in
any way you can if that is what you want to do. It seems to
me that anyone who recognizes a difference between ethical right and wrong
can see this clearly. It is important to do right,
to use others with respect. Sometimes minding ones own
business is a part of that; sometimes it isn't.
--
Mark Dominus
Perl Paraphernalia
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Now, don't get me wrong -- certainly you still have the right to object. I just object to the idea that it's costing you or any other author money. It's not.
It's giving you money by increasing sales.
So you say, and I could probably find some counterpoints.
But it's not a right for you to choose as a consumer. It's a right for me to choose
as a producer. And the choice is probably must be made on a case-by-case basis.
If anything, you "stole" the right of the GURPS book producers of the choice of
controlling the distribution. So you did steal, just perhaps not in the way you
see it. And you justified that theft by buying more books. Maybe you bought
those books because of an unconscious guilt? Who knows?
It's a bit like saying "I demand the right to test drive any car I choose
for the weekend, because eventually I'll probably buy that car." Yes,
perhaps, but there's an opportunity cost to that test drive that you might
not be aware of. And that's up to the producer to choose. Again.
-- Randal L. Schwartz, Perl hacker
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