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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #241 Posted: Thu Oct 13, 2011 10:03 am 
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Redundant wrote:
daal wrote:
Redundant wrote:
Google "FLAC music store". You get nothing.


Attachment:
flac music store.jpg


Try not capitalizing.


None of those results are what I'm looking for either.

I've revised my requirement to be a store that sells flac, with even a tenth of the music I listen to.


Which, may I ask, is what kind of music?

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #242 Posted: Thu Oct 13, 2011 10:14 am 
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Not only are we derailing hard from the topic, but I feel like we're arguing for the sake of arguing on this FLAC topic and this is all rather pointless bantering. If Redundant can't find the music he likes in FLAC format outside of pirating, that's that. It's not hard to provide examples where piracy provides more convenience than legal means for a lot of things, including FLAC-format music. No need to continue this argument imo.

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Post #243 Posted: Thu Oct 13, 2011 11:20 am 
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Araban wrote:
Not only are we derailing hard from the topic, but I feel like we're arguing for the sake of arguing on this FLAC topic and this is all rather pointless bantering. If Redundant can't find the music he likes in FLAC format outside of pirating, that's that. It's not hard to provide examples where piracy provides more convenience than legal means for a lot of things, including FLAC-format music. No need to continue this argument imo.


I think the fairest solution here is to have him provide a table of his 6TB collection with checkmarks for each songs availability in each store. If any store has 10% checkmarks he should be keelhauled.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #244 Posted: Thu Oct 13, 2011 11:22 am 
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Sheeple wrote:
I think the fairest solution here is to have him provide a table of his 6TB collection with checkmarks for each songs availability in each store. If any store has 10% checkmarks he should be keelhauled.


Nice try RIAA ;)

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #245 Posted: Sun Oct 30, 2011 11:32 am 
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I just finished reading through this thread, yes the whole thing and it took a while but it's okay because I did go problems after every few posts.

I'd just like to say that I've read a number of John Fairbairn's other posts on this forum and I have his books The Go Consultants and Kamakura. I've enjoyed both books for their detailed commentaries on the games. I also plan to get the two books on Go Seigen's matches with Fujisawa Kuranosuke and Takagawa Kaku at some point as well. It's unfortunate that he doesn't want to continue posting on these forums or writing Go books. It's also disappointing to hear that the book on Jowa's game with Akaboshi Intetsu may not (will not? I don't really know the situation) get published. I've read the commentary on the game that is in Invincible but it's only a very small section of the book.

I think the problem Go book authors and publishers face is a problem faced by the entire community and it's not pirates but rather a lack of players. Until I started playing a couple years ago none of my friends had even heard of the game; they all knew about chess, not just what the game was but also how to play. Go is just too niche of a subject and that's more of a problem than losing a few potential sales to pirates. I don't know how to change that though.


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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #246 Posted: Wed Feb 22, 2012 11:12 pm 
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It is funny when book writers make money from writing about other people's so-called "intellectual property" (the games they played, the move combinations they invented, etc.) and do not reimburse the players or their families, yet they complain about the "piracy". Hypocritical much?

Real piracy involves one side losing their property and another side gaining. But, as Einstein said, if you have an idea and share it with me (or I "steal" it from you), neither of us is poorer.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #247 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 12:55 am 
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You mix up different kinds of information:
1) a book's contents, word by word, picture by picture
2) general conceptual ideas (such as a tesuji)
3) sequence of a played game
4) compilations of played games / tesujis, game by game, tesuji by tesuji

Western / international copyright law protects (1) and (4) but does not protect (2) and (3) (except maybe for a live broadcasting stream). Somebody said that Japanese copyright law also protects (3) within Japan, but I am not sure about that.

If somebody writes a crime novel, then the concept of crime novel is not protected (it is a general idea) but the particular plot and especially the text word by word are copyright protected.


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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #248 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 6:31 am 
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So, we can say that baduk is NOT a language, since a reproduced game would mean reproducing a passage which could be copyrighted, and its NOT art because reproducing artwork without an authors permission is also not allowed (unless specified by the artist otherwise)

It is just a game where we can take and split into pieces without the players consent and make money off of it!

Thanks for clearing it up John. :tmbup:

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #249 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 6:56 am 
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Good lawyers' joke but seriously: Making money from go requires the effort of teaching, writing (books) or compiling (game collections). Simply speaking, copyright then distinguishes effort (other than the joy of playing the game) from almost no effort (of copying a teaching lesson's video tape, a book or a game collection).

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Post #250 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 7:02 am 
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badukJr wrote:
So, we can say that baduk is NOT a language, since a reproduced game would mean reproducing a passage which could be copyrighted, and its NOT art because reproducing artwork without an authors permission is also not allowed (unless specified by the artist otherwise)

It is just a game where we can take and split into pieces without the players consent and make money off of it!

Thanks for clearing it up John. :tmbup:


First of all baduk is not a language from a legal point of view. this conversation isn't related to the other thread.

Secondly, what I really object to in your statement is the insinuation that it is easy to make money off of the game. people like Robert Jasiek put an incredible amount of work writting books and advancing knowledge in the west about go, it is not unreasonable that they want to get money from selling their books, instead of having their intellectual property stolen.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #251 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 7:44 am 
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RobertJasiek wrote:
You mix up different kinds of information:
1) a book's contents, word by word, picture by picture
2) general conceptual ideas (such as a tesuji)
3) sequence of a played game
4) compilations of played games / tesujis, game by game, tesuji by tesuji


What is the fundamental difference between these kinds of information that makes some of them property and others not?

Quote:
Western / international copyright law protects (1) and (4) but does not protect (2) and (3) (except maybe for a live broadcasting stream). Somebody said that Japanese copyright law also protects (3) within Japan, but I am not sure about that.

What difference does it make whether some law protects something or not? You are merely saying that a large organization with a lot of guns recognized something arbitrarily as "property" and decided to give monopoly to it. My uncle is a Russian mafia mobster who "recognizes" all possible shoe sales transactions in South Brooklyn as his property. He has a lot of guns too (admittedly, not as many as the Federal government). Therefore what?

Whether or not something is legal and whether or not something is moral have nothing to do with each other. There are plenty of cases from history when things were legal but not moral or illegal but moral. For example, American democratically elected state governments at some point recognized slaves as property, protected slavery by law, and recognized assisting slaves to escape as illegal. The first "patents" were actually permissions to rob foreign merchant ships that were granted by European governments at times of war.

Remember, every time you apply a law, you're applying force and violence. You're telling people what to do with their property (such as "you may not use your hard drive and the data on it in this particular way"). When you apply violence/force to someone, you better have a good reason for doing so. The only reason that I see is when you're defending your property or yourself from violence being applied to them. For instance, if I take your pencil, you can use force to take it back. Why? Because the pencil is scarce. Only one of us can use it. So, violence will be applied to one of us. So, let us choose the lesser of two evils and let the force NOT be applied to the one who has a better claim to the pencil.

But information is non-scarce. When I use your idea, that in no way prohibits your use of the same idea. So, scarcity cannot be used as justification.

Your sales will drop if I redistribute the contents of your book for free? Well, you don't own future potential sales. You don't own your potential customers, their money, and their potential custom. If I open a shop right next to yours, I am not "stealing" the customers from you, since you never owned them to begin with. When you're saying that information is property, you're saying that you own potential future business transactions. But that is clearly ridiculous, since it contradicts other people's ownership of themselves and their property.

In general, utilitarian arguments cannot be used as a basis for morality. Such arguments allow nine people to rip a tenth person apart and harvest his organs.

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If somebody writes a crime novel, then the concept of crime novel is not protected (it is a general idea) but the particular plot and especially the text word by word are copyright protected.
Again, arbitrary distinction. You have to show that there is a fundamental difference between "going from A to B to destroy a source of great but dangerous power" and "hobbits Frodo and Sam going from Shire to Mordor to destroy the One Ring". The second is more specific. So?


Last edited by FlyingAxe on Thu Feb 23, 2012 8:23 am, edited 5 times in total.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #252 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 7:58 am 
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speedchase wrote:
[W]hat I really object to in your statement is the insinuation that it is easy to make money off of the game. people like Robert Jasiek put an incredible amount of work writting books and advancing knowledge in the west about go, it is not unreasonable that they want to get money from selling their books, instead of having their intellectual property stolen.

Whether or not it is easy to make something or difficult has not relevance as to whether that is his property. Imagine I walk into a forest and find a tree with a lot of berries. I work really hard to pick every berry off the tree. Then, suddenly, the owner of the forest comes about and tells me I am in fact standing in his property. The fact that I worked hard has no bearing on the fact that I worked hard on something that is not my property.

If I spend a lot of time re-copying Lord of the Rings, word by word, into my notebook, does it mean I own the information in the notebook? If I think really-really hard and write a book on well recognized tesujis, do I own those tesujis?

Having said that, if people work hard, they have the opportunity to sell their work. As the first seller, they have a good chance to make money from their product. People who come up with new fashion designs in Paris also work very hard. Yet, their work is not copyrighted (and fashion industry prospers). For more information on how creative workers can profit without intellectual monopolies, see here: http://www.stephankinsella.com/2010/07/ ... l-property

They have a right to be recognized as the authors of the work, and they can ask for donations to support them in their future endeavors. They do NOT have a natural, moral right to suppress other people's use of those people's own property. (They may have a pseudo-right, i.e., some arbitrary rule that was set up and is being enforced by a large organization with a lot of guns for political reasons.)


Also, let me ask you a question: if I read a lot of books on Go and then go and apply the knowledge to win a price (or to teach Go to kids in a local school), do I owe anything to the writers of the books (besides gratitude)? Let me repeat my previous question: does the writer of Kamakura owe nothing to Go Seigen and Kitani Minoru for using their completely new and very specific ideas? Why is it that the specific way of arranging black and white letters on paper is "property", but a specific way of arranging black and white stones on a somewhat thicker piece of wood is not?

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #253 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 8:33 am 
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A perfect case for "don't feed the troll". Even if my view on IP laws may not be as close to the law as it should, Go book writers deserve their money.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #254 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 8:33 am 
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FlyingAxe wrote:
What is the fundamental difference between these kinds of information that makes some of them property and others not?


Their different treatment by law.

Quote:
What difference does it make whether some law protects something or not?


What is protected under law can be brought to jurisdiction.

Quote:
legal but not moral or illegal but moral.


You are right that legality and morality are not always the same.

Quote:
Remember, every time you apply a law, you're applying force and violence.


More than that is applied. People in civilisations under law create work under those conditions so that they can maintain their living. If there were civilisations with different law, then people would work differently or even work in entirely different areas to enable themselves to maintaing their living under those different circumstances. Which is theoretically entertaining but irrelevant under current international etc. copyright law.

Quote:
You're telling people what to do with their property (such as "you may not use your hard drive and the data on it in this particular way").


If "you" is "the law" and "the legislative", yes.

Quote:
When you apply violence/force to someone, you better have a good reason for doing so.


Force is a strong word. Copyright law usually issues fines rather than imprisonment. It requires being the manager of Rapidshare or whatever together with particularly aggressive behavioru to risk imprisonment.

Quote:
The only reason that I see


That you want to see?:)

Quote:
So, scarcity cannot be used as justification.


Who says that it is used as a justification?:)

Quote:
Your sales will drop if I redistribute the contents of your book for free?


Pose the question to different authors and the answer will probably be different. In case of go book authors, the answer is very likely "yes".

Quote:
If I open a shop right next to yours, I am not "stealing" the customers from you


Indeed. Have fun opening a book store in a street full of book stores!:)

Quote:
When you're saying that information is property,


Me? There is a distinction between property and intellectual property. Information in general is not intellectual property but specific kinds of information (such as most commercial go books' contents) is.

Quote:
you're saying that you own potential future business transactions


Not transactions are possessed but the money once the transaction will have been completed.

Quote:
But that is clearly ridiculous, since it contradicts other people's ownership of themselves and their property.


Be serious.

Quote:
Such arguments allow nine people to rip a tenth person apart and harvest his organs.


Advocating copyright is not robbing organs. Be serious.

Quote:
Again, arbitrary distinction.


Maybe arbitrary but it is in the typical copyright laws.


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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #255 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 8:40 am 
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FlyingAxe wrote:
If I spend a lot of time re-copying Lord of the Rings, word by word, into my notebook, does it mean I own the information in the notebook?
Read a typical copyright law and you will know the answer.

Quote:
they can ask for donations to support them in their future endeavors.


Good idea. Please, donate some support to my future endeavors. If it suffices, I can then offer more free contents.

Quote:
Also, let me ask you a question: if I read a lot of books on Go and then go and apply the knowledge to win a price (or to teach Go to kids in a local school), do I owe anything to the writers of the books (besides gratitude)?


No. You can even use your gained knowledge to write a summary of what you have learned and publish that as a new book.

Quote:
Why is it that the specific way of arranging black and white letters on paper is "property", but a specific way of arranging black and white stones on a somewhat thicker piece of wood is not?


Because legislatives do not equally appreciate thicker pieces of wood?;)

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #256 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 8:44 am 
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RBerenguel wrote:
A perfect case for "don't feed the troll".


Suppose it was a troll treatment. Then sooner or later advertisement for piracy would prevail because a climate of unopposed possibility were accepted.

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #257 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 9:46 am 
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RBerenguel wrote:
..."don't feed the troll"...


I don't think that he is trolling. There is a serious argument in his posts. It may be presented in a more confrontational manner than is necessary, but that doesn't change the ideas presented.

*puts on admin hat*
[admin]
As always, speaking as an admin, I urge people to avoid pejorative or emotional arguments. And the more controversial the subject, the more I advocate this.
[/admin]

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #258 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 10:55 am 
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speedchase wrote:

First of all baduk is not a language from a legal point of view. this conversation isn't related to the other thread.

Secondly, what I really object to in your statement is the insinuation that it is easy to make money off of the game. people like Robert Jasiek put an incredible amount of work writting books and advancing knowledge in the west about go, it is not unreasonable that they want to get money from selling their books, instead of having their intellectual property stolen.


First, the legal point of view IS the point of view. If you don't follow, you might want to consider your place of residence or civil disobedience.

Second, I never said that in my post.

Also, people do work hard at creating problems yet those are constantly lifted from their books and placed onto goproblems and other L&D websites that are generally recommended to beginners around here. People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place, so why is there anger about game compilations - i.e. not even board positions created originally by the author of the book?

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 Post subject: Re: Piracy in the Go industry.
Post #259 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 11:13 am 
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badukJr wrote:
People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place


Please provide more details: are all the problems from some source copied or only a small part of all?

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Post #260 Posted: Thu Feb 23, 2012 12:03 pm 
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speedchase wrote:
insinuation


badukJr wrote:
Second, I never said that in my post.

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