Laman wrote:FlyingAxe:
i am strongly inclined to agree with you, but there is one analogy that undermines my determination - it occurs to me that piracy is pretty much like free riding, except the impossibility of an enforcement. i use a service (or obtain informations) that is offered anyway and i don't generate more expenses for the provider. if i want to be able to use the service of public transport, the provider has to be paid and i am afraid that crowd sourcing wouldn't do the job. it could, but it would not...
In order for something to be a legitimate service, it does not have to provide any kind of expense on the side of the provider. I own a piece of land that I inherited from my grandfather. I lease it out to you. It's a service/product that costs me nothing to provide.
The bottom line is not whether or not what the "pirates" do is nice or not, but whether they are really violating anyone's rights -- which should be the only reason to prosecute anyone in a civilized society.
RobertJasiek:
I think we are going in circles. You seem to be saying that legal = moral, and that depending on which society we are talking about (rain-forest natives vs. America vs. Europe), different things can be made moral by law. I consider this position to be morally bankrupt. It allows the governments to do anything they want. I already gave many examples of immoral laws. Furthermore, where would the impetus to change laws come from, if we have no way to figure out whether or not they are fair/moral, since they are always fair/moral by definition?
In my opinion, a society needs to figure out what moral or immoral is and then create the laws to safeguard that. Of course different society will have different ideas about morality. Different societies will also have different knowledge of how human body works and, as a result, different kinds of medicine.
If you're NOT saying that moral = legal, then what is the point of talking about legal distinctions between different kinds of information? You tell me it's immoral to buy a book, use the information from the book, and reprint the book without the author's permission. But's it's not immoral to watch a game, take the information from the game, and reprint it in a book. (Or discuss it on your free blog.) I am asking you: what is the fundamental difference between these two types of information? How are you stealing in one case and not in the other? How is information = property in one case and not in the other? You go back to legalese talk. Seems like a vicious circle to me.
Furthermore, I am pointing out that before you make something illegal, you have to justify its illegality. Otherwise, you're stamping on the rights of the people who perform this activity. For instance, if a husband claims that his rights were violated when a wife refused to have relations with him, you have to prove that he had any rights in this area to begin with. You have not provided any justification for making free use of information illegal. You have not provided any proof that the authors' rights are being violated when someone "steals" the content of his book after buying the book. The burden of proof is on you (or anyone else who holds such views), since you are proposing to fine or jail the intellectual "pirates".
Btw, I really like your books and will consider buying one after my next paycheck.
