Piracy in the Go industry.

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Laman
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Laman »

topazg wrote:The law and morality and necessarily one and the same thing.

You can stand up for political ideology that you believe to be right, and still end up in prison for it. That doesn't mean you're morally wrong (or morally right), it just means you may have to face the consequences of your actions.

the trouble is that piracy results in no consequences for a common downloader. there is hardly any effective way how to stop it. and efforts made and publicized recently makes me feel more uneasy for the intrusion of my privacy than i believe it would help authors. so what to do?

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...

RobertJasiek:
i can understand that you are annoyed by FlyingAxe's posts and want to deal with him, but your arguments along the line "it is (il)legal, so it doesn't matter whether it is (im)moral" make me nervous and remind me of Milgram's experiment. if you saw a law that you considered morally wrong, wouldn't you argue against it?
Spilling gasoline feels good.

I might be wrong, but probably not.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by RobertJasiek »

Laman wrote:i can understand that you are annoyed by FlyingAxe's posts and want to deal with him, but your arguments along the line "it is (il)legal, so it doesn't matter whether it is (im)moral" make me nervous and remind me of Milgram's experiment. if you saw a law that you considered morally wrong, wouldn't you argue against it?


As I have said, laws immoral of the kind "violates human rights etc." are bad. Possible moral inconsistency related to copyright law is much weaker though; it is related to questions like "copying a book is illegal but copying a game sequence is legal - how can both at the same time be moral?" or "copying a book is illegal but copying results of scientific research produced after equally much mental effort is legal...". If both kinds followed the same moral, the world be an entirely different place. Possible in theory but in practive there would be many millions of jobless people until not only consistent moral were applied but also a major reform of the world economical system. IOW, there is also the social moral. We live in a complex world. Getting one dimension of moral right from a philosophical POV does not automatically guarantee getting all moral dimensions right.

So what I advocating by following copyright law is the current more or less balanced system of the world's jurisdictional, economic and social morals. (I know, there are also the much worse parts of it that really do need change such as peoples feeding more and more cash to the banks.)
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Peter Hansmeier »

Balance wrote:So people will abandon their beliefs when threatened by thugs. Nothing new there, Galileo Galilei did much the same. :grumpy:


Sorry, but pirating John Fairbairn's books does not make you Galileo. In fact, I would say John Fairbairn plays the role of Galileo (producer of useful content), and pirates play the role of the Inquisition (ideologues who chill the desire to create useful content).

Also, before you call pirates a persecuted class of free thinkers, you should consider:

How many pirates have asked John's permission before copying and distributing his work?
How much have pirates compensated John (and his collaborators) for using the pirated content?
What have these pirates done to promote change in the copyright laws they dislike?

If the answers ever become "most", "a fair amount", and "more than complaining on forums", copyright holders will rein in the "thugs".

To make it easier for people to do the right thing on the second question, perhaps the New in Go blog should add something like this (on their own site's account, of course) :):
Image
I am Tartuffe from GoDiscussions.com
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by hyperpape »

Peter Hansmeier wrote:Sorry, but pirating John Fairbairn's books does not make you Galileo. In fact, I would say John Fairbairn plays the role of Galileo (producer of useful content), and pirates play the role of the Inquisition (ideologues who chill the desire to create useful content).
You started off so well...
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by quantumf »

Stable wrote:Crowd support can be very effective for popular projects (eg order of the stick comic just raised over a million dollars to reprint their books and some other projects, which is amazing to me), but it risks a tyranny of the mob where ONLY popular/well known creators and projects have a decent chance.


If it hasn't already happened, I'm sure its just a matter of time before crowd sourcing funds meta projects, e.g. a record label like thing supports some appropriate group of musicians.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Jrs22 »

I would add to Peter's questions this one: how many of the pirates who need to support themselves would accept not being paid for their work? After all, writing may be an art but it's also a job.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Javaness2 »

Is property theft?
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by FlyingAxe »

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. :)
Last edited by FlyingAxe on Sat Feb 25, 2012 5:34 pm, edited 1 time in total.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by oren »

While legal doesn't mean moral, most people believe it is immoral to pirate. Therefore laws have been written to try to prevent it. Of course it's impossible to completely stop, but arguing that piracy is moral is ridiculous to me.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by badukJr »

oren wrote:While legal doesn't mean moral, most people believe it is immoral to pirate. Therefore laws have been written to try to prevent it. Of course it's impossible to completely stop, but arguing that piracy is moral is ridiculous to me.


I doubt most people believe so. There is a whole industry devoted to it in Asia the most populated area on earth. Many of my university books are from there, 2 or 3 dollars each.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by RobertJasiek »

FlyingAxe wrote:I think we are going in circles.


Not exactly but close enough so that I need to restrict time spent on this thread so that I can spend more on writing the next book.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by mlund »

badukJr wrote:I doubt most people believe so. There is a whole industry devoted to it in Asia the most populated area on earth. Many of my university books are from there, 2 or 3 dollars each.


Clarification: A reasonable person who is on the victim end of piracy is almost always aware that piracy is immoral, while a typical person who is only the beneficiary of piracy will twist themselves into a pretzel rationalizing why they are entitled to benefit from someone else's labor without giving compensation.

- Marty Lund
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by badukJr »

mlund wrote:
badukJr wrote:I doubt most people believe so. There is a whole industry devoted to it in Asia the most populated area on earth. Many of my university books are from there, 2 or 3 dollars each.


Clarification: A reasonable person who is on the victim end of piracy is almost always aware that piracy is immoral, while a typical person who is only the beneficiary of piracy will twist themselves into a pretzel rationalizing why they are entitled to benefit from someone else's labor without giving compensation.

- Marty Lund


Exactly, they'll bend them selves so much that they will rally against the pirates while pirating themselves.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Javaness2 »

badukJr wrote:
oren wrote:While legal doesn't mean moral, most people believe it is immoral to pirate. Therefore laws have been written to try to prevent it. Of course it's impossible to completely stop, but arguing that piracy is moral is ridiculous to me.


I doubt most people believe so. There is a whole industry devoted to it in Asia the most populated area on earth. Many of my university books are from there, 2 or 3 dollars each.


Yeah, there was nothing illegal about those fake Apple stores the government closed down.
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Re: Piracy in the Go industry.

Post by Kirby »

I think that the method by which payment gets to a content creator needs to be updated for the times. I just don't know the best way to do it.

With today's technology, it's easier than ever to copy and redistribute files. It's the way of the future. We should figure out a way to get the compensation model caught up. Like I said, I don't know how... But the old, "I take this product and give you money for it" method of doing business doesn't seem like it can work that well in the longrun.

We need to find a more modern way to compensate content-creators - one that is aligned with modern technology.
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