mamba
Legend
Precisely. Does that mean you do not own it?Not capable of copying a car.
Precisely. Does that mean you do not own it?Not capable of copying a car.
It seems reasonable to me that, unless you're asking for money (which you shouldn't do), what you do with your own property, do long as it's not causing direct harm to anyone, should be ok.Copies for personal use have always been a bit morally gray, but generally accepted as long as you aren't disturbing it in a way that harms the copyright holder. Examples could include showing a Disney movie for a bunch of Kindergartners or making a burned CD of an album you item for your car (back when CDs were the primary method of listening to music). Neither is robbing the owner of potential revenue. But selling tickets to a Disney movie or giving away burned copies of an album on the street does.
I'm not following. My literal ability to make a copy is quite different from my legal ability to do so.Precisely. Does that mean you do not own it?
Legally gray, sure. Morally gray? To make a copy for yourself?Copies for personal use have always been a bit morally gray, but generally accepted as long as you aren't disturbing it in a way that harms the copyright holder. Examples could include showing a Disney movie for a bunch of Kindergartners or making a burned CD of an album you item for your car (back when CDs were the primary method of listening to music). Neither is robbing the owner of potential revenue. But selling tickets to a Disney movie or giving away burned copies of an album on the street does.
Just to clarify, what happened was that WotC sent out preview copies to channels with some loose restrictions, pretty standard permissive stuff.
Channels made their videos and posted them, then a day or so later WotC changed the rules to be much more restrictive and sent out copyright strikes. A few days later they retracted strikes, but the damage is done. Creators spend a long time making those videos according to the original guidelines, then have to blur 90% of the video if they don't want their channel struck as per the new guidelines.
Yeah, misspeak. I meant legally.Legally gray, sure. Morally gray? To make a copy for yourself?
you were talking about ownership, not a legal ability ('How can you own something if you're not allowed to copy it?')I'm not following. My literal ability to make a copy is quite different from my legal ability to do so.
You were taking my statement much more literally than intended. If I own something, I shouldn't be legally prevented from making a copy of it under all circumstances.you were talking about ownership, not a legal ability
I doubt there is ongoing condemnation, certainly have not heard any, but the claim was that there is nothing at all to object toI appreciate the explanation. Sounds like someone in legal or marketing simply screwed up I guess I would call that a mistake not something worthy of ongoing condemnation.
it’s been a couple of years now since they did anything even slightly objectionable