Dannyalcatraz said:
To which I respond that my quote was not complete- the actual definition goes on longer than one of my posts. However, "the sole and exclusive privilege of multiplying copies of the same and publishing and selling them" implies as much. If the copy you download is unauthorized, you have cost the author his sale by taking his property as surely as if you had snatched it hot off of the photocopier. That is THEFT.
No. It is NOT.
It is a bad thing that is different than theft. That is why it is called infringement and not theft.
And if you check out the STATUTES, not the definition, you will see that copyright infringement has legal penalties including fines and imprisonment, depending on the egregiousness of the infringement, that are based on various theft statutes. Infringement varies from merely appropriating a bit of this or that, in which case you may just be asked to pay a royalty, to complete misappropriation of the entire work (commonly known as bootlegging) which may net you a couple of years and a few hundred K in fines...per violation. Its all considered theft in the eyes of the law, the only difference is how much of a penalty you'll pay, which is controlled by how much you stole.
It is considered a bad thing in the eyes of the law and the punishments are frequently based on equilvalences to actual theft of property values the same as the claimed value of the IP.
If you can't follow that then we get into the you don't get it round and round that gets real boring real fast.
Go look at the penalties the Verve had to pay when frontman Richard Ashcroft lifted a portion of an obscure Rolling Stones track for their Bittersweet Symphony. He just infringed a little bit from a Stones song nobody would remember...except when the song shot up the charts, the Stones' legal team swung into action. The band sacrificed ALL of their royalties from that song to the Stones and supposedly had to credit the Stones with a writing credit on future pressings of the disc (read that as ADDITIONAL costs). The band broke up because they couldn't afford to stay together.
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SIGH
Again, because they commited copyright infrigment. Showing me that someone got in a LOT of trouble for doing the bad thing called copyright infringement does not provide a single DROP of evidence that copyright infringement is theft. Just that it is against the law and they will punish you for it.
Honestly, if you are paying attention to the point I am making I can not see why you would even waste time typing that out because it does not even REMOTELY address the matter I am speaking to.
EDIT:
That is absolutely correct.
However, if you buy a copy of RtL, and lose it and have no copies of your own already made, you don't have the right to grab an unauthorized copy off of the internet.
I already said that.
In fact, there is no fact situation involving the phrase "I downloaded an unauthorized copy" that will survive a legal test. Stolen property, regardless of method, belongs to the original owner regardless of the passage of time (one and only one exception-the doctrine of adverse posession, which only applies to land). That unauthorized copy on the net is considered stolen property by the law. If you download it, you are in possession of stolen property, same as if you'd pickpocketed someone or paid for it with a counterfeit $20.
Agreed. But we do agree that making a copy of IP that I have purchased IS legal as long as I don't cross the "and" part of your stated definition.
If I make 1000 copies of a CD and store tham in a box because I am a paranoid freak it is still legal.
Same if I scanned my copy of War and Peace or Complete Divine.
If I steal $10 from you and get away with it, all you need is good enough accounting to know that you were stolen from. If I infringe against a $10 IP of yours one time and get away with it, you will never know.
Does that make it a lesser crime? That is a philisophical question. In my opinion, no. It is no less of a crime.
If I steal $1,000,000 from someone and get away with it, they will likely be financially destroyed. If I distribute 100,000 copies of your $10 IP, then you will NOT be financially destroyed. You can claim that you potential to realize earned value from your IP has been destroyed. And you will be correct. But the extent is unknown. If you do catch me and prove it, then you can have me punished for $1,000,000 worth of infringement. That is fine, because that is what I did. Would I deserve the same penalty as if I actually stolen $1,000,000. I dunno. I don't much care, I won't waste time feeling sorry for criminals whether they are infringers or thieves.
The point being that both theft and infrigment have a negative financial impact on the victim. And in both cases the criminal should be punished. But the nature and objective, measureable magnitude of the impact on the victim are very different in the two cases. Because the two actions are different things.