If you wouldn't be judged don't put your thoughts on the internet to be viewed. That way your could keep your limited ethical understanding to yourself and no one would judge you.[/.quote]
Weren't you accusing me of being self-righteous earlier?
In any case, you mistake my intent. Your judgements don't hurt my feelings-- I'm simply pointing out that, with your seemingly murky view of ethics, you're not qualified to make those judgements.
For the record, I'm not referring to your disagreement with me on this issue; I'm referring to the way you confuse
necessity with
justification.
Sundragon2012 said:
Well I guess that removes ownership from anything that anyone can xerox, scan, copy, etc. basically no one can claim ownership even of hard copy books and the ideas therein because one can always scan it or a piece of art or anything at all that would fit on a scanner. More BS.
Nothing I've said removes the concept of ownership from hardcopy books-- only the ideas within. If I own a book, I have no obligation to let someone copy it; I'm not even obligated to let someone else copy my computer files-- and as I've noted before, I'm somewhat picky about what I allow other people to copy.
My argument is, if someone owns the physical media upon which information is stored, then it is morally acceptable-- and even beneficial-- to make copies of that information for others to use.
People can own books, computers, and clay tablets; what they can't own is the information on them.
Sundragon2012 said:
I said in my previous post that there is nothing wrong with downloading something to see what its about. If you decide its right for you, you pay for it, if you find its not you don't and you erase the file. This isn't anywhere near as complicated as you make it out to be.
I'm still benefitting from it without paying for it; by your standards, that is morally unacceptable. While this is less applicable for roleplaying books, I don't need to own a copy of a book to benefit from having read it.
Sundragon2012 said:
Someone bought the book in the first place thereby benefitting the creator of said book.
Someone bought the book they scanned and let people download.
Sundragon2012 said:
The owner may no longer have a need for the book and wants to recoup some of the loss on ebay or whatever. There is no ethical dilemma here ...
The person buying the book off eBay is benefitting from the book without the creator receiving any money for it; unless they're a sucker, they're also benefitting from the book without paying the full price set by the author.
Either way, by your reasoning, they're depriving the "owner" of the money he deserves for the sale of that book.
Sundragon2012 said:
The rights of ownership in this case trump the original rights of the creator of the product because they no longer own it and have no say as to its final destination.
So... you admit that the creator of a book has no right to control what people do with it after they've purchased it? You admit that the creator and publisher no longer own it?
Sundragon2012 said:
Reproducing the product and selling 2000 of them for 33% of retail value is immoral and unethical because all you have a right to sell is the copy you legitimately purchased.
I'm not condoning that kind of behavior, either, and you know it.
As much as I believe that everyone has the right (morally) to make free copies of books and music, I do think the creator (or publisher) should be able to dictate who is and who is not allowed to make
retail copies.
Sundragon2012 said:
Wow, you can corrupt any ethical position can't you?
I haven't corrupted anything, any more than you've proved any of your muddled and irrational arguments.
Sundragon2012 said:
The golden rule in regards to this issue is... "Would you want someone to take something of yours they didn't pay for and share it with hundreds or thousands of others who also refuse to pay for it when you rely on the income from your creativity to pay your bills?"
Only if you were talking about people actually
taking anything-- which you still aren't, despite your claims to the contrary.
As for people copying something they didn't pay for, and sharing it with hundreds or thousands of others...
someone had to pay for that first copy. And I'd be thrilled to know that hundreds or thousands of people have read my work.
As for relying on the income from my creativity... you do have a point there. It's why I avoid sharing anything from small publishers; you've already insulted me enough today, so please give me at least enough credit to believe that my ethics would survive a couple miles in the other guy's shoes.
Sundragon2012 said:
No Robin Hood....you would not.
Actually, Robin Hood stole from the rich and gave to the poor. I copy things from the middle-class and give them to whoever asks for them. I also don't think the people I'm copying things from are corrupt tyrants and I'm not trying to overthrow them.
Sundragon2012 said:
The golden rule doesn't mean I shouldn't point out the rationalizations for theft that you are offering up as sound ethical arguments.
If you were applying the Golden Rule to this argument at all, you'd stop trying to win this argument through insults and labelling my personal ethical convictions "rationalizations". Otherwise, I don't really see how the Golden Rule would stop you from arguing with me at all, and I'm not asking you to agree with me or concede, or even to shut up.
We're arguing; that's what civilized people do when they disagree. It was my choice to get involved in this argument, so I obviously expected to be argued with.
Sundragon2012 said:
Good for you....this is your choice.....your choice.....you cannot expect others to make the same choices with materials of their creation.
I'm not expecting them to make that choice-- regardless of which of us is right or wrong, I'm sure we can both agree that they simply do not have a choice in the matter. Even if I agreed with you 100% and believed that copying books was immoral and unethical, the choice would still be made for them tomorrow when people did it anyway.
Even if everyone in the world believed that copyright infringement was theft, there are enough people who don't mind stealing that the p2p networks would still be full of copyrighted material.
Please don't confuse these last few paragraphs as an ethical argument-- "it happens anyway" is no basis for any kind of decent human morality, and I'm not trying to use it as an argument in my favor.