Oh Duke...
If you actually read my post correctly (erm, that would be a 'no')... you would realise:
I never actually encouraged rampant piracy in any way (nor argued that it wasn't theft, something you felt you needed to prove over and over), I was just making a case (in a debating sense) that it wasn't the crime of the century, that its level of criminality isn't on the same page as traditional theft. Of course its still a crime (duh), but its not the same as normal style shop-lifting etc, mainly due to a different (softer) stance on it in society. Of course this public stance doesn't make it legal! (it does make it arguably less morally evil amongst the general public however - hence causing confusion about what they can/can't do...). I'm not out to say whats right or wrong, I'm just explaining how some people (that do pirate) might think about it - purely to fuel debate.
So if I steal a crappy car - say a 5 year old Hyundai, instead of that new BMW - it's not theft, because it's inferior? That makes no sense. It's still theft. Videotaping first-run movies with a handheld camera in the theatre is still theft, even though it's inferior quality. How is this different?
Bad analogy, it misses the point entirely. I was just saying that stealing an MP3 was not equivalent to stealing the CD, and thusly not necessarily hurting CD sales as much as you might think. Of course its still stealing though.
NO! Broadcast media is not the same! By recording off the radio or TV, you are exposing yourself to the advertising that pays for the radio to be free to consumers. Or you're paying the subscription fee for non-commercial service. Either way, you're paying for the access to that product, in agreements that filter back to the owners of that product. And even if you record hours worth of music off of the radio, it's still illegal to give it away to other people; it's only for your personal use.
When did all radio stations have advertisements or subscription fees? Public broadcasting? Australian Triple JJJ? Oh but then you're still paying government tax, so you're still paying for the service... can you get done for piracy if you're on welfare and don't pay tax? It really starts to get tenuous here... your point isn't really important to what I was debating anyway. I was just pointing out that we shouldn't now vilify music pirates any MORE than we did in the past (again I'm not justifying their actions completely, they are still guilty of a crime), just because it is easier to do. There is a PRECEDENT set in society (as opposed to a law) that taping the radio/TV, copying tapes etc is NORMAL. Again, of course its still illegal. Again, just me giving evidence why
some people may honestly believe (even wrongly) that its OK to download music a bit...
Those tape machines can also used to duplicate original tapes made by a musician himself. But who said piracy was OK back then? Nobody! It's not the equipment that's to blame, it's how it's used that's the problem. Piracy was illegal and immoral then, and it still is now.
Duh. I agree. The manufacturers DO make products that are seemingly designed to aid piracy (regardless of legal uses they may have originally intended) which DOES make people think its OK to use their dual deck tape machine to hi-speed dub some good old 80s Dire Straits or something...
Does Apple think the average 16 year old iPod owner legally owns enough music to fill up an 80 gig model? Thats a lot of money on CDs. They KNOW a fair proportion of the songs on it will be illegally downloaded, this is how the machines are marketed. X number of songs in your pocket! All my point is, is that over the years hardware manufacturers have made many products that seemingly encourage piracy (no matter how subtley), they admit it goes on, possibly even using this illegal activity to drive hardware sales. Hence more moral confusion amongst many people...
Bullcrap! Vinyls were more expensive in real dollars. LPs were anywhere from $8-$12 back in the early '80s when I bought them. According to the CPI inflation calculator, what cost $8 in 1980 would cost $20.32 in 2005. Yet I haven't paid more than $15 for a CD that wasn't a double, ever. Also, vinyl LPs don't sound as anywhere near as good, and they have an extremely short life compared to CDs! So your glory days of vinyl were not so glorious, considering they effective cost double what a new CD costs.
CDs are generally much cheaper in the states than here in Aus. Vinyls were cheaper back in the day. Ask any old dude from Australia. Sound quality wasn't a percieved problem at the time, and vinyls still sound great through a really good hi-fi, many people (admittedly not me) actually prefer the warmer sound (not as harsh a top end as a CD). They also last fine you look after them properly. CDs are hardly indestructible either, so its a non-issue. Maybe in the states CDs are much cheaper and they are better value for money, but in Aus many feel CDs are overpriced for what you get. I feel my original point is perfectly valid from my perspective.
The majority of pop music has always been rubbish, everywhere, forever. That's no excuse either.
I actually mentioned I was just giving MY OPINION about current pop music. And excuse for what? Did you misunderstand my point AGAIN? (erm yes sir!)
When was I arguing it was OK to be a rampant pirate? I'm just discussing the issues, trying to work out (trying to see things from BOTH sides) what factors may have led to such mainstream pirating of music, why a big chunk of society thinks its ok. I'm saying things for the purpose of debate, throwing ideas that may be relevant out there. Please stop inventing things to be reactionary about, Duke. I'm just trying to cover all bases as to why piracy is such a problem... Besides, pop music IS worse nowadays. At least it used to be FUN in the old days, and not about popping caps in people's arses. Its hard to argue that MTV/sampling hasn't made pop music more throwaway in quality. Sure there were crap songs at every point in time, but at least they were performed in real time by a band, the very nature of it being less sterile and pre-fabricated than today. The emphasis of the visual element over the actual music and the sheer vacuousness that pervades much of modern pop really makes me think its crap. If you want to disagree, good on you. Your point wasn't on track with what I'm discussing anyway.
People are getting mixed messages because they refuse to admit the truth.
How can some people refuse to admit the truth if they honestly haven't got a clue they're doing something morally wrong (within their own (and society's) judgement)? There are people like this, believe it or not. Society has dictated that piracy is normal, almost kinda cool in a way. If there wasn't genuine confusion about whether downloading MP3s/Movies was JUST AS BAD as stealing them from a shop (a level of crime that most people would not cross), the government wouldn't need to run ads telling the public this message in cinemas right across Australia.
I'm done. Justify it to yourselves anyway you wish, but it doesn't change the truth: if you download music and then keep it without buying the album, it's theft. And no matter how many people decide they can get away with it, it's still theft.
I never personally justified that pirating music was OK, but was only discussing why it is so prevalent now, and what the recording industry is doing wrong to promote this. Because frankly, I think laws need changing if half a nation would be put in jail tomorrow if there was a huge crackdown on music pirates. That many people can't all be considered criminals, hence its just a problem the people, government and the record companies will have to work through if you want to eliminate piracy. Perhaps a trial period for listening to a song a few times would be a good system, I'm not sure. As we've already proven, most of us only ever use P2P to trial an artist to make an evaluation about their CD. Technically piracy, but also a right as a consumer (if any other product was being sold). Again, I'm not advocating or legitimising piracy, its still and illegal act, but one I feel can be justified under certain (limited) circumstances. Certainly not the ideal situation, I want a piracy free society as much as you.
P.S. The bold text is patronising, considering you constantly misunderstand me.
I think we agree that piracy is bad and we want to eliminate it, but you're seeing it from a really simplistic point of view, where you're either a criminal (and hence evil) or you're not. Many otherwise respectable people from all walks of life/occupations pirate the odd song to evaluate a CD (due to society's acceptance of P2P for that use), are you gonna lock them all up?