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How is downloading not stealing?

I think that the industry does make a hasty assumption on the "stealing" aspect; they assume that all of the people downloading would have bought the material if they couldn't download it. I don't think that's the case. If the industry stopped all illegal downloading today, I don't think they would see that great of an increase in their revenue. In effect, the industry would only win some kind of moral victory instead of a substantive one.

Of course, I look at it mostly from the comic book perspective; the majority of people downloading comics do so because they are either unable to pay or are sick of paying $4.00 for 22 pages of content that only presents 1/4th to 1/6th of a story. Is that a defendable justification for downloading the material through back channels? Not really. However, it highlights how poor business practice is a catalyst to the problem. If the companies would change their distribution models and reign in their expenses, then consumers would be more willing to pay. It's a similar scenario to music where labels were trying to force people to buy an entire album to get one song. Once the model was changed to make single songs available for $1.00 each, people started buying in droves.

The crux is really distribution, though. I think alot of people take for granted that everyone has everything available to them the same way. Where I live, it's 90 miles in any direction to go to a movie theater. I don't download new movies, but I can see where someone in my situation would be very compelled to do so.
 
I think that the industry does make a hasty assumption on the "stealing" aspect; they assume that all of the people downloading would have bought the material if they couldn't download it. I don't think that's the case. If the industry stopped all illegal downloading today, I don't think they would see that great of an increase in their revenue. In effect, the industry would only win some kind of moral victory instead of a substantive one.
Instead, people would just find a friend who bought the CD and then rip it onto their own computers. :p
 
I downloaded Wolverine and felt bad as the credits started to roll and I saw the names of all the people who worked on it so I am planning to buy a ticket the day it comes out whether I actually go into the theater or not, I'll throw them 12 bucks.

I also download nice HD copies of TV shows I enjoy like Lost, BSG and 24 to tide me over until the DVDs are released.
 
Assuming, just for the sake of a theoretical discussion, that you download an album you would otherwise never, ever have considered shelling out even a few pence for and you don't pass it on to other people, where, please, is the damage to the industry?

The artist, studio, etc etc and all the people who worked to make that album don't get PAID for the work they did to create while you still get to reap the benefits of their WORK to create it. You are deriving GAIN from their WORK without paying for it. That is theft, plain pure and simple.

You’ve actually made me realize wherein the real difference between illegal downloading and stealing a CD lies. I could never quite pinpoint it, but it’s right there.

Theft requires there to be a GAIN and a LOSS. Here’s the different possibilities to look at:

- Stealing a CD: You GAIN a CD whereas the store owner LOSES part of his stock and his profits.

- Illegally downloading and never intending to buy any of it (even the stuff you like and would have purchase otherwise): You GAIN copyrighted materials, the creator LOSES revenue from you.

- Illegally downloading and purchasing everything later on: You GAIN copyrighted material, the creator GAINS revenue from you.

- Illegally downloading and purchasing only what you really like (hence none of the stuff you wouldn’t have bought anyway): You GAIN copyrighted material, the creators GAIN revenue from you on the stuff you really like. They suffer NO LOSS on what you would not have bought anyway.

So the distinction really isn’t that simple. And understanding that (or failing to) is one of the reasons the music industry, for example, is having such problems at the moment.
Here’s another point (based on something another poster pointed out) that illustrates why you’re definition is problematic at best:

If somebody gets the loan of a book from a friend, he GAINS a story (even if only for a brief time and later on stored in his memory) that he never paid for. By your definition, this would also be loss of compensation for the creators’ work (since only your friend compensated them, you didn’t) and hence theft.

Feel free to follow that route, but I promise it won’t help one bit.

HOWEVER, there are a few additional things I need to point out. For one, IMHO there is a huge difference between illegally downloading something for yourself or actually distributing contents that is not your own.

No, there is not. Doesn't matter whether you are stealing for yourself or for others, it is still theft.

You said it yourself: It’s about GAIN and LOSS. Somebody who distributes illegally clearly creates a LOSS for the creators of the copyrighted material. Plus he’s operating on a large scale and driving demand.

As I’ve pointed out above, somebody who downloads illegally can still be somebody who actually provides the industry with GAINS.

Here, again, is another good example of why the industry is in a fix. Even in drug dealing, you treat the consumer of drugs (which are illegal) in a different way than you treat the dealer. And rightly so IMHO.

I'm appalled at some of the drastic penalty inflicted upon illegal downloaders by the music industry in particular. I'm even more appalled by the fact that some courts have been willing to go along with this.
Punishment always has to be measured by how severe the offence was. And, I'm sorry, but downloading a few songs illegally does not warrant punishments in the thousands of Dollars or Euros or even imprisonment (though I don't know if the latter has ever happened yet).

I'm not. You steal, you pay the price. Simple as that.

But those people don’t pay the price – they pay way, way more. The industry is using different standards to punish people. What we’re talking about, essentially, is that the guy who steals the CD actually ends up being better off since he’s judged based on the value of the CD he stole.

Oddly, if somebody downloads a CD for private use, they don’t simply say, well, that’s one CD we lost so we have to punish them as though they nicked ONE CD. They’re treated as though they’ve caused much larger damage which they simply haven’t.
That’s shameful and wrong, no matter what way you look at it.

It's also very interesting to see how the film industry, for example, is now placing such a premium on the fact that you're not actually, well, not really, anyway, obtaining a DVD that is yours but rather a license that lets you view their film under certain conditions.

Well, if it's a license, why can't I go to the cinema where I pay for the license and showing and then legally download the film since I've paid for the license? Or get the DVD at a cheaper rate, paying only for materials and shipping?

Because you are paying that theater and the film company for THAT viewing only.

You need to distinguish between the film theater and the film company. The film theater needs to pay for the costs involved in showing the film.

The whole idea of purchasing a ‘license’ is not one that I came up with but the studios themselves. They like it because, if you argue it their way, it means lots more profits.
The other way around would be more beneficial to the consumer and would also be more in line with actually rewarding the creators for the work they’ve done rather than re-warding the copy & paste process.

If I pay to see a movie at a theater, haven’t I paid the creators of the film for their work? If I haven’t, then why was I allowed to see the movie in the first place? If I have, then why do I have to pay for the same work just because it’s on DVD (excepting the production costs for the DVD, of course)? Forgetting about extras, they didn’t have to any additional work to create it, now did they?

But the model I’m suggesting isn’t really that far fetched at all. As I mentioned, I do believe such schemes already where you pay to see the movie at the theater and get a better deal on the DVD. That’s fair, isn’t it?

And there’s another point I’ve wanted to make (but had forgotten). CDs, as we’ve come to know them, will run on CD players, computers and car hifi systems.

If a label slaps on a copy protection that prevents the CD from running on the computer and the hifi system (as I’m sure you’re aware of has happened) isn’t that theft on some level? They take the same money from you for a product that does less even though it should offer the same performance.

It's THEIR work and NOT YOURS. They are allowed to control it. Again, if you want to give your rights and work away for free, feel free to do so and no one will stop you.

I have to ask: Do you work in the film or music industry? You seem incredibly adamant about it.

And, yes, they should be able to control it. But I think you just can’t ignore two things:

- The consumer has rights as well (which neither the movie nor the music industry mind bashing)
- If you’re going to go out there with your material, you better be prepared for the world as it is. You can always wish for a better place and try to force it into place. But the people who succeed are those who manage to work with the world as it is.

All of which is an excuse to rationalize theft. Pure and simple. The lamest of defenses is the "but everyone else is doing it" defense. Just becuase someone else is a thief doent' give you license to be a thief. Guess the lesson of not giving in to peer presure idn't stick with you.

No, you’re missing the point I was making. We, as a society, define what is wrong or right.

Now, you can try to bend the people to make them fit the law. But that really misses the point of what laws or for, does it not? Aren’t the laws in some form there to represent the views and values of the country and the people they represent?

It’s the reason we, in the EU, don’t have a death penalty, for example. Too many of us believe it’s the wrong thing to do, and the law reflects this.

I don’t have any figures on illegal copying or downloading, but I believe it’s huge. And it’s being done by people who, otherwise, would never, ever be considered even remotely criminal.

Naturally, you can criminalize an entire nation or people if you like, but, honestly, it’s not going to get you anywhere.

What is right or wrong is determined, in the end, by the people – if it’s a democracy. We set the standards by which we live by.

You can work with the way the people are and try to find the best solutions. Or you can try to fight them with all you’ve got. Your pick. But be aware that you may end up on the losing side of the battle.

Oh, and then there's nonsense like region coding, DRM, rootkits, and what not. The problem is that, on many levels, you often get the better product if you go with the illegal version.

Another way to rationalize theft. Don't like your choices at the Sony store in Boston well steal from the Sony store in London instead. That's no excuse to steal.

It’s about the market. People tend to look for the best offer on the market. That’s another one of the many, many reasons the music and film industries are having such problems.

I buy the stuff I’m interested in because I want to support it. Sadly, I’ve not always been rewarded by doing that, but I do it anyway.
A lot of people don’t. And I’m really interested in looking at what a solution to that problem might be.

I certainly don’t think criminalization is. The scale of what’s going on ( as I indicated above) is just too large, really.

And, Othello, I truly believe your rigid, unforgiving and indiscriminate point of view is also hurtful to the cause you want to support. All it achieves is that it alienates a large percentage of people just the way the music and film industry tends to.

Laws will change, I don’t think people as a whole really do. Learn to work with what’s there, and you will be successful on the market place.
 
For the most part, I do consider it stealing and I don't download things. I have a bookcase full of DVDs and CDs that can testify to that. There are a few things I own that aren't strictly legal. I downloaded a few MP3s from obscure artists whose CDs I can't find anywhere to buy (like a Japanese artist who calls herself simply "AiM" and seems to make a living producing songs for anime shows, the CDs to which go out of print as soon as the show is off the air, it seems). I also have some DVDs, some I made myself and some made by others, of content that will likely never see the light of day officially (MST3K, some old horror movies like Invasion of Saucer Men). To be honest I don't feel bad about it. The percentage of such things compared to everything I have bought is neligible, and if any of it were released tomorrow I'd head out to the store ASAP.

I seem to be a rarity among my age group though. One of my friends recently asked me why I bothered to buy a new DVD when I could just as easily download the content for free. I tried my best to explain, to no avail.
 
For the most part, I do consider it stealing and I don't download things. I have a bookcase full of DVDs and CDs that can testify to that. There are a few things I own that aren't strictly legal. I downloaded a few MP3s from obscure artists whose CDs I can't find anywhere to buy (like a Japanese artist who calls herself simply "AiM" and seems to make a living producing songs for anime shows, the CDs to which go out of print as soon as the show is off the air, it seems). I also have some DVDs, some I made myself and some made by others, of content that will likely never see the light of day officially (MST3K, some old horror movies like Invasion of Saucer Men). To be honest I don't feel bad about it. The percentage of such things compared to everything I have bought is neligible, and if any of it were released tomorrow I'd head out to the store ASAP.

I seem to be a rarity among my age group though. One of my friends recently asked me why I bothered to buy a new DVD when I could just as easily download the content for free. I tried my best to explain, to no avail.
Having a bookcase of dvds doesn't attest to not downloading. I have 3 bookcases full, 1 of movies, 2 of TV shows, over 100 cds and probably 10s more legally downloaded albums, and another bookcase full of books, and another of VHS tapes. I still download stuff, not because I want to "Steal" content, but because I want to "try before I buy" or watch TV shows when they're aired in the states and not wait weeks or months till they air in the UK. I buy way music and TV shows since I started trying out stuff than I ever did before I could test stuff to see if I like it first.
 
When people illegally download bootlegged videos, they hurt the industry, because they aren't paying for the material they're watching. And that means the people who make that material get less money and are less able to make more material, not to mention less able to buy food and pay rent (contrary to popular belief, the vast majority of actors, writers, etc. are not rich by any means).

Besides, even if it "hurts" no one, stealing is still stealing. Hell, it's just plain rude. It's an insult to the people who created the work. People shouldn't be looking for excuses to justify breaking the law -- especially for such a flimsy, self-serving motive as impatience. The law is the system that holds society together, that protects all of our rights and freedoms. We have to respect the law, not treat it as an inconvenience to be subverted at every turn. Making sure the system works, respecting and supporting the system, is the only way to ensure that our own rights will be protected by that same system when we need it. If you don't like the law, petition your congressperson or run for office yourself. Get the law changed. Until you do, though, you follow the law. That's what being a citizen means. There was a time when Americans cared about their duty to their society rather than merely their own self-indulgence.

It's really fucked up when I am forced to agree with Christopher. And you will probably never find me saying this again: he's correct.

It is stealing. It is theft. And the multi-page long posts in this thread that are trying to make excuses for stealing is just fucking stupid. It's theft. No two ways around it.
 
It is stealing. It is theft. And the multi-page long posts in this thread that are trying to make excuses for stealing is just fucking stupid. It's theft. No two ways around it.

QFT.

It's amazing to see so many hairs split. What is and isn't stealing, what are the levels of stealing, who benefits or gains by illegal downloading, so it's not really stealing.

If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING.
 
It is stealing. It is theft. And the multi-page long posts in this thread that are trying to make excuses for stealing is just fucking stupid. It's theft. No two ways around it.

QFT.

It's amazing to see so many hairs split. What is and isn't stealing, what are the levels of stealing, who benefits or gains by illegal downloading, so it's not really stealing.

If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING.
Nothing is YOURS, you don't OWN any of those films or music. They're not your property you're basically buying a license to view and/or listen to these things.
 
QFT.

It's amazing to see so many hairs split. What is and isn't stealing, what are the levels of stealing, who benefits or gains by illegal downloading, so it's not really stealing.

If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING.

Is that supposed to be an argument?

"If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING." - What is? Taking it away, copying it, what?

If downloading copyrighted content is stealing, why doesn't anyone who does it get locked up for theft?

I also don't understand why people are so passionate about this.
 
I wonder how many people on the BBS have obtained permission to use the copyrighted materials in their avatars.
 
I think there is quite a bit of difference between an alleged "theft" and downloading. One thing no one has mentioned is that for some people (quite a few actually) just being able to SAY "I downloaded X, I'm too bad and L33T 4 U! $uck !T" IS the reason they do it. I know back when I was heavy into graphic arts and I'll admit, had to resort to downloading to finish my graphics arts course, the software I needed didn't arrive yet and I needed to get some work done, so...

But when you get to these sites and newsgroups and such, it was like a big bragging contest of who had the most stuff, who had the newest and latest and greatest whatever it was. I will bet a dozen donuts that maybe LESS than half of those people bragging even really knew how to use the software, other than maybe... maybe load some premade (heh or stolen) 3D meshes and render a couple pictures, but could they really "USE" the software they "stole"? Hah, heck no.

OR... and I found this to be the case quite often, those that DID download software, movies, music, whatever, actually got more involved with that product line and went legit, bought their entire catalog, paid for the newest versions of the software, and made a career.

Not to say that downloading an MP3 over a filesharing program is the same as actually paying for it using like iTunes, but there are a lot of times when the only way you can find certain versions of a song, is by going the file sharing route. Live cuts, old radio morning show spots, recordings of long past TV appearances that never made it to albums, "demo" versions. One of my "prize" downloads is a demo version of Led Zeppelin's "Friends" that I never saw on any compilation CD, anthology, record or whatever. Will I share it? Nah. If I could find it, someone else could too, but I like it being a Led Zep fan.

Now, if we had this discussion maybe 5-10 years ago, no one would argue this, they'd be like "Hey I just want one or two songs why should i buy the whole album, I used to buy singles back in the day, this is great!" And I remember when every store used to have a whole rack of tape singles, paid a couple of bucks to get 2 maybe 3 tracks, 4 if you were lucky (usually the "hit single", a "radio remix", another somewhat "hit" and maybe another version of that one or another shorter song that "might be a hit"

When I was a poor, unemployed, working for nothing in my mom's office, I downloaded quite a bit of music, music which I've since bought CD versions of or replaced with legit and higher quality downloads from iTunes or eMusic. I still rip any CDs I get to my hard drive, so I can load them onto my MP3 player, or listen to them without having to keep the CD physically in the drive or handy. Back before I downloaded i used to have 2 CD drives, one basically for music, one for data, so I could listen to CDs. And I still made my own mix CDs of my digital stuff, simply so I could listen to it on my computer without hogging resources (i had a nice cd-rom drive that would play cds without software) this was back in the days of 266mhz processors, 64 megs of Ram (standard) and 56k modems.

Now in 2009, to download anything over filesharing is kind of pointless, when you can get enough DRM free music on eMusic or iTunes or Amazon.com for a buck or less a track. Plus you know its not going to be a virus packed and isn't all glitchy. Movies on the other hand are a mixed bag. I like the fact that some DVDs are coming with digital copies right out of the box. I know I downloaded Iron Man even after I bought the DVD so I could it onto my MP3 player, simply because a compatible digital version was not available for my brand of player. So did I "steal?", did I "take someone's livlihood away"... NO!

Honestly, the only reason I can see rebuying any kind of content, is if its a) an improved product - ie remastered, remixed, edited, added to, b) a new physical format that works in the current equipment. Like I had no problem with buying DVDs of VHSs, since they were far superior, had MORE content and in some cases were cheaper than looking for a replacement to the VHS. BUT I do have a problem with buying a download for a record or cd or tape that I already own. Especially when I can copy it myself into the format I want it in.

One thing I always thought the industry should have done is have some kind of "prior purchase proof" thing, that would give you either a break on the new format or in the case of a digital version, a free or greatly reduced price on it. I know how many people groan and moan about when CDs came out about having to rebuy expensive classic albums, like The White Album, the Wall, etc in the new format.

While I don't think all music needs to be free, if we charge for every thing, sooner or later we should get fitted with ear cups and eye cups that will only let in what content we paid for. Didn't pay for that TV show, can't see it. Didn't pay for that song, can't even hear it. Then that should end the cycle. Right?

Course to all the "artists" that bitch and moan about "losing money", wait until they're in their 50s and 60s and giving free concerts in a zoo, or at a street fair. Honestly I will buy a CD a group that only performs at little local fairs and such, if they're good. If they suck, did I steal from them by listening to their shitty music without paying for it by standing outside of the auditorium?
 
One thing that hasn't been touched upon is the fact that when DLing via filesharing you are not just taking a copy for yourself, you are also distributing small parts of it to many many other people, which muddies the moral waters even further.
 
^
That's very true. It automatically turns a downloader into a distributor which is an issue (if that distinction means anything to you, that is).

I wonder how many people who use filesharing services are actually aware of this.
 
Another thing to contemplate - and I realize this may be very, very different depending where you lived at the time - is how prominent any of this was in the media. Today, the music and film industry are trying to use huge penalties to attract media attention and frighten people off.
Back in the mid '90s, I can't remember (for what that's worth) anything on a comparable scale taking place. If the industry had no interest in engraining how important all of this is to them in the mind of the people in general at the time, then they're partly paying for what they created in the first place.
In the mid '90s I was a member of the Video Software Dealers Association. Our organization was involved in many, many "raids" of pirating operations and flea market distributions. The problem is now that technology has enabled just about anyone to have the capacity to do what it took much more $$ back then. The theft is the same. Only the scale has changed.
 
^
That's very true. It automatically turns a downloader into a distributor which is an issue (if that distinction means anything to you, that is).

I wonder how many people who use filesharing services are actually aware of this.

Good question, I'd imagine it must be a good number though as you can physically see what the software is doing, very stupid people may not know :lol:

One thing that makes me laugh though is when they say that the people they are interested in are the big uploaders, and then proceed to mention how many files a person had available for sharing (relevant to programs like Kazaa which share everything you have in your folder more than Bittorrent which only shares the files you currently have active). What they should really be concerned with is the amount of information uploaded not the number of songs they are sharing. Somebody on a dialup connection isn't doing much uploading regardless of how many songs they have to share.
 
QFT.

It's amazing to see so many hairs split. What is and isn't stealing, what are the levels of stealing, who benefits or gains by illegal downloading, so it's not really stealing.

If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING.

Is that supposed to be an argument?

Yes. Sorry if it's succinct.

"If it's not YOURS, it's STEALING." - What is? Taking it away, copying it, what?
You're making an illegal copy.

If downloading copyrighted content is stealing, why doesn't anyone who does it get locked up for theft?
Perhaps the laws haven't caught up with the technology? I'm not a cop. The question was is it stealing? Yes. It is.

And people have been brought to court, civil court. And paid fines.

I also don't understand why people are so passionate about this.
Don't know. I just am.
 
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