A
Amaris
Guest
Common nomenclature calls them pirates. The actions are clearly separate in any case... people who copy things without permission are infringing, people who take physical goods are stealing.
So it has to be physical to be stolen. Does this mean it's acceptable for me to copy Microsoft's code for their various operating systems? I'm not taking anything physical. How about game code? What if I took the codes for, say, Sims 3 and compiled it on my own system and gave it away to friends via bitorrent or limewire, is that okay? Clearly by your definition I'm not a thief, so what am I?
Yes, pirates copy things, make duplicates, sell on for profit or use for their own ends. Thieves take things, possibly for the same reasons.
I don't know, is it the 2 best songs on the album, and the rest are shit and not really worth buying? You see that's why sometimes the only way to truely know how good something is is to see/hear it in it's entirety. So many albums have got 2 good songs, which are played endlessly on the radio/music channels, and then the rest of the cd is pointless shit. You hear those 2 and then spend £10 on a cd that turns out you already heard the best of anyway. Just as a lot of movies have their best bits in the trailer, then are rubbish when you see them in full.
So what you want is a guarantee. You want a sure thing.
So even me being very reasonable and offering two of my own songs for free as incentive, it's not enough for you, you want the whole thing, and after you've listened to all of it, just maybe you like it and you'll pay for it. I see.
J.