There are lots of laws that don't make sense, but you still obey them because it's what civilized people do. Civilization can't work unless we agree to abide by the laws. Individuals don't have the right to pick and choose which laws they think should apply to them. If you disagree with a law, then you try to change it within the system.
We are aware of that. But UNTIL it changes, the law is the law and must be followed.
While the law is useful in establishing procedures that make life a bit safer (right of way protocols, for instance), let's keep in mind the fact that laws exist for us and not the other way around. I believe in the individual rights of self determination and free conscience, not in the law. The law is just a convention. If the laws are good, I'll comply -- and if not, I won't. Maybe the state doesn't say I have the right to make that determination for myself, but I say I must. The state does not own me, and it would violate every right it claims to give me if that suited its purposes. Human will, not compliance to purported authority, keeps people free.
David R. George III said:
If downloading a copy of a book is not permitted by the publisher, then doing so is stealing, regardless of any attempt to justify such an action.
It may be stealing in some arbitary legal sense, but not in reality -- and it's reality that concerns me. The laws can go hangs themselves. If I lived in medieval Europe, I might break the law and "steal" by not giving the bishop a portion of my harvest every year -- but that's legalism, not reality.
David R. George III said:
Enabling a website that permits illegal downloads of intellectual property by patronizing it is itself harmful.
An understandable point.
David R. George III said:
You don't download ebooks because you don't like them, but you'd be completely justified in doing so if you liked ebooks?
Not at all. I will not steal the labor of anyone, whether it be a writer or the kid next door who offers to rake my yard. I don't download music or PC games that I have not paid or, nor would I download a book I hadn't paid for and in so doing, cheat the artist. I even feel a twinge of guilt when buying books used, because none of that money is actually going to the original artist. (I did a lot of used-book buying this year, but now I've finally caught up in TrekLit and have been buying new releases, including the three Typhon Pact books.)
If I read eBooks, I'd buy a copy for my reading pleasure but not think twice about making a backup on my computer in case of data corruption or if I misplaced the Kindle. I can't help my car being stolen or my magazine flying out of my hands and into a mud puddle, but in the case of digital property I
can make redundancies to protect that which I have purchased. Perhaps those who created the property would rather I didn't, but we all act to preserve ourselves as much as possible.