Am I An Evil Hard-Bitten Criminal Scum?
Jul. 27th, 2007 11:04 pmFor the poll I'm interested in the moral implications rather than in whether one should trust someone who would pirate games/music/videos in the first place.
[Poll #1029243]
There was a TV show in the '90s which I enjoyed immensely. I was in a long-distance relationship with
callicrates, and knowing I could see this show every Sunday was what kept me going in between visits. Like all good things it came to an end, and the Major Studio (TM) which produced it seems intent upon pretending it never existed. Then again, it seemed as if they planned on doing it with several of their Sunday shows, but have since released two of the series on DVD.
Tonight I found a box set of all two seasons on a site and was overjoyed, but as I read the site I got the idea that it might not be under license by the Big Studio (TM). Andy agrees; what tipped us both off is that they are not regionally encoding the DVDs. Right off the bat I know a few things:
I went to the Big Studio (TM) website (which still refuses to acknowledge their long-gone Sunday lineup. The two exceptions are the two shows released on DVD, and even then I could only find mention of those two shows by searching the DVD shop specifically) as well as the IMDB. There seems to be absolutely no indication they will ever release the show; even Amazon doesn't have the "Vote for this so we can tell them to make it" option.
I may buy the pirated copy, but I do have nagging doubts about the morality of it all. Or, to put it another way, I'm not the biggest fan of the RIAA or of Big Studio (TM), and I don't see the people who actually created/contributed to the show as being hurt by this. While my decision as to whether to buy it probably won't be influenced by the poll answers, I am a Cat and therefore my curiosity has to kill me sometime.
I welcome comments, especially if the answers offered in the poll are not nuanced enough to cover your feelings on piracy and such.
[Poll #1029243]
There was a TV show in the '90s which I enjoyed immensely. I was in a long-distance relationship with
Tonight I found a box set of all two seasons on a site and was overjoyed, but as I read the site I got the idea that it might not be under license by the Big Studio (TM). Andy agrees; what tipped us both off is that they are not regionally encoding the DVDs. Right off the bat I know a few things:
- These people may not have the material in question and may just laugh all the way to the ID theft club with my credit card number.
- If the videos are not commercial-free, uncut, and high-definition, as they promise, I will have no legal recourse since I could be nailed for buying pirated goods.
- Their purchase record would have to be turned over to the government (presumably with proper paperwork, but under this administration I wouldn't count on it) in a criminal case.
- Big Studio (TM) could and probably would try to take it out of my hide if they found out I'd bought a copy (I will note that given how hard Big Studio (TM) seems to be trying to disassociate itself from the show, this doesn't worry me as much as if this was their flagship money-maker).
I went to the Big Studio (TM) website (which still refuses to acknowledge their long-gone Sunday lineup. The two exceptions are the two shows released on DVD, and even then I could only find mention of those two shows by searching the DVD shop specifically) as well as the IMDB. There seems to be absolutely no indication they will ever release the show; even Amazon doesn't have the "Vote for this so we can tell them to make it" option.
I may buy the pirated copy, but I do have nagging doubts about the morality of it all. Or, to put it another way, I'm not the biggest fan of the RIAA or of Big Studio (TM), and I don't see the people who actually created/contributed to the show as being hurt by this. While my decision as to whether to buy it probably won't be influenced by the poll answers, I am a Cat and therefore my curiosity has to kill me sometime.
I welcome comments, especially if the answers offered in the poll are not nuanced enough to cover your feelings on piracy and such.
no subject
Date: 2007-07-28 07:24 pm (UTC)I really like how the origami community handles things like this. It's generally accepted that copying books is a bad idea. However, there are organizations out there (Origami USA and the British Origami Society and doubtless a dozen others of which I am not aware) that maintain lending libraries. That's only part of it, though. An awful lot of the art is passed on through face-to-face teaching, whether in a class, at a group meeting, or one-on-one. Copyright doesn't even enter into the equation there. If the original creator doesn't want the model to be passed on he or she simply doesn't teach it to anyone (or publish diagrams) to begin with. Sometimes there are conditions -- "this is how I want my work to be presented/treated" sorts of things. No problem.
The really interesting part is how all this interacts with the law, or rather, how it doesn't. A set of origami diagrams is clearly copyrighted. However, the model you fold from them is not. It is perfectly legal to fold a model from a book, reverse-engineer it and make your own diagrams, then give those away or sell them. Legal -- but very, very rude, and so noone does it. The community operates very much on respect and good manners.