Wow, I actually have to take a step back and reconsider my position, or at least the way in which I approach things. You've certainly appealed to my intellectual half. I think there is one major flaw in what you are saying though.
Yes, stealing is wrong, but copyright infringement is also wrong, the effects of both are different I will own. One is certainly preferrable to the other but there are other options preferrable to both.
When we start making compromises and saying 'this is bad, but it's better than this other way' we are still left with a problem that shouldn't be there in the first place.
I agree but it's not what I'm trying to get at.
I'm simply pointing out that one is pretty much always harmful (stealing) where as one is only harmful in certain circumstances and potentially not harmful in others.
I'd prefer that people did neither and everyone got paid for their work, but at the end of the day there is some largely unknown percentage of gamers who pirate for reasons which I would consider perfectly moral. Let me clarify it's still ILLEGAL, but I personally consider morally justified.
Some personal examples of things I've done which I consider perfectly moral:
1) I legitimately own discs for games I bought, but I no longer have an optical drive (I actually use all my SATA ports on HDD/SSDs) and so I've downloaded ISOs of some of my games in order to play without needing to change my hardware config
2) I've had DRM fail in the past rendering the game unplayable, GFWL has been problematic for me many times in the past which has resulting in downloading cracked game exe's for games I already own and fake GFWL dlls.
3) I've downloaded ISOs of old games I've bought but lost the discs for or had broken discs but still have my CD key.
4) Games with known problems on my hardware config I've downloaded to test/try before I buy, one good example was the Witcher 2, there was numerous scaling issues with crossfire and numerous day 1 bugs, i didn't want to risk it being unplayable so I downloaded to try it first, low and behold it didn't work. When they patched the game to work I bought a legit copy
5) Downloading cracked exes for games I own to remove DRM checks such as needing the CD to play, needing to be online or whatever.
I own a shelf full of games and currently 294 games on steam...am I a blight to PC gaming because I've pirated stuff for the reasons above? I don't think so and some others might agree.
The point is that this simplified idea that
PIRACY = STEALING = WRONG is a gross over simplification. What we really should be saying is
PIRACY = COPYRIGHT INFRINGEMENT = SOMETIMES WRONG, the appeal to piracy being theft and theft always being wrong simply destroys the nuances of the problem.
Morals and values change over time. In some contexts even what is considered immoral is considered to be just. That isn't to say I remotely think piracy is just fine at this time, but in the end, it's just what the majority thinks that makes it right or wrong and that can change at any time.
If it wasn't for people who disagreed and went against the grain of thought of what is considered right and moral, the world would be a far scarier place than it is with some people who download things off the internet.
This kind of follows on from what I'm saying, once we move away from this false idea that piracy is theft and we accept that not instances of piracy are morally wrong we can start investigating the idea of copyright law not being ideal.
In some places in the world such as sweeden, the young generation have been brought up with fast broadband/cable and sharing has been a shift in cultural norms, in these places we have political movements to reform copyright.
No - it's not that they don't see it as a crime. Most people only really consider criminality in terms of how likely they are to get caught.
The problem is that they don't see it as unethical.
And this brings us to this, sure some people just do not see this as unethical, what is currently legal and how we prosecute breach of copyright is simply not up for debate, it just a fact we cannot deny. But as long as people disagree with the law then they're going to risk breaking it, at some point when a large enough portion of society question the law it faces being reformed.
I think that's a long way off yet, but I can see us moving that way eventually, that's a much deeper discussion though.