lxskllr
No Lifer
What's all the fuss about? I'll finally have somewhere to store my linux iso's
I have 16gb of GNU/Linux isos :^D
Edit:
I guess it's more like 14gb. I also have the Win8 release preview in there.
Last edited:
What's all the fuss about? I'll finally have somewhere to store my linux iso's
Neither are defensible, legally or ethically. So again, why is that a useful distinction?
Wow really? This is what's wrong with this country and why we're losing all our rights. GG.
You mean like the right to create something, and decide what happens to it?
I've always supported that right, and always will. Do you?
Are you still deciding 30 years after you die? Oh wait....since you don't understand distinctions, that idea is lost on you. Lawyers use these distinctions in law against people all the time. If you can't see the reason this distinction is important, you are the naive one. It is NOT theft. Period.
I also (as stated above) believe once you've purchased an item (even if it's a license to use) you have the right to use that item for your own personal use however you see fit. Again, once people start going OMG pirates, the argument gets twisted because that's all narrow minded people think things are used for.
(No one) *** edit: most of us are not arguing the right or wrong of pirating, and for some reason, that's what you people keep coming back to as your only defense of COPYRIGHT is THEFT.
The end result is I deprived you of potential profits
Yeah, that's what I said several posts ago. So what?
Loss of potential profits is not a loss. There is no guarantee you would have made anything in the first place.
But they're making the leap that someone who would have pirated media is someone who would have purchased the media if the facilities were unavailable.It is in many legal instances (ignoring copyright).
For example, if I'm in a car accident and miss time at work, there is still a case of lost wages, even though there was no guarantee that I would have continued to work during that time. In this case there is an extremely high probability I would have worked, but I had yet to work and receive those wages.
But they're making the leap that someone who would have pirated media is someone who would have purchased the media if the facilities were unavailable.
It is a huge fallacy because not everything you receive for free is something you would pay for.
90% of what I download is to try it once. If I like it, there is a good probability that I will buy it on blu ray in the future. But if I don't like it, it goes straight to the recycle bin.
And also, if you are going to mention loss of profit as an argument, what do you think about the fact tons of great bands would have remained completely unknown if it werent for the internet?
Copyright law needs to be reformed.
To claim they have suffered a loss you only need to make the leap that at least one person who has pirated media would have purchase the media if the facilities were unavailable.
To claim they have not suffered a loss you would be making the leap that no person who pirated media would have bought it if the facilities were unavailable.
Which is the greater leap?
You're right. It needs to be made a lot stricter.
You're right. It needs to be made a lot stricter.
It is in many legal instances (ignoring copyright).
For example, if I'm in a car accident and miss time at work, there is still a case of lost wages, even though there was no guarantee that I would have continued to work during that time. In this case there is an extremely high probability I would have worked, but I had yet to work and receive those wages.
The greater leap is to presume that every illegal download could have been a purchase. And thats where they get their astronomical figures when they calculate losses due to piracy.
Back then, Dotcom "thought of myself as more American than Americans", he says. "I always had this attitude of can-do, and if you're successful you can show it, which is a very un-German thing, you know. And now, in hindsight, looking at this, the US has lost a lot of its flair for me. It's becoming such an aggressive state."