Interesting question. I think so. What if you are an expert musician, and compose and record your own copy of all your favorite songs?Would it be stealing if you could do the exact same thing with material objects?
Say you could do it with a sports car, just copy/paste a brand new one. Would that be stealing?
wait till assembling nano bots are a feature in every home then ask that question againWould it be stealing if you could do the exact same thing with material objects?
Say you could do it with a sports car, just copy/paste a brand new one. Would that be stealing?
They can't legally check your hard drive.I downloaded this movie but Im not really worried I own the movie now and long ago deleted the digital copy. They will never be able to tell if I have the pirated version or not, unless they supeona my HD which they wont.
Yeah that works. But you have a very low risk of your shit being intercepted. I wouldn't be worried.This is why i leach off of my neighbors open internet when i download shit haha.
You'll see your neighbor on the news as one of the people being sued LMFAO +repThis is why i leach off of my neighbors open internet when i download shit haha.
Semantics again? Okay, what's the word for stealing content?
Radio is paid for by the advertisers whose commercials you hear while listening. How do you figure consuming content that you have not paid for is "fair use"?downloading should fall under the “fair use” provisions of copyright law, the same way listening to the radio does.
sharing content that you HAVE paid for IS fair use however. someone buys a CD and decides to share it, they make a hard copy for a friend on a CD. they bring this gift home and decide more people should hear it so he turns it into a torrent and shares it with people on the internet. Where is the theft? Unless you are contending that the peson who bought the CD only owned the CD and not the music that was on it, there never was a theft. The music was paid for already. Imagine a restriction on the number of people you were allowed to feed a pizza to. Or maybe a resrtiction on the total number of people you were allow to let view a DVD you bought. no. after i buy it, it's MY product.Radio is paid for by the advertisers whose commercials you hear while listening. How do you figure consuming content that you have not paid for is "fair use"?
So, by your logic, the folks that created the content on the CD you bought are really only entitled to the proceeds from one CD, because once one person buys it, that person now owns the rights to it. Are you fucking kidding?sharing content that you HAVE paid for IS fair use however. someone buys a CD and decides to share it, they make a hard copy for a friend on a CD. they bring this gift home and decide more people should hear it so he turns it into a torrent and shares it with people on the internet. Where is the theft? Unless you are contending that the peson who bought the CD only owned the CD and not the music that was on it, there never was a theft. The music was paid for already. Imagine a restriction on the number of people you were allowed to feed a pizza to. Or maybe a resrtiction on the total number of people you were allow to let view a DVD you bought. no. after i buy it, it's MY product.
And again by your logic, it stands to reason that you now have the right to make copies of YOUR CD and sell them. Why not? It's YOUR content!no. after i buy it, it's MY product.
And what's this? Just you, with nothing to add.edit, cut and paste. your three posts are a waste of space.