Angry Alt Right Nerd
kiwifarms.net
- Joined
- Jan 18, 2022
I think the fact that watching people fake reactions to things is so popular is a sad commentary on the state of society but at least it makes it easier for me to pirate shit
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If most people don't pirate things than I have nothing to worry about. My behavior doesn't actually affect anything. It's kind of like voting; it becomes a moral issue for people to bang on about because of propaganda, brainwashing, and superstition, not because it's actually effective. Gilens et al (2014) (link) already proved that public opinion measurably has no effect on policy.Piracy is still illegal; most people don't pirate things
Do you think piracy should be legal and copyright be completely abolished? Even creative commons licence does not allow using the work in another for-profit product.
I would say that is because people widely recognise the value of a creative person sharing their artistic creations.most people don't make money from YouTube ads but rather from sponsors, patreons, merchandise, etc.
No, I would compare it to a street musician. People give them money because they find them entertaining, and I should be able to play their music and cover it whenever I want without issue.I would say that is because people widely recognise the value of a creative person sharing their artistic creations.
Would you not say that from that follows the idea that you should have a right to the creative product you made?
Should you be able to record the musician and sell the recording without any problem?No, I would compare it to a street musician. People give them money because they find them entertaining, and I should be able to play their music and cover it whenever I want without issue.
I should be able to sell the recording. It's nice to shout them out, but the reality is they don't make money anyway.Should you be able to record the musician and sell the recording without any problem?
If intellectual property becomes meaningless how can the original musician (let's assume it was an original song and not a cover for simplicity) claim on their patreon that they are the creator? Would that claim have any meaning? Would there be anything to prevent many other people from making that claim?
What is the creator doing to secure his ownership? Why is it everyone else's responsibility to secure any other artist's """""""property""""""""?Should you be able to record the musician and sell the recording without any problem?
If intellectual property becomes meaningless how can the original musician (let's assume it was an original song and not a cover for simplicity) claim on their patreon that they are the creator? Would that claim have any meaning? Would there be anything to prevent many other people from making that claim?
Recognising copyright is, at a more base level, allowing someone to protect their intellectual property by recognising it as suchWhy is it everyone else's responsibility to secure any other artist's """""""property""""""""?
When physical property is stolen, someone is deprived of their property. They can show physically the place where the property has been removed without authorization. When information is copied, nobody is derived of that information. Show me on Dreamworks's server where their copy of Shrek is now missing because I downloaded it 82,000,000 times. If someone doesn't want information to be shared, they shouldn't share it. Like I said, millions of entertainment media are produced yearly despite the fact that making unauthorized copies of information has never been easier.Why is intellectual property fundamentally different from physical property?