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uriel238 ,
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Sony has really gone off the rails this week.

(It may have always been off the rails and just making a lot of news.)

Nommer ,

They’ve always been off the rails. Always were 25-40% more expensive for their electronics for no real reason. I’ve never bought from them because of that.

ultra ,

I assume they also lost access to their games. If so, I’ve said this before and I’ll say it again: if buying isn’t owning, then piracy isn’t stealing.

iegod ,

Piracy was never theft regardless.

tabular ,
@tabular@lemmy.world avatar

Boats, murder and theft never had much to do with unauthorised copying. The music industry somehow convinced people to use a word with negative connotation to justify ruining people’s lives for downloading songs.

uriel238 ,
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Oyster pirates in the 19th century would land surrepititiously onto beaches at night and harvest oysters without license. It is from this use that media piracy emerged. Pirated oysters typically meant cheaper oysters at market so the resell and consumer sectors benefitted while the beach owners lost revenue.

tabular , (edited )
@tabular@lemmy.world avatar

Not sure if I’ve heard that suggested origin before, but it’s still disingenuous propaganda. Electronic media is fundamentally a different concept where the “resource” is practically infinate.

uriel238 , (edited )
@uriel238@lemmy.blahaj.zone avatar

Not to mention, copyright was a concession to encourage creative innovation in order to develop a robust public domain. Every extension of that temporary, every deflection of fair-use rights runs against that mission.

Like the buccaneers of the golden age preying on the Spanish silver train, media piracy plunders from ill-gotten gains, raiding the plunder of marauders.

I can’t speak for the original intent of naming unlicensed sharing after mischief on the high seas, but even in its time it was the sensible alternative to abuses of the ratings by English aristocracy. In the golden age, it was even then preying on plutocrats and imperialists, and it was romanticized, even if only in fiction, long before the term was applied to copyright infringement or media inspiring knock-off content.

tabular ,
@tabular@lemmy.world avatar

The precursor to copyright was the state banning books deemed to contain “dangerous” knowledge. The state limitting distribution may have encouraged invention sometimes but moreso it appeases the big keys to power. A trading card game for big business does not justify the concession. Let’s not pretend there are no gains to be made without imposing artificial scarcity.

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