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  • thus should be priced far lower than physical goods

    This is a completely separate argument, that's why it's not valid. I'm not arguing about the price that content producers are charging for their products. If people don't think it's worth that price, then they shouldn't buy it. What I am arguing, though, is that, whatever the perceived value of that work, people should not be entitled to consume/ingest that product simply because they disagree with the price. They just shouldn't consume/ingest it.

    With digital piracy, they've experienced no extra cost...you claim is suffering a loss?

    One is infinite. The other is not. The scope of the loss matters. The time it takes someone to produce a physical good may be greater than an intangible good but there is time and effort taken in either case. You can make the argument that those differences should be reflective of that, and I would probably agree, but that's not the point that I'm arguing so it's irrelevant to the argument.

    Maybe not entitled for the cost of accessing a place, eg a museum could charge entry (although the best ones don't), but viewing art itself should be free and a natural part of the human experience.

    You're advocating for something you yourself would not participate in. If this was an actual situation that you'd be supportive of, then you'd just be advocating for exactly the situation you're in - DRM and other bullshit that limits the access to a "place". It's just not a physical place. No one wants that, including you, so there has to be some middle ground where artists can get paid for their work by the people who view it without having to needlessly restrict that access to physical places.

    viewing art itself should be free and a natural part of the human experience

    This would be great in a society where people can create art freely without needing to make a living. We do not live in such a society nor even such a planet.

    Most people involved in making these products get paid only once, they don't get paid per copy sold - the ones that do get paid this way actually, by and large, have very little hand in producing it.

    Again, a different argument from the one I'm making. This is only the case because people pay the distributors rather than paying the creators directly. The distributors have the money and so they're the ones that have the massive piles of funds necessary to produce these products.

    You seem to be skirting around any of the valid negative points that the industry itself creates.

    No, I'm not. I'm not arguing anything about the industry. This is yet again a completely separate argument.

    Edit: And yet you left the original text in there for some reason... 🧐

    • This is a completely separate argument, that’s why it’s not valid.

      It's not a separate argument, though. I've provided justification for why piracy should exist - to limit the price of goods and services, which are currently excessive, but would be even more so if piracy wasn't an option. That is a very valid point in this discussion.

      One is infinite. The other is not. The scope of the loss matters.

      EXACTLY!! EXACTLY. The scope of the loss is different.

      If you are the victim of theft, you've not only lost a potential sale, you've also lost a tangible good that you have paid to produce. If you are the victim of copyright infringement, you've only lost the potential sale.

      The two ideas are distinctly different. You claim they are the same. They are not.

      You're on the cusp of recognising this.

      Edit: And yet you left the original text in there for some reason…

      I own up to my mistakes. I think you were a little bit hostile in your defense, understandably, as a result of the hostility you've received - along with all the downvotes. I know that can have an effect even when you know it doesn't matter. I certainly did myself, I saw the single downvotes to my replies and concluded that was from you. I may have been wrong, it doesn't really matter, but I can see you are engaging at least.

      You're still in the wrong position, though. While it would be right to say copyright infringement is wrong, it is not theft. Stealing is the act of committing theft. Theft is defined differently to copyright infringement (piracy).

      • It's not a separate argument, though.

        It absolutely is. I have not argued that piracy shouldn't exist nor have I made any argument about how much goods and/or services should cost. Both of those things are irrelevant to the point that I made and are distinctly different from the argument I made. The cost of something doesn't determine whether piracy is justified and my argument isn't whether piracy can or should be justified.

        If you are the victim of copyright infringement, you've only lost the potential sale.

        This is not true. While the loss would not be equal to a physical good, claiming nothing is lost assumes that people's time/effort/labor have no value and are free. They are not.

        The two ideas are distinctly different. You claim they are the same. They are not. You're on the cusp of recognising this.

        I do not claim they are the same. I already recognize they are different. You need to recognize that those are merely legal terms to differentiate how the legal system treats them. I am not arguing anything about the legality of the two nor am I arguing anything about copyright infringement. I am only talking about ingesting/consuming something without paying for it, regardless of how the law treats it (and that's not even considering that laws are different depending on where they are defined).

        • It absolutely is. I have not argued that piracy shouldn’t exist nor have I made any argument about how much goods and/or services should cost.

          No, you've argued that piracy and theft are the same thing. I've explained how they are not. They are distinctly different.

          This is not true. While the loss would not be equal to a physical good, claiming nothing is lost assumes that people’s time/effort/labor have no value and are free. They are not.

          That isn't a loss related to piracy. That's something that happened regardless of whether or not piracy had occurred.

          You are claiming that a potential revenue is akin to a loss. That is a flasehood.

          I do not claim they are the same. I already recognize they are different.

          You haven't though. You keep saying piracy is theft. Theft has a very clear definition - not just a legal definition, but a definition that has been around for far longer than you or I have been alive.

          If, 500 years ago, a monk picked up a book and copied it, he would not be accused of theft. He's not paying the author - regardless of how recently the book was written - but he is diluting the author's work and their ability to sell it by producing his copy or copies. But that's not theft.

          Copyright has only existed for a little over 100 years. Since that time, rightsholders have tried to argue that infringing on their copyright was theft, and deserving of similar punishment - all so that they could (they hope) profit more. They put their effort in already, now they feel they deserve money with no further effort (I can't help but draw back to your argument that people don't "deserve to view art", and note the irony). However the argument is just as false then as it is today. You are pushing a false narrative.

          Copyright infringement is not theft. The two concepts are distinctly different.

538 comments