A lot are ad supported, so while you may not be paying for them with $, you're still paying for them by viewing content that people that give the app creators $ want you to see
9/19/2012 9:48:40 AM
Firstly, I said all free apps on my phone; not all free apps in the market. Secondly, obviously not, but the point is still valid. Most people don't pay for free content.
9/19/2012 9:48:55 AM
most people have no moralsmaybe this libertarian thing won't work after all
9/19/2012 9:52:41 AM
Taking free stuff for free isn't a morality issue.
9/19/2012 9:54:40 AM
it is when the creator asks for voluntary compensation proportionate to the value of the contentthat's what we've been talking about the whole time, you were just slow to get theresee: in rainbows[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 9:57 AM. Reason : start creating valuable content - get paid]
9/19/2012 9:57:11 AM
First time you've mentioned voluntary payment aka donations.And still, the content is free. Free is free. Not immoral to take free content for fee, even if donations are accepted.
9/19/2012 10:02:05 AM
if you truly believe that most of your other beliefs don't scalecongratulations, you suck
9/19/2012 10:04:13 AM
I'm just saying how the world operates. Most people don't pay for free content.
9/19/2012 10:06:44 AM
your belief system doesn't scaleyou lose
9/19/2012 10:07:16 AM
9/19/2012 10:36:28 AM
You might not, but the company does, seeing as how they have to pay, thus they pass those costs down the line, ending up at you. And it's the company's right to have their product protected from theft and to charge you to use it.[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 10:41 AM. Reason : .]
9/19/2012 10:40:15 AM
9/19/2012 10:44:14 AM
It's theft.
9/19/2012 10:45:13 AM
There is a youtube video I would like to share with you...
9/19/2012 10:46:44 AM
That video is equivalent to riding unicorns to Sunday brunch.
9/19/2012 10:47:38 AM
9/19/2012 10:48:23 AM
I create a product. I want to be paid for others to use my product. If you use my product without paying for it, you are stealing. Theft.
9/19/2012 10:49:33 AM
It's not theft. It's copyright infringement. And it's just as illegal.
9/19/2012 10:57:34 AM
law != right
9/19/2012 11:01:58 AM
wdprice is kinda dumb
9/19/2012 11:05:19 AM
9/19/2012 11:08:43 AM
You guys are right. Content producers shouldn't be paid for their products.^ talking about a dumb comparison[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 11:11 AM. Reason : /]
9/19/2012 11:11:00 AM
9/19/2012 11:13:02 AM
The video game industry has gone after the practice of selling used games, since they discovered it cut a big part out of their sales. The problem is that they're right. If you look at something like Netflix or even old Blockbuster, they had to go through the proper legal channels and negotiations in order to allow serial use of a product.Serial use is legally different from copying, but ethically it's not.
9/19/2012 11:14:47 AM
9/19/2012 11:18:13 AM
If you want another example of different expectations about serial use:When I buy a product, use it, then sell it on ebay, I don't have a strong expectation that I'll be able to deduct the sell price from my taxes. Many people would have this expectation. The difference is whether you consider the sell value to be your own "consumption" or not. I mean, you went to the store and paid the retail price. Why should that be any less consumption than the guy who stands next to you and buys it with no resale intention?in terms of illegalityfull purchase and throw away < serial use < copyingBut I wasn't speaking of legality for most of what I wrote, same with the video.
9/19/2012 11:18:39 AM
The great misconception is that copyright is somehow supposed to be equal to the rights of physical property; in fact it is of a different form, because it deals with the right to copy rather than the right to hold a physical object.BTW, in the CD-player example, the doctrine of first sale applies: After you purchase an item from a retailer, if you sell off or give away that item (without copying it, so that you no longer have the item you had purchased), copyright law does not apply.(Issues with the doctrine of first sale arise with smartphone apps, books for some eReaders, and video-game DLC, which now are not so easily transferrable after the first sale.)EDIT: You don't gain all the rights associated with a work just by buying it at retail; for example, it costs much more to buy an educational DVD for showing in class than to buy a DVD for home viewing.[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 11:20 AM. Reason : copyright is more complicated than "no warez plz"
9/19/2012 11:18:50 AM
9/19/2012 11:24:12 AM
BUT WITHOUT LAWS THERE WOULD BE NO MORALS
9/19/2012 11:30:10 AM
that video and most of this thread brings the and yes, copying/distributing material that the recipients would have otherwise had to pay for is essentially stealing. do most of us do it? of course.
9/19/2012 11:32:24 AM
The argument for freedom of copying isn't a legal argument!It's a religious argument.http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Missionary_Church_of_Kopimism
9/19/2012 11:32:35 AM
thank God for laws! they are how i know what is right and what is wrong!
9/19/2012 11:43:07 AM
http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2007/09/30/radiohead/
9/19/2012 11:58:43 AM
http://lefsetz.com/wordpress/index.php/archives/2007/10/27/stunting/
9/19/2012 12:04:37 PM
9/19/2012 12:35:58 PM
Dude we get it, no one is arguing that business practices don't change with new technology. And as for Radiohead if they give away free music, that's their choice as the content creators and I can copy their music because the have given consent to it. However if Justin Bieber doesn't give you consent to copy his digital noise then doing so would be illegal.[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 1:05 PM. Reason : ]
9/19/2012 1:03:39 PM
copying is not theft
9/19/2012 1:51:22 PM
9/19/2012 7:46:29 PM
I don't have any issue with copyrights as a concept, what is hugely problematic is the length of time things remain copyrighted. Indefinite ownership of intellectual property is ridiculous. Most things should go into public domain in less than a decade. It's certainly not the case that people should be paying to use the fucking happy birthday song. 95 years of copyright protection is just outlandish.Why the hell should "Girlfriend" by Justin Bieber receive 75 more years of protection as intellectual property than the patent for a cancer drug?Creators of intellectual property deserve to be paid for their work and deserve to have it protected, but not indefinitely. I do believe that rigorous enforcement of laws is necessary to encourage the creative process, but protection should probably be inversely proportional to number of units sold whether that's CDs or books, or whatever. Once something is broadly distributed to people and has become part of popular culture it stops belonging solely to it's creator.I'm about as Libertarian as you can get, and even I can recognize that the concept of owning intellectual property is not as easy to wrangle as physical property and thus cannot be handled like other property rights law.
9/19/2012 8:37:01 PM
9/19/2012 9:03:49 PM
To those who think people shouldn't be able to ask to paid for producing content, answer me this:What's the difference between asking to be paid for an MP3 and asking to be paid for a ticket to a concert?
9/19/2012 9:08:05 PM
9/19/2012 9:21:38 PM
[not sure if troll thread]
9/19/2012 9:22:57 PM
^^^^ uh, you honestly think people would continue producing high production-value content like AAA video games and blockbuster movies if they didn't get paid for it?[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 9:25 PM. Reason : I don't know what you are laughing at. You think everyone counterfeiting money would be fine?]
9/19/2012 9:24:31 PM
9/19/2012 9:26:19 PM
You asked a stupid question and I answered your stupid question. That is all.I don't have an ipod.[Edited on September 19, 2012 at 9:27 PM. Reason : .]
9/19/2012 9:27:20 PM
and your answer was moronic and subject to a giant lack of logical reasoning.]
9/19/2012 9:30:31 PM
Saying a piece of digital data and a live performance are fundamentally different is moronic.Okay chief.
9/19/2012 9:32:56 PM
no, they may be different, but your explanation for how they are different and why one deserves payment and the other doesn't was NOT logically sound. You said one required time, suggesting, then, that the other doesn't. Is it your contention that the band does NOT have to spend any time at all or do any performing whatsoever in order to make an MP3?
9/19/2012 9:34:47 PM
Where did I do anything of the sort?YOU ASKED A QUESTION ESSENTIALLY WITHOUT CONTEXT. I SIMPLY ANSWERED IT, DEVOID OF WHATEVER BIASED SUBTEXT YOU APPARENTLY INTENDED. i mad like bill o'reilly.
9/19/2012 9:39:36 PM