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by deong
2993 days ago
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It's only ignorant to apply supply and demand to digital goods if you start from the premise that copyright shouldn't exist. 1. Copyright shouldn't exist.
2. If copyright didn't exist, anyone would be able to get any digital file easily without restriction.
3. If you can get any digital file without restriction, then supply is infinite and demand doesn't matter.
4. If supply is infinite, then supply and demand doesn't matter and you're ignorant for trying to apply it. That's basically the argument you're making, and you're rather trivially just assuming the consequent. On the second part, that's just a really faulty analogy. Competitors aren't "stealing" from one another for the simple reason that they haven't taken anything. Copyright infringement isn't "stealing" demand. It's stealing an item that has demand. It's the infringement that's the theft, not the consequences. The consequences are just the justification for having the law in the first place. To repeat, competitors aren't "stealing" when they lower demand for the stupidly obvious reason that they haven't stolen anything. |
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Copying a file is free, it's weird to make it equivalent to theft when there is no loss on behalf of the studio. Perhaps a better example would be one friend sharing a dvd with another friend.
That's what I'm saying though, it is stupid, to call file sharing theft. Theft involves loss on behalf one party. If simply taking profit(file sharing media companies would say) is enough to count as theft, then regular competition does that.
Another analogy: suppose you had a technology where you could clone real life items, you could copy food, cars, precious metals etc. you wouldn't call that theft. However in computing that technology readily exists.
Another thing, you're conflating laws with morality, just because something is illegal doesn't mean it's immoral. Copyright has been extended again and again by the Disney company afraid to lose their mouse.