Jeff Taylor | February 10, 2005
Boing Boing relates that you consider the actual possible legal sanctions against you for downloading content from a ripped DVD, you'll run to your local retailer and attempt to steal the thing outright.
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Cory Doctorow says,
... One has to wonder, then, what kind of crazy society we live
in given the relative penalties for infringing a copyright using a
computer as compared to stealing an object from a store?
Oh, I don't know. Maybe the same kind of society that locks up drug
users longer than murderers.
I think people make a guess that they are far less likely to get
caught downloading a DVD illegally than they are to get caught
trying to shoplift a DVD from the local Wal-Mart.
A simple risk times potential cost calculation would probably come
out in favor of the downloading, assuming you were the kind of
person who would do one of those things, anyway.
I think, probably, the penalties of law are related not only to
the severity of the crime, but also how serious a problem we think
it is. If something happens constantly, we try to crack down on it
with more enforcment and harsher penalties--think drug laws. It's
not that using drugs by itself is quite that bad, but that nothing
less seemed to have any effect (yes, I know what we have now has no
effect either. If you really think drug use is a serious problem,
that may justify ramping the penalties up even more). So the
harsher penalties don't say that shoplifting is worse than
downloading, but that downloading is a larger problem.
Also, consider the scale...though the law doesn't enshrine this
specifically, the penalties for shoplifting a DVD are for one
instance of stealing...maybe three, four max? The penalties for
downloading mostly get brought in when you've taken tons. I think
you can make a case that illegally downloading a couple hundred
DVDs and sharing them with others is worse than shoplifting one or
two.
"I think you can make a case that illegally downloading a couple
hundred DVDs and sharing them with others is worse than shoplifting
one or two."
I disagree, downloading doesn't cost anybody anything. Saying that
every download is a lost sale can be easily disproven. Based on the
mp3s I downloaded in the past I actually bought some of the CDs
later, which I wouldn't have done otherwise as I'd never heard of
the band before. The person uploading the files should have charged
the RIAA for freelance marketing costs.
Stealing from a store on the other hand has a material cost to the
shop and is therefore theft. I disagree with theft, but I have no
issue with downloading.
The one thing i will never understand about Reason is its constant embrace of the theft of intellectual property. Can anyone explain to me why unauthorized downloading of copyrighted material is not theft? Cut the "poor little guy vesrsu big bad record company" crap; you are condoning theft of property (our most fundamental right), and I can't see how any "libertarian" can justify that.
I can't see anything in Jeff's post above that defends or even
implies defending stealing other people's property. If anything, I
think that to the extent Reason and its writers have revealed a
position, it's that:
1) They have a problem with the constant rent-seeking going on by
the RIAA and the MPAA, by using the government to control, alter or
ban technology and business models that might threaten their
control of the industries.
2) The penalties for so-called "piracy" are out of all proportion
to any actual harm caused to the parties in question.
3) Both the MPAA and RIAA have used the government as a tool to
violate others' civil liberties in the name of stopping
"piracy."
jimmy - I don't see downloading as 'theft' of intellectual
property. Theft would be publishing someone elses copyrighted works
for commercial gain with no return to the author.
Downloading music is no different to picking up an old newspaper on
a train and reading an article or two. In both cases, the author
has not benefitted from the sale, but in neither case would I call
that copyright theft.
Okay, let me rephrase: if you accept the original argument that
filesharing is bad, even if it's nowhere near as bad as
shoplifting, filesharing 200 times could easily be worse than
downloading twice.
Then we get into my friends who have 9000-song collections, of
which they paid for maybe 500...
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