Study examines sales in 12 countries from two studios before and after closure.
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I just want to point out that these companies don't actually want to "know" facts or reason - they simply want to do what they have always been doing. With no change. If they could get govt to make digital media sales illegal and stick with discs, they would do it in a heartbeat.
Which is why they continue to refuse to do what the customer wants: sell to me online, simple, no ripoff, no hassle. Everyone on the planet knows this is what the customers want and are willing to pay for.
Also your point about industry associations being not monolithic is not true. The entire foundation of industry associations is per definition, the interests and issues they have in common. Otherwise they are competitors. So industry associations go hard on the issues the industry has in common and believes in. In this case, furthering their common belief that customer wishes are to be ignored and the law used as a cudgel.
You must understand that this issue isn't even new. I was part of a strategy consulting team that did a study for one of the majors in this industry many years ago, very early on in the game. We did the research on how technology and communications platforms would likely evolve, looked at the rise of social communities and told them exactly how this was going to play out technologically, socially and in terms of business - and laid out what was a fairly sensible path for adapting and thriving in this new era ahead. They looked at it, told us we were wrong, did not hire us again - and went on doing exactly what they were doing. That sir, what happens when you give corporate executives an answer that they don't like and falls outside the beliefs in their little bubble. "The customer is going to be have a lot more power, and you need to change" - hell no. That's heresy. Response: "Jane, get my congressman on the line. We need to fix this".
morfraen":3fg441yn said:Yes, they BELIEVE it makes them money. That's the key point there. And to reinforce that belief, they also have to BELIEVE that shutting down megaupload helped, and pay for any studies that will reinforce that belief.
If they paid for a study and it didn't show any change, or showed a decrease in sales, their entire case before the US government would be completely undermined.
Titanium Dragon":1l5dgh6x said:The easiest and perhaps most widely accepted definition of evil is "selfishness at undue cost to others". I would argue that almost all humans on the planet earth will see that as evil - there are, of course, exceptions, and people add MORE to their definition of evil, but that thing - selfishness at undue cost to others - IS something that is nearly universally viewed as evil.
FearLES":151z623z said:Yet if I download a file it causes no harm or cost to the copyright owner. No property is lost and no money is taken away. The result is the same for the content owner if I download it or I simply don't buy it.
Titanium Dragon":34wji0ya said:FearLES":34wji0ya said:Yet if I download a file it causes no harm or cost to the copyright owner. No property is lost and no money is taken away. The result is the same for the content owner if I download it or I simply don't buy it.
This is the big lie. The harm is that you are taking their work without compensating them for it, the same as if you refused to pay a plumber for fixing your sink. You are forcing everyone else to pay more for it, or depriving them of just reward for the work they did for you.
The result is not the same because you benefited from their work without compensating them for it. The lack of compensation is harm.
Classic weaseltude. Going to the library, watching a public performance, or borrowing a copy from a friend are all fair uses because, unlike piracy, the use does not create more copies and doesn't diminish the value of owning a copy. Maybe weasels are just too dim to see the difference between experiencing a work and possessing a copy of it.hpsgrad":3gc3ijt0 said:Going to the library harms authors; they're immoral, evil institutions that should be banned.![]()
The authors thank two anonymous major motion picture studios for individually providing data to support this research.
Even more disconcerting is that some of those downvoted comments are still visible even though they should have been filtered out by votes (see Titanium Dragon's first post in this thread). Keep in mind it's not always just the comment that's being downvoted, but the individual's ceaseless broken record posts that are nearly identical to others of theirs made in previous threads. Some of the people being downvoted practice making baseless assertions, hurling insults directed at entire groups of people, engaging in the projectile vomit of immorality claims, misusing terms such as "theft" when speaking of "copyright infringement," or any combination of the previous examples.Octagon":ji7gtsnu said:Interesting how pretty much the only dissenting opinion here is being downvoted to oblivion to the point that nearly all his posts are hidden.
Regardless of your stance on copyright infringement, I'm not sure how it can enhance a discussion to silence the other side of the argument.
patterson_hood":ji7gtsnu said:tunaman7787":ji7gtsnu said:You can pay any researcher enough money to produce a study that supports the result you have in mind.
As a researcher I find this massively offensive.
ruddy":1f17nm3y said:Classic weaseltude. Going to the library, watching a public performance, or borrowing a copy from a friend are all fair uses because, unlike piracy, the use does not create more copies and doesn't diminish the value of owning a copy. Maybe weasels are just too dim to see the difference between experiencing a work and possessing a copy of it.hpsgrad":1f17nm3y said:Going to the library harms authors; they're immoral, evil institutions that should be banned.![]()
Titanium Dragon":13ia26xr said:FearLES":13ia26xr said:Yet if I download a file it causes no harm or cost to the copyright owner. No property is lost and no money is taken away. The result is the same for the content owner if I download it or I simply don't buy it.
This is the big lie. The harm is that you are taking their work without compensating them for it, the same as if you refused to pay a plumber for fixing your sink.
Titanium Dragon":13ia26xr said:You are forcing everyone else to pay more for it, or depriving them of just reward for the work they did for you.
Titanium Dragon":13ia26xr said:The result is not the same because you benefited from their work without compensating them for it. The lack of compensation is harm.
Titanium Dragon":13ia26xr said:If I steal your stuff, you can always work extra hours to buy more stuff to replace it.
What's the difference?
The answer is rationalization. They're outside your monkeysphere, but you aren't.
That's like saying morality and fairness have nothing to do with each other. It makes me wonder if you could possibly be stoopider.FearLES":kad62xyb said:ruddy":kad62xyb said:Classic weaseltude. Going to the library, watching a public performance, or borrowing a copy from a friend are all fair uses because, unlike piracy, the use does not create more copies and doesn't diminish the value of owning a copy. Maybe weasels are just too dim to see the difference between experiencing a work and possessing a copy of it.hpsgrad":kad62xyb said:Going to the library harms authors; they're immoral, evil institutions that should be banned.![]()
What does fair use have to do with the morality of it?
Nope. The rightsholder gets to exploit their works' value, and how they get to exploit it is in controlling the works' distribution. Stealing and proliferating copies isn't the same thing as borrowing one copy from the library for a short period of time.They are simply exceptions to the monopoly but they do cause a similar "harm" as simply downloading because the benefit can be enjoyed without further benefit to the copyright owner.
Because as weenies like to complain, the value of copies reside in their artificial scarcity.How does someone else downloading a copy diminish the value of someone else owning a copy?
FearLES":3fmi5zs0 said:So using the library, buying used etc. is immoral then??? What is immoral about receiving a benefit? If my neighbour improves his house and the value of my house goes up as a result is that immoral?
Refusing to pay someone who expended a scarce resource (time) and not compensating them it is obviously harming them as your benefit came at the expense of someone else but downloading a file doesn't do that. Downloading doesn't use any of the copyright owners scare resources (no electricity, storage, bandwidth, or money, etc).
ruddy":1txtntf7 said:That's like saying morality and fairness have nothing to do with each other. It makes me wonder if you could possibly be stoopider.FearLES":1txtntf7 said:ruddy":1txtntf7 said:Classic weaseltude. Going to the library, watching a public performance, or borrowing a copy from a friend are all fair uses because, unlike piracy, the use does not create more copies and doesn't diminish the value of owning a copy. Maybe weasels are just too dim to see the difference between experiencing a work and possessing a copy of it.hpsgrad":1txtntf7 said:Going to the library harms authors; they're immoral, evil institutions that should be banned.![]()
What does fair use have to do with the morality of it?
ruddy":1txtntf7 said:Nope. The rightsholder gets to exploit their works' value, and how they get to exploit it is in controlling the works' distribution. Stealing and proliferating copies isn't the same thing as borrowing one copy from the library for a short period of time.They are simply exceptions to the monopoly but they do cause a similar "harm" as simply downloading because the benefit can be enjoyed without further benefit to the copyright owner.
ruddy":1txtntf7 said:Because as weenies like to complain, the value of copies reside in their artificial scarcity.How does someone else downloading a copy diminish the value of someone else owning a copy?
Titanium Dragon":23p86pse said:FearLES":23p86pse said:So using the library, buying used etc. is immoral then??? What is immoral about receiving a benefit? If my neighbour improves his house and the value of my house goes up as a result is that immoral?
Its not a question of immorality, but illegality.
In the case of the library or used goods, you are taking a discrete physical object and using it, or using a licensed system. Its not the same thing at all as stealing a copy of something. Used goods and libraries DO hurt publishers, but they are not illegal.
Titanium Dragon":23p86pse said:The house example is not comparable because they are improving their own property, which has the peripheral effect of your property being percieved as more valuable; they did not, however, alter your property in any way, and you did not take any part of their property.
Titanium Dragon":23p86pse said:In the case of making a copy, you are denying them any compensation for the work that they did for you in producing the program for YOUR use.
Titanium Dragon":23p86pse said:Downloading doesn't use any of the copyright owners scare resources (no electricity, storage, bandwidth, or money, etc).
Of course it does. THey expended a scarce resource (time) in making the program in the first place.
Are you now pretending fairness has nothing to do with determining fair use?FearLES":d9mfzxje said:I was talking about fair use not fairness.ruddy":d9mfzxje said:That's like saying morality and fairness have nothing to do with each other. It makes me wonder if you could possibly be stoopider.FearLES":d9mfzxje said:What does fair use have to do with the morality of it?ruddy":d9mfzxje said:Classic weaseltude. Going to the library, watching a public performance, or borrowing a copy from a friend are all fair uses because, unlike piracy, the use does not create more copies and doesn't diminish the value of owning a copy. Maybe weasels are just too dim to see the difference between experiencing a work and possessing a copy of it.hpsgrad":d9mfzxje said:Going to the library harms authors; they're immoral, evil institutions that should be banned.![]()
Morality is determining right from wrong. Determining fairness, including fair use, is always a moral question.Morality deals with harm and has no interest in benefits by themselves but dealing with the balance of harm and benefit.
Whatever you pretend to yourself, the law recognizes the harm in piracy, both to the rightsholder and to society.If there is no harm then it can't be immoral.
Downright Weasel logikDownloading is simply personal borrowing without physical limits.
Yup, pure weasel logik. Sounds just like something Jammie Thomas or Joel Tenenbaum each said before their respective juries spanked them.It is borrowing, just without physical limits.
You merely admit you have no morals when it comes to copyright.There is nothing inherently immoral about ignoring physical limits if there are none.
Yes artificial]/i].ruddy":d9mfzxje said:Because as weenies like to complain, the value of copies reside in their artificial scarcity.How does someone else downloading a copy diminish the value of someone else owning a copy?
FearLES":210d40ga said:But should they be illegal then???
Why should we outlaw the benefits of digital abundance?
Copying 1 book for a short time and deleting it seems to have the same effect as buying a used copy or borrowing it.
Yes but you were trying to make the point that getting a benefit without compensating someone for it is wrong (whether perception or not, the benefit is real if you can sell your house for more as a result) . This example clearly shows that receiving an uncompensated benefit is not immoral. What is immoral is causing harm which is why stealing is considered wrong - you are depriving someone of their property which makes it just as wrong to destroy it as to steal it.
BS! They produced the work and whether I even know it exists or not, let alone if I copy it, borrow it or buy it, it exists and the effort is the same regardless of if it will sell millions or not at all. I deny them compensation if I decide I don't want anything to do with their work which is the same effect as making a copy.