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Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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You claimed "when you pirate something the original owner does not lost anything", which is simply not true. Your logic is wrong. If you take something that someone else is selling, no matter what that is, and don't pay for it, the person(s) that created it have lost potential value. Even if that potential was a later "fire sale", or selling that version much later at a huge discount when newer/better products were out. You can buy Duke Nukem for $2 at most Big Lots, for example... Unless you pirated it back when it came out, in which case, why bother? Using your logic, and your false assumptions, you could justify just about anything. Like taking _a_Ferrari_ is just fine, because they're asking more than someone else values it for. Pirating is wrong. Justifying it is equally wrong. If piracy didn't cause financial loss, nobody would be concerned over it. |
Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
*sigh*
Call me when you learn to read. |
Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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edit: and anyway, numbers can't be stolen. And regarding the 'rari, if you paid for the machinery and raw materials to build yourself your own fer' then how can you call that stealing? |
Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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So, you don't want to give "Microsoft", the big company, money for their office suite. It's too expensive. Tell me, when you pirate it, how are you giving back to the engineers that get paid to code the program? When you pirate Photoshop, how are you supporting the secretary that arranges the lunch and learn sessions the engineers are going to, to learn new skills and get ideas for new tools? You're not. Software at least has the advantage that it doesn't always get sucked in. Mom and pop shops can make it pretty big and still stay pretty small. But I'm willing to bet most people that have pirated versions of software have never paid for it, even if it's a small mom & pop that made it. Quote:
Are you ok with someone using your car for a long trip when you're not using it, as long as they provide gas? In the example I gave, you don't own the machine. You're just using it. You're not paying for the initial investment, nor are you paying to help maintain the machine. That's what's being stolen. And tell me, how exactly are you "providing materials" when you take someone's program (without paying for it) and run it? Again, we're not talking about people writing their own driver after seeing a youttube demo of this one. They're using the exact code, not their own version. Quote:
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Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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A better analogy would be going to a museum that is free entry but with a suggested donation. All the patrons in front of you are graciously giving a few £/$, you get to the window.. "What's this ... SUGGESTED DONATION?! ..... Well you can **** right off then", strolls in for free, looking like a complete dick! |
Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
Not to wade into this forum flame-war but just a drop a few points to try to being some understanding and maybe some calm to the situation:
1) Please learn the difference between rivalrous goods vs. non-rivalrous goods. They fit in different economic spaces and misconstruing one for the other makes for some really dumb laws/calculations of loss/arguments. http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rivalry_%28economics%29 2) Everything is based on something before it. Putting a value on a small evolutionary change is difficult and subjective. Some people think that since this is a small addition (module) to an already enormous code base (kernel) that the value is infinitesimally small. Some think because this addition enables some profound new functionality (wifi Monitor mode) that it is worth a lot to them. Both camps are probably right but have no right to force their views on each other. 3) No one is taking anyone's food out of their mouth by sharing GPLed software. If you don't want it shared, don't GPL it or base your software off of GPLed software (a difficult thing to do for a kernel module). That is all there is to it. The whole point of the GPL is to encourage sharing and ensure that things GPLed can't *stop* being shared and annoying everyone who has contributed to the code base in the past. Being adequately compensated for writing GPLed software is a related but a mostly orthogonal issue. I hope that the author works to get this code included in an upstream project (most-likely the power kernel ... I suspect the Nokia will ignore this completely for the official kernel). I also hope that some company (Nokia/Broadcom/RedHat/Intel?) recognizes the talent it took to make this and hires the author. |
Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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The biggest problem (and the one happening here) is that people don't take into account the labor taken to create "non-rivalrous" goods. Just because a good can be duplicated without "significant loss" to the original work doesn't mean that labor was not expended creating the original work. Labor that that author or creator should be compesated for in a manor of their choosing, by those willing to use the work. With rivalrous goods, only a fraction of the price is the material used to make the good. A large portion of the price often is the labor involved, be that direct labor or indirect (eg. machine maintenance). Yet when the material used to make a good is virtual, or so cheep as to not register, for some reason people feel it's ok to duplicate without compensating for that initial labor. If one lived in a utopia (like star trek) where artists get a stipend from the government to create non-rivalrious goods, then free duplication would be an acceptable thing. In most of the world however, even digitally duplicatable works have to be able to support the person(s) who put the labor in to initially create them. Non-rivalrous goods don't simply come into being on their own. They take time and effort to create initially. And if the author of a piece of work sets a value on that labor and seeks compensation for it, and others circumvent that by duplicating the piece without compensating the author, that's morally (and in many places criminally) wrong. Quote:
The problem with piracy is that it is exactly one group forcing their views on the other. By stealing/duplicating/pirating goods (or converting them to a non-rivalrous form to duplicate) they are effectively forcing their view on the author that their labor is worth nothing, regardless of the price the author may want to set on those goods to compensate for the labor and time spent. Quote:
One of the key reasons I'm sensitive on this subject is because what I do for a living focuses on creating what you would call "non-rivalrous" goods. But I can assure you, just because something is digital doesn't mean it has no value, nor does it mean there's no rivalry. That, and the fact that I like to eat and have a place to live, incites me to speak when others are justifying or advocating the the concept that creators of such goods don't deserve compensation. Quote:
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Re: [Announce] bleeding-edge wl1251 wifi driver for Maemo Fremantle
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