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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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The bottom line to your thinking is that its a good thing as long as its someone else's dime. Once it's yours, then wait, hold up. That's not right. Quote:
That college boy will spend more on the cool laptop he wants or MCB or iPod. But somehow they find money for that. Let's be real. Kids that need software in college have student labs they can go to to get access to everything they need. Don't pretend that the student will die or all of a sudden lose his brain and fail because he won't. He just has to work a little harder. Quote:
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Slaves were kidnapped, beaten, sold, raped and forced to work in inhuman conditions against their will and you compare it to students that a) want to go to college b) know that in order to go to college they need school supplies? So no, they're not the same and you're still wrong. I mean if you follow your thinking that poor students have a moral right to steal, then what prevents them from taking other "rich" student's laptops? And what constitutes poor? Naked and starving or the student too lazy to get off their *** and get a job and only live off the allowance their mom gives them? Please. |
Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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We live in the computer age. the resources are there. |
Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
I would love to know how many of you guys who say "no" never pirated anything.... including songs, videos etc.
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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I can do that, right? Since in 2010, apparently nobody cares that the definition of theft involves depriving someone of property, just as the definition of murder involves depriving someone of life. Non-sarcastically, as "sad" as my reusing old arguments may be, attempting to guilt-trip or prejudice by disregarding definitions to call something by a scarier name is even sadder. If your arguments as to why information should receive property-like legal protection, or why that legal protection should be morally binding, cannot stand on their own merit when using accurate terms like "copyright infringement", then you should find some new arguments. Quote:
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When I spoke of someone who didn't have money, so they couldn't have bought it, so there was no real or potential lost sale, I was using that as an example to show why that argument is ridiculously broken -- in fact I consider it ridiculous precisely because, if accepted, it leads to the conclusion that whether piracy is "theft" or not depends on whether the person could have (and, even more awkwardly, would have) purchased it legitimately, which is obvious nonsense. I completely share your disgust with arguments that the morality of theft, copyright infringement, or anything else should depend on the depth of the perpetrator's pockets. |
Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Re: Is it okay for a student with limited financial resources to pirate software?
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Here are some hints:
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