Margo wrote:Guardian, does your country have libraries? You have access to the internet, so there is zero reason you can't read a sample to find out if you want to buy a novel, read a review or a walkthrough to see if you want to buy a game, rent a movie to see if you'd like to buy it.
Actually my country has pretty famous libraries, but here many books are for free in it's digital shape. So my country is not the best example as we have quite different regulations and laws to protect the citizens from the companies (Yes, my country doesn't really like megacorps in general.). i.e. here, you can make back up copies of a DVD if you have a legal copy of it. Of course, you're prohibited to sell it or spread it for money, but you're not prohibited to make thousand copies if you want. In the past we even had a rule that people can download anything and can keep anything for 24 hours on their computer (This was good to try products, before we would buy blindly. In my native country many are downloading products, but they're also buying them, IF the product deserves it. Why they're doing this? Because here people always want to know what they're going to buy. My people are not really buy anything blindly, but if something deserves the buy, that one used to be bought immediately by the customer.). But in general, Europe has quite different rules then the U.S. There are countries where piracy is not considered as stealing, but as a protection against companies. It's a good method to protect the customers from company fraud and cheating, when the advertisement of a product is not matching with the actual, true product.
If you steal it anyway it is because YOU WANT TO. It comes down to this. Is stealing for pleasure and convenience EVER justified? My response is no, not ever, ever, under any circumstances, no matter who uploaded the copies. NO. I suspect your response is quite different.
Actually it does matter who uploaded the copies. Check the law. Doesn't knowing the law is never relieved anyone if committed a crime. Not even companies. And if the company is uploading the product to a torrent to blame the pirates in front of the investors when the sales are poor... that company can be sued because they commited a fraud.
You need food and water and shelter to live. not novels and video games and movies. No one is forcing anyone to take drastic measures. That level of spoiled entitlement is taking the piss.
Actually tell this to those families whose are living from 300USD per month and they want to do something else, then working all over their life, want to spend one day along with their family on a rainy afternoon. But if they would want to buy a product for 25-50USD (Which is almost or more then 10% of their monthly salary), that's already risky, because there is a 75% chance the product is something else in the reality, than as it is advertised. In my country and in other countries in Europe this is the reason for these strange laws. What you're calling as stealing, it's called as customer protection.