Re: The p00n thread
We don't have netflix, that contributes to the problem. Convenience is a large attraction for piracy.
Whatever the reason why piracy occurs in Australia is entirely irrelevant, these aren't necessities, they are luxury goods.
Look up copyright reform, the difference is that when a physical good is stolen the owner has lost tangible assets from the theft. Piracy is just hypothetical losses and a lot of the time when something is pirated a potential sale is not actually lost as the pirate never would have bought it legitimately in the first place. It's comparable to saying that $10 rolex watches on the streets of China have a large impact on the sale of genuine Rolexs.
Also under the definition you are using for stealing, buying used music, dvds and games would also be considered stealing as the owners of the copyright are not receiving anything for it.
'A lot of the time' is not measurable, moreover even if 1 CD could have been bought instead of pirated then that is an illegitimate loss of revenue, hypothetical or not, the loss of revenue still stands
In your analogy, if they are real watches, and the sellers are willing to sell it at that price then that is fine and it is the decision of the business to sell it at that price.
Buying used CDs is similar to how businesses will buy from a supplier who produces a good, it is simply the transfer of ownership of that good. Piracy is not the transfer of ownership of media, it is the illegitimate duplication of media that is distributed.
Yes, but surely rather than getting rid of piracy they can find a way to make money out of it i.e. revenue from ads on torrenting sites? By the same logic, YouTube also results in a net loss of revenue in terms of not selling CDs, however they circumvented this issue via getting revenue from ads etc.
Allowing users to download music for free also increases the potential market enormously, people are more willing to listen and commit to bands after giving them a try for free by downloading some of their music. Many people then go on to pay for CDs etc. to support bands they particularly like. It would interesting to see how the music industry is faring nowadays because I daresay contrary to the doomsday predictions about piracy they are making more money than ever.
I sincerly doubt that
all artists generate more revenue purely from ads. It still doesn't change the fact that piracy is stealing though. Also artists putting their work onto Youtube is their own business choice and whether it results in a loss of revenue or not is in the control of the company.
Whether or not there is a potential to make more revenue by allowing users to download the music for free does not change the premise that piracy is still stealing.