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I'm with Reggie. As an internet user, my biggest concern is the apparent lack of anonymity (not realtive to you fools, relative to people who could potentially do annoying or bad things to me).2dimes wrote:I hate the fact that the internet is trying to make it so I can't just go online as 2dimes anonymously anymore. So I'm not as comfortable talking about embarrassing medical conditions, their effects on dating or other issues surrounding life with small deformed genitalia.
Now Facebook and google plus automatically tries to sign me into everything and I have to go under my real name Reginald P. Snordville III. Then everyone at work knows it's me.
The problem is the system for preventing internet piracy does not work at all. The only way they can make it work is by imposing major internet sensorship and even that is limited in it's capabilities. The current system just leads to common people who don't mean any harm to society to get persecuted and getting enormously heavy fines. It's just a system that makes ordinary people out to be major criminals.thegreekdog wrote:I'm with Reggie. As an internet user, my biggest concern is the apparent lack of anonymity (not realtive to you fools, relative to people who could potentially do annoying or bad things to me).2dimes wrote:I hate the fact that the internet is trying to make it so I can't just go online as 2dimes anonymously anymore. So I'm not as comfortable talking about embarrassing medical conditions, their effects on dating or other issues surrounding life with small deformed genitalia.
Now Facebook and google plus automatically tries to sign me into everything and I have to go under my real name Reginald P. Snordville III. Then everyone at work knows it's me.
I am much less concerned with the fight against piracy. In fact, I would generally say I'm on the side of the "bad guy" big companies, writers, musicians, producers, etc. I think there are better ways to do business than how the bad guys are doing business (for example, Netflix), but I have no big problem with suing the living f*ck out of a fuckhole who takes your shit that you spent money and time to produce and puts it on his free webpage. Oh, sorry, did that come off as me hating fucking fuckface pirates?
You do realise that if you buy a DVD and just loan it out to a friend for even 1 day, that is considered stealing too? The system is going too far, it's not taking into account feasibility.2dimes wrote:It also bothers me that it seems most people, if they thought they wouldn't get caught, would have tripped Abel Mutai raped him and then took second place behind the third place runner in Spain last January.
I don't even care that it's only a penny you stole. That fact remains you stole it. Giving it to someone else doesn't make it ok either.
I understand the studio stole it first. That still doesn't make it ok.
It doesn't even work like that. Usually most people have an attitude of "it might have happened to that guy, but it'll never happen to me".2dimes wrote:I don't agree with it but I understand. It's the only way to deter us.
Our buddy goes to jail for downloading curb Your Enthusiasm and we think, "Whoa, I'm not going to do that."
I think the point is deterrence doesn't work, unless taken to ridiculous extremes. (and you can't take it to those extremes without trampling all sorts of other things like internet anonymity).2dimes wrote:I don't agree with it but I understand. It's the only way to deter us.
Our buddy goes to jail for downloading curb Your Enthusiasm and we think, "Whoa, I'm not going to do that."
Prior to we thought, "Awesome! Free stuff."

+1Funkyterrance wrote:I don't think the government ought to be the one who controls it though, it should be the companies who produce the media. They need to do their part and come up with a format that is not so readily transferable to the internet. The effort will come out of their end but in the long run they will be able to charge the exorbitant prices they used to and their profits will come back again. The people whose livelihoods are at stake should band together, not cry to the government to get it's big clumsy fingers involved.

The government is inevitable and stupid. They'll keep pushing for SOPA and PIPA-esque bills every 5-10 years, and eventually the people will get tired of resisting. Or, they'll insert riders into somewhat unrelated bills (e.g. Cybersecurity bills--another unnecessary form of state intervention). However, as long as people can keep innovating around the government and its nonsense, then we'll be fine (except for of course the government wasting our money on that endeavor).Haggis_McMutton wrote: A couple years ago, I was dead certain that piracy would win and would force the big producers/retailers to adapt or die. I'm still 90% sure, but all the recent attempts to fundamentally change the nature of the internet have me a bit worried now. Hopefully those in power won't be able to use piracy as a scare tactic to push extremely heavy-handed regulation onto the internet.
What do you guys think about this stuff?
Lawful good: Willing to uphold the law--even if it is unnecessary, costly, and best to ignore.thegreekdog wrote:I'm with Reggie. As an internet user, my biggest concern is the apparent lack of anonymity (not realtive to you fools, relative to people who could potentially do annoying or bad things to me).2dimes wrote:I hate the fact that the internet is trying to make it so I can't just go online as 2dimes anonymously anymore. So I'm not as comfortable talking about embarrassing medical conditions, their effects on dating or other issues surrounding life with small deformed genitalia.
Now Facebook and google plus automatically tries to sign me into everything and I have to go under my real name Reginald P. Snordville III. Then everyone at work knows it's me.
I am much less concerned with the fight against piracy. In fact, I would generally say I'm on the side of the "bad guy" big companies, writers, musicians, producers, etc. I think there are better ways to do business than how the bad guys are doing business (for example, Netflix), but I have no big problem with suing the living f*ck out of a fuckhole who takes your shit that you spent money and time to produce and puts it on his free webpage. Oh, sorry, did that come off as me hating fucking fuckface pirates?
I suspect you think you're being chaotic good, which is probably the problem here, right? You're probably more chaotic evil. I'm not concerned with upholding the law. You've seemed to ignore my concern, so I'll type it again (differently this time). I'm concerned with protecting the works that someone spent time, effort, and money preparing. Those people should receive some form of compensation. There is an exchange. I write a book, you pay money to read it. Unfortunately, piracy results in... I write a book, you pay nothing to read it. Therefore, my time, effort, and money were wasted so why should I write another book?BigBallinStalin wrote:Lawful good: Willing to uphold the law--even if it is unnecessary, costly, and best to ignore.thegreekdog wrote:I'm with Reggie. As an internet user, my biggest concern is the apparent lack of anonymity (not realtive to you fools, relative to people who could potentially do annoying or bad things to me).2dimes wrote:I hate the fact that the internet is trying to make it so I can't just go online as 2dimes anonymously anymore. So I'm not as comfortable talking about embarrassing medical conditions, their effects on dating or other issues surrounding life with small deformed genitalia.
Now Facebook and google plus automatically tries to sign me into everything and I have to go under my real name Reginald P. Snordville III. Then everyone at work knows it's me.
I am much less concerned with the fight against piracy. In fact, I would generally say I'm on the side of the "bad guy" big companies, writers, musicians, producers, etc. I think there are better ways to do business than how the bad guys are doing business (for example, Netflix), but I have no big problem with suing the living f*ck out of a fuckhole who takes your shit that you spent money and time to produce and puts it on his free webpage. Oh, sorry, did that come off as me hating fucking fuckface pirates?
It's interesting that you bring up the book example because from what I understand sites like Abebooks really piss off some authors because their books are just getting passed on from one reader to the next, drastically affecting sales(If your book get's re-sold 3 times you are making 1/3rd the amount you would otherwise). This mostly applies to textbooks and instructional stuff but still, are you going to make a rule about re-selling books? It's really tough and more to try and stop piracy retroactively(legally) and you must continue doing it to instill fear in would-be pirates. The best way is to make the media harder to copy in the first place, curbing illegal distribution.thegreekdog wrote: I write a book, you pay money to read it. Unfortunately, piracy results in... I write a book, you pay nothing to read it. Therefore, my time, effort, and money were wasted so why should I write another book?

Yeah, maybe I am not explaining myself well. I'm not in favor of creating additional laws. I'm in favor of enforcing the laws we have. It appears that some people in this thread do not think we should enforce the laws we have.Funkyterrance wrote:It's interesting that you bring up the book example because from what I understand sites like Abebooks really piss off some authors because their books are just getting passed on from one reader to the next, drastically affecting sales(If your book get's re-sold 3 times you are making 1/3rd the amount you would otherwise). This mostly applies to textbooks and instructional stuff but still, are you going to make a rule about re-selling books? It's really tough and more to try and stop piracy retroactively(legally) and you must continue doing it to instill fear in would-be pirates. The best way is to make the media harder to copy in the first place, curbing illegal distribution.thegreekdog wrote: I write a book, you pay money to read it. Unfortunately, piracy results in... I write a book, you pay nothing to read it. Therefore, my time, effort, and money were wasted so why should I write another book?
This post is super happy fun ichiban! Domo.Haggis_McMutton wrote:I think the point is deterrence doesn't work, unless taken to ridiculous extremes. (and you can't take it to those extremes without trampling all sorts of other things like internet anonymity).2dimes wrote:I don't agree with it but I understand. It's the only way to deter us.
Our buddy goes to jail for downloading curb Your Enthusiasm and we think, "Whoa, I'm not going to do that."
Prior to we thought, "Awesome! Free stuff."
What they need to do is adapt so that for the majority it's not worth it to go to the hassle of downloading the stuff.
This isn't new. Same thing happened with bootleg physical CDs, bootleg vhs, etc etc. Hell, there probably were similar arguments about the invention of TV (won't it kill the cinema?) and even the invention of the cinema and recording technology(won't it kill live performance?)
I'm not with the pirates. However, I'll side with the pirates over the people trying to destroy the internet because they are unable to adapt to a technological innovation.thegreekdog wrote:By the way... anyone who is with the pirates on this one, please tell me where your valuables are and I will come take them from you.
And for whatever it's worth, I'm with crispy and FT - the companies should not use a clumsy tool like internet regulation to get what they want. They need to use the court system and for the current laws to be enforced.
The thing is, they haven't really been able to find a solution that makes the media significantly harder to copy without also being a major pain in the ass for the people actually buying the stuff. As such we reach the ridiculous situation where, when buying the thing you have to jump through 5 hoops and watch an unskipable 2 minute clip about how piracy is the worst crime ever, but when pirating the thing you can just get directly to the content.Funkyterrance wrote:It's interesting that you bring up the book example because from what I understand sites like Abebooks really piss off some authors because their books are just getting passed on from one reader to the next, drastically affecting sales(If your book get's re-sold 3 times you are making 1/3rd the amount you would otherwise). This mostly applies to textbooks and instructional stuff but still, are you going to make a rule about re-selling books? It's really tough and more to try and stop piracy retroactively(legally) and you must continue doing it to instill fear in would-be pirates. The best way is to make the media harder to copy in the first place, curbing illegal distribution.thegreekdog wrote: I write a book, you pay money to read it. Unfortunately, piracy results in... I write a book, you pay nothing to read it. Therefore, my time, effort, and money were wasted so why should I write another book?