Ninjas, Not Pirates
Tagged as: Apr 23Alright so I don’t actually know any ninjas. Pirates, though? Perhaps.
Not the pirates that say, “Arggh me matey” or have a peg leg or even have a parrot on their shoulder. That would be cool, but I actually only know pirates in the modern day sense. You know the ones that illegally consume things like music, videos, software, pictures, or any of a whole range of things. Haha I can hear the groans already.
The digital age has made it infinitely more easy to exactly duplicate other content (which is related to why digital things are superior in quality to analog). With this, people have degenerated to outright stealing while not even understanding what they’re doing. Well I hate to break it to you, but wrongs committed unintentionally are still wrong.
While I have written that I think that Music Piracy Makes People Stupid, this issue is far larger than just music. Music is the best known, probably because it’s the area that’s most often violated. It is so much more widespread, though. So let’s get down to the real issue.
Breaking Down Piracy
- Someone creates something for a purpose
- Somehow it’s made available to other people (whether stolen, hacked, copied, or what) outside of the realm of the original purpose
- You (or a “friend” of yours) gets a copy of said good and utilize it
Is that pretty much how it breaks down? Seems to me like the real issue is that the creator/writer/actor/musician/whatever did not intend for those in step 3 to make use of their creation. If I were a computer programmer and wrote a program to sell. And then if someone had illegally hacked my program that I worked to create to sell and gave it away for free, I’d be piping mad. If you were a photographer and had taken a picture for someone, but someone else had taken it and used it for a totally different purpose, you’d be up in arms. If you provided services (law, medicine, therapy, teaching, what have you) and someone took your service without providing payment, you’d see that something was immediately wrong.
So basically, since the creator didn’t want it (and who hopefully created a bulletproof license or end user agreement), you’re undermining what they’re doing. It doesn’t matter that you could create a digital copy of their song without paying for it and they’ll be none the wiser. Because in actuality, it does affect them. You should have paid them for that song. And you are now a pirate. But you don’t have to be!
Dealing With This New Ninja World
Is all lost? Far from it. Once you understand what it’s like to be the one being defrauded, you’ll see that something needs to change. And there is a solution! There are all kinds of answers! Maybe watch things that are actually released by the studios (try out Hulu), actually buy music (if you’re listening to music you can probably afford to pay for it) or try Amie Street for the whole indie scene, and possibly even catch up on some of my Favorite Open Source Apps.
Or you could just become a real ninja and then you’d care about arrows, ninja stars, and ninjato rather than swiping versions of old TV shows, Adobe Photoshop, and/or the remix version of Justin Timberlake’s latest single. ![]()
jtttttttttttttttttttttttt
Haha don’t we all love our JT.
good points. is that why you have a large CD collection? pirates are so cool, though..and ninjas..overrated.
haha
That is indeed why I have a large CD collection. And why I don’t let other people just rip my CDs. What about you? Pirate or ninja?
Haha maybe you just haven’t met a cool ninja yet!
Is using software like limewire and bitcomet are listed as a pirate? hehe
I likes ninja, because everything you get is free. lol. But might consider buying some real music CD if finds it really nice and released by certain entertainers.
Yes,
Using limewire and bitcomet are kinda abuse the copyright from the company.
For example,
Sharing of Microsoft Office within friends, using the same/cracked CD key are consider as pirates.