Why do we authors get angry about folks pirating our books?
Medium-sized publisher advance on a novel in 1960: $3,000.
Medium-sized publisher advance on a novel in 2022: $3,000.
Gimme my $4.99.
Why do we authors get angry about folks pirating our books?
Medium-sized publisher advance on a novel in 1960: $3,000.
Medium-sized publisher advance on a novel in 2022: $3,000.
Gimme my $4.99.
I put my novels out in the world under a license that says "give me $5 and you get a digital copy."
A thought for you pro-piracy folks, not one I'm going to argue here:
Why should you be allowed to violate that license, keeping in mind that I will use your exact same argument to justify a closed-source Linux variant that I distribute to customers.
@lxo no.
Writers create intellectual property and license it. Go read The Copyright Handbook.
Copyright has problems, but you should have a basic understanding of the topic before discussing it.
@lxo Studying and working in the field since 1985.
Yes, I've read those pages. GNU has done some clever things, but they ignore the inconvenient parts of the law.
Under the law as it stands, writers create and license intellectual property via copyright. That's why each print book has a license printed in the front of it.
@lxo there is extensive case law about the rights conferred by owning a copy of a book over the last century.
Licenses as we know them today did not exist when copyright law was settled. The copyright statement is the license.
Go to any publisher, on the legal and production side, and the first lesson you get is that publishers do not sell books. They license IP. Titles are even depreciated as IP.
Morally, stealing books and violating the gpl are both wrong.
Morally, both are wrong.
Any argument that applies to breaking one can be applied to breaking the other.
Different applications of the same law protect both books and gpl software. If I can violate one, I can violate the other. :flan_shrug:
@mwl "But that is something completely different, the GPL is sacred!!!!!!11" ?
Intellectual property law is very definite on this point. Go read Nolo Press' Copyright Handbook and their trademark book. Billions of dollars get spent tracking and punishing IP theft, that's as real as you get.
Ebooks are intellectual property. To be doubly sure, they are licensed for a single user. It's theft.
If you can't bother to go to a library and check the book out, print or physical? You're saying the rules of society don't apply to you, and are in the social category "criminals, assholes, and people we don't want."
I'm done with this discussion. Have a good day. Don't pirate books.
And it would make perfect sense for me to pillage GPL software under that logic.
re stealing: your definition is incorrect. Intellectual property is a thing.
@tirifto @Corvan we do all have different ideas of morality. That's why we put our creations out into the world under different terms and conditions.
If you don't respect the terms and conditions on my work, why should I respect yours?
And piracy is stealing. I spend month or years on a book and someone won't give me $5 or ask their library? Total dick move.
@mwl @Corvan I thought we were talking about unauthorised copying (i.e. pirating), not stealing.
At any rate, my point is that people have different ideas about morals, different things they care about, different convictions. Your conviction (if I get it right) seems to be that disrespecting any copyright licence is equally bad, be it a licence to a piece of software or a piece of culture. But I don’t see what would make your conviction more valid or objective than others, and admittedly I don’t share it, myself.
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