RBerenguel wrote:A perfect case for "don't feed the troll".
Suppose it was a troll treatment. Then sooner or later advertisement for piracy would prevail because a climate of unopposed possibility were accepted.
RBerenguel wrote:A perfect case for "don't feed the troll".
RBerenguel wrote:..."don't feed the troll"...
speedchase wrote:
First of all baduk is not a language from a legal point of view. this conversation isn't related to the other thread.
Secondly, what I really object to in your statement is the insinuation that it is easy to make money off of the game. people like Robert Jasiek put an incredible amount of work writting books and advancing knowledge in the west about go, it is not unreasonable that they want to get money from selling their books, instead of having their intellectual property stolen.
badukJr wrote:People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place
speedchase wrote: insinuation
badukJr wrote:Second, I never said that in my post.
RobertJasiek wrote:badukJr wrote:People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place
Please provide more details: are all the problems from some source copied or only a small part of all?
speedchase wrote:speedchase wrote: insinuationbadukJr wrote:Second, I never said that in my post.
badukJr wrote:Also, people do work hard at creating problems yet those are constantly lifted from their books and placed onto goproblems and other L&D websites that are generally recommended to beginners around here. People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place, so why is there anger about game compilations - i.e. not even board positions created originally by the author of the book?
badukJr wrote:Also, people do work hard at creating problems yet those are constantly lifted from their books and placed onto goproblems and other L&D websites that are generally recommended to beginners around here. People don't seem to mind when that sort of theft takes place, so why is there anger about game compilations - i.e. not even board positions created originally by the author of the book?
palapiku wrote:Strongly agree that I don't see any rational argument about why a book should enjoy different legal treatment than a game record.
daal wrote:palapiku wrote:Strongly agree that I don't see any rational argument about why a book should enjoy different legal treatment than a game record.
A book is written with an expectation of income from future sales. This isn't the case with a game record.
No bearing on morality of the action. Kidnapping a West African and kidnapping a West Virginian at one point was treated differently by the law. Both actions were equally immoral. On the other hand, criticizing the king at one point was illegal, while criticizing your neighbor was not. Yet, neither action was immoral (on the other hand, jailing or fining a person for criticizing a king was).RobertJasiek wrote:FlyingAxe wrote:What is the fundamental difference between these kinds of information that makes some of them property and others not?
Their different treatment by law.
No, this is erroneous.More than that is applied. People in civilisations under law create work under those conditions so that they can maintain their living. If there were civilisations with different law, then people would work differently or even work in entirely different areas to enable themselves to maintaing their living under those different circumstances. Which is theoretically entertaining but irrelevant under current international etc. copyright law.
Force is a strong word. Copyright law usually issues fines rather than imprisonment. It requires being the manager of Rapidshare or whatever together with particularly aggressive behavioru to risk imprisonment.
Yes, protection from violence is the only reason I want to see for violence being applied to another human being. Call me old-fashioned.That you want to see?:)
Indeed. Have fun opening a book store in a street full of book stores!:)
There is a distinction between property and intellectual property. Information in general is not intellectual property but specific kinds of information (such as most commercial go books' contents) is.
Not transactions are possessed but the money once the transaction will have been completed.
No, but justifying violating individuals’ rights for the "improvement of society" (utilitarian approach to morality) leads to gross violation of human rights seen in Germany, US, Japan, USSR, and other countries in the 1930s.Advocating copyright is not robbing organs. Be serious.
daal wrote:palapiku wrote:Strongly agree that I don't see any rational argument about why a book should enjoy different legal treatment than a game record.
A book is written with an expectation of income from future sales. This isn't the case with a game record.
First, there is no call for ad hominem attacks. I have not insulted anyone. I know my ideas may sound alien to people who are used to the concept of copyright, but that does not mean they are wrong. Abolitionism, rights to abortion, rights to free speech, rights not to recognize a certain person as a propher were (and are, in some places) considered crazy and alien at some point.RBerenguel wrote:A perfect case for "don't feed the troll". Even if my view on IP laws may not be as close to the law as it should, Go book writers deserve their money.