[citation][nom]victorintelr[/nom]quote: Somewhere in China today, in Russia today, and in many other countries that do not respect American intellectual property, criminals who do nothing but peddle in counterfeit products and stolen American content are smugly watching how the United States Senate decided it was not even worth debating how to stop the overseas criminals from draining our economy," he added.obviously these people are still living in the cold war. the problem in not concentrated there anymore, it's global! sure they want and think that there 30 year old speech is gonna still work, but doesn't look like it does anymore.sorry for the quote, I'm writing from my thrive tablet,[/citation]
um, you go through hong kong or any of those mainland asain cities today, and you can buy movies still in theaters, shows that don't have dvd release yet for about 1-5$ at most, those countries have the largest counterfeiting operations, to the extent where they have as high if not higher quality counterfeit releases than the official releases.
these areas are also the ones that have actual sale of counterfeit material, apposed to america where its mostly just piracy. [citation][nom]bak0n[/nom]I am not a fan of the MPAA or the RIAA. I'm also not a fan of SOPA or PIPA. I'd also like nothing more than to see all 4 of these fail horribly as they are all out of touch with modern consumerism and loaded with unnecessary greed harming and pissing off consumers. The reality is however, people do lose jobs from piracy. If businesses don't make their target "profit margins" they will and do lay people off. THQ cited their bankruptcy and layoffs was directly due to the pirating of Titan Quest series.I'd love to see industries involved go to a model like Steam or GOG. It would benefit all involved.[/citation]
titan quest came out in a time where i didnt have a good enough pc to run it, and due to its drm, i'm assuming that was the problem, it wouldn't even run when i did have a good enough computer.
great game but the drm really held that back, correct me if im wrong, but it was also a game that came out, and at its time, required a fairly beefy computer to play it at any quality right?
i remember that was another sticking point and why i didnt buy it outright when i did get a good pc, and went demo instead.
on my current pc, its easilty one of the best rouge like games i played in years, i consider it better than the diablo series, maybe not 3, but i dont like the direction 3 went. [citation][nom]RapidoInternetestes[/nom]I'm still not convinced. The people that never purchased the title, and pirated it, most likely would have never purchased it if pirated copies were unavailable. Look at HAWX 2. It was so bad, nobody bothered to crack it, and nobody bothered to buy it either as a result of it being largely unavailable to the pirate community. The only thing that is for certain though, is that THQ failed to produce a product (Titan Quest) that was compelling enough to purchase.Anyway, back to the article. I'm glad this has all been put on hold. I'm still not convinced that piracy of data, cleverly arranged combinations of 1s and 0s (games/mp3s), has any huge impact. There's no physical medium that's been taken from a store shelf that would represent a loss of income for the creators and retailers. I'm still going with the assumption that people would pass on purchasing regardless of its availability on the net.I'm a reformed pirate. I'm much more selective about the titles I really want to play, and purchase them. I no longer feel like I need to "try out" every new release to see if I like it. I stick to website reviews and gameplay videos on sites like youtube.[/citation]
titan quest is the best game in that genre i played in years, cant call it out on that... but most people wont consider games like that unless its diablo or under 20$
[citation][nom]JonnyDough[/nom]Dear PIRATING IDIOTS WHO MAKE LIFE HELL FOR THE HONEST CONSUMER
![Stick Out Tongue :p :p](data:image/gif;base64,R0lGODlhAQABAIAAAAAAAP///yH5BAEAAAAALAAAAAABAAEAAAIBRAA7)
irates will always try to justify their actions."I would not have bought a diamond necklace, so its okay to steal one" is equal to "I would not have purchased a video game, movie, or that music - so its okay to steal one". Either way, it wasn't yours to take was it?The issue is not whether it results in lost revenue or not - the issue is that you did not have ownership rights to it. Stop taking what is not yours through illegal and unethical means, and trying to justify it so you can do whatever you want without a conscience/guilt./rant[/citation]
if i coult pirate a mansion, my own country, a ferrari, skeleton rolex, and a diamond encrusted gold toilet i would
physical to digital is not a 1 to 1 coloration, realistically digital is far less, but in law digital is about 1000 times more damning to get than the physical.
[citation][nom]JonnyDough[/nom]"Everyone does it" - Also not justification. At some point society needs to realize that it has become morally corrupt and no longer respects the individual. I realize that capitalism is broken because of monopolization and mass marketing. (A music artist makes millions because he sells to so many people, and it just seems wrong when there are kids starving for love, food, a warm bed, and education). Still, two wrongs don't make a right.There's an old saying: "If you want to change the world, start with yourself."[/citation]
the musician doesn't even make a fraction of what the people who found him and only fronted a bit of cash make. people who are truely good at what they do dont tend to make it, just because you would have to pay them more than lets say 4 people with a decent voice to dance on stage.
and lets look at it realistically, musicians make their money off of tours, not off the cd sales unless they just sell retardedly insane amounts.
[citation][nom]Tomfreak[/nom]lol when software company learn that selling software copies in mass quantity in ultra low price is the only way to kill piracy. Selling 10 more copies @ 5USD is more profitable than selling 1 @ 40USD.[/citation]
however some things like 3ds max and to some extent photoshop would lose over all money doing that. if photoshop cost 100$ with a 50$ upgrade path, that may be a different story, but not at what, 390-500$ a new copy, they are already the industry standard, selling cheap for a consumer would sell less than they do now.
you have to wonder if some software even cares if its pirated at this point (not talking games, real software)