[quote name='Sporadic'] My money is finite and to tell me to get a job so I can get everything I currently get is

[/quote]
No the

is for you schmucks who have a sense of entitlement and think it's perfectly fine to steal shit you can't afford to buy. Telling you to get a job to be able to afford things you want isn't

worthy. It's

ing common sense. If you want things, you get a job and earn money to buy them. If you don't make enough to afford everything you want, then tough, you go without or find a way to make more money legally. Pretty much all of us have things we'd love to have but can't afford. Most of us don't go out and acquire them illegally! We do without or save up.
Just because something is a digital file doesn't make acquiring it without paying for it (when it's not being legally given away for free) any more acceptable than somehow illegally acquiring a CD.
You still own something that's copyrighted and for sale and you didn't pay for it. If it doesn't bother you, fine. But don't get all pissy when people bash you for your unscrupulous morals and sense of entitlement that you have some

ing right to acquire every song that interests you to expand your horizons regardless of your ability to pay for them.
[quote name='crystalklear64']That's the problem right there. How do you own a song?
All digital data is information. Information is valuable when only a few have access to it, however with the internet's purpose being to spread information, it is just an inevitable conclusion.[/quote]
BS. A digital product is the same as a physical product. You buy a CD you're paying for the content on the CD with a small price added for the cost of the physical materials. With digital content, you simply pay for the content.
So yes, one can own a song or any other type of file. I buy an mp3, or an ebook for my kindle, etc. etc. I own it and can use it as the license/DRM that I agree to by making the purchase allows.
If I don't like that license/DRM then I don't buy it and get a physical copy or go without the item, not make justifications for illegal actions.
Something is only worth what someone is willing to pay.
The trick is to make them willing to pay more. Apparently that younger generation isn't as susceptible to the trickery.
No, the problem is the younger generation are a bunch of spoiled brats with a sense of entitlement who have no problem with pirating stuff.
[quote name='javeryh']I'm not so sure about this. As is the case with every right to media, it depends on the license that the copyright holder grants you when you purchase the license. I believe iTunes only allows you to "sync" to one computer in the house and a song purchased from the iTunes store can only be transferred to 5 iPods. It doesn't matter if your computer dies or your 5th iPod breaks - you don't have a license to go beyond that.
The only CDs I have access to right now all say something like "FBI Anti-Piracy Warning: Unauthorized copying is punishable under Federal Law." They don't mention exactly what is authorized but I doubt they want you ripping CDs to a computer.
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It's complicated and would take a copyright lawyer to clarify, but I think what I stated was true.
Sony tried that crap with rootkits on cds to prevent files being ripped and they got sued and lost.
So I think the law stands that you can make copies of CDs for personal use (burnt cds and mp3s) as long as you still own the physical CD.
DVDs are different as they have encryption on it and it's a federal crime to crack the encryption--so they have a different copyright that currently doesn't allow for the making of any personal copies.