[quote name='mykevermin']Elaborate more on this. It's kinda of a self-serving argument, isn't it? Though at least you're honest: there are means to pay for albums, books, and game digitally and in stores. The knowledge and effort required to navigate TPB shows a person who is demonstrably unwilling to pay for something.
There's some irony to the ethics of it. Put money in the hands of artists =

a bunch of that. Let 'em starve. I'll sit on my throne of condescension, insist that I'd buy a "Brokencyde" scarf and sunglasses kit if they came to town in concert, and then lament that it's THEIR fault if they don't play Des Moines, and that's why they didn't make any money for me.
At the root of the matter, and sporadic says as much in his posts, this kind of behavior is sopping with this idea of limitless, boundless, morally ambiguous (immoral via the means, moral via the action of satisfying your need for acculturation), desire for instant gratification. The idea that not only should you be a consumer of culture, you are indeed entitled to the products no matter your financial situation.
That's a defeatist attitude. "We can't win." Look, I'm not for further prosecution, but if the market isn't going to change (like the war on drugs isn't going to end), and in this case we're talking about an addiction to compulsive consumerism so deep, so thick that you must download illegally, then I totally believe you deserve a massive fine. $2-5K at most. Pony up. You're the one who couldn't kick your habit for "Lil Wayne" albums.[/quote]Elaborate? Okay. Let's take the analogy of newspapers. They're slightly different situations in that newspapers are dying out because they can't compete with how up to date the internet is, but one can look at another reason for their demise: they cost money. People nowadays don't attach value to the news. They really don't at all. Ask any one if they'd be willing to pay.
They've gotten used to getting the news for free, whether from their local stations broadcasting over the air for free, or from the internet, over even free papers. The news has NO value any more. Absolutely none. If you run into a website with content behind a paywall, are you going to pay for it, or are you going to go elsewhere? But just because people won't pay for the news, it doesn't mean one can't make money from the news. News websites have advertising. That's where the majority of their revenue comes from. So, news companies build a brand, a base, by giving away content for free--the news--and make money in other ways--advertising.
The same thing is happening with music now. People don't want to pay for music. At all. Again, we can argue over whether it's right or not that people download music, but I think that, in the long run, such an arguement is meaningless in that the attitude of downloading is becoming so much more ingrained into our culture that the same thing that happened with the news will happen with music. People simply won't want to pay for it without getting more than just songs. Fortunately for artists, they have plenty of other revenue streams available to them ranging from merchandise to performances to endorsing products (if they're big enough) to even just their fan base (an artist recently, for example, asked her fans to "prefund" an album for her. They threw her some cash, she booked recording time in one of the most well known and highly reputed recording places in California and got a famous producer on board too. She used the community that she built around her music. The fans that donated got copies of the album).
The mentality that you have is that there are no other ways for artists to make money. It's the same kind of thinking that has newspaper folks demanding that the news be locked down behind pay walls so that they can make money. It's the same mentality that had content providers demand that Hulu block Boxxee (sp?) users when Boxxee does nothing more than make it easy to stream Hulu to one's TV. Technology is changing the market, and the kneejerk reactions of these industry organizations are nothing more than a refusal to adapt to the changing environment.
[quote name='mykevermin']There's an interesting set of ethics that pirates have. I often hear the "I'll see them when they come to town in concert" excuse, but that's so half-hearted and untrue. I know that, as individuals, people really do think that way, but get

in' real. If 100,000 people in 10,000 cities say this on a daily basis (a severe underestimate), then you have a large population of people who are never going to make good on their promise to put the penny back in the "give a penny, take a penny" cup.
So

ing over artists and going to great lengths to discover new means of acquisition that involve a good bit of time to learn how to operate are ok. Where I work now, running torrent programs will get you IP blocked from the network (even if OMG we're doing so to ethically share a WoW update!). But people still download. They know how.

ing over musicians you adore is ok. Getting pissed at the people who are pissed because you are a thief is ok. Having your indirect costs go up (tuition) in order to pay for the software that monitors and blocks your downloading habits as well as programs of legal music distribution (can't recall the name, but college gives big studios a buncha money for a service the students have access to) is shit, however, and something you should protest over.
Doesn't matter if downloading killed of legitimate businesses due to selfishness and compulsive behavior, or who you

over along the way. The worst thing you can do, ethically as a pirate, is to have an unbalanced u/d ratio. Hilarious.[/QUOTE]
I don't think you read what you responded to with this.