User:JubalHarshaw/Razor LeakFrom Battlestar Wiki, the free, open content Battlestar Galactica encyclopedia and episode guide
Razor leaks on October 30th, 2007
They were fools to give out advanced copies. Of course it was pirated
Did I download Razor? Hell yes. Will I purchase it as soon as it's available, to support a quality product and those who produced it? Absolutely. I download all the episodes. It's no different than using a DVR to record a broadcasted show to avoid commercials or to watch it at a time of your choosing. As soon as the DVD is available, I purchase it. I consider it fair use to download the episodes at my leisure (I pay for cable, and they are broadcast, so what's the difference?)
Thoughts on copyright
Artists, writers, producers, etc., should be paid for their work. Having said that, copyright law in this country has gone far beyond its original intention. There is effectively no longer a "public domain", as the copyright terms keep getting extended by media companies throwing money at our "representatives". Mickey Mouse should be public domain already; not so, Disney can still make money from him, so hey, better extend those copyright laws. The music industry is even worse, I suggest the following reading, as a start: The Problem with Music The issue of "Abandonware" falls right in here too. Kudos to companies that actually use their brains and make older games available, either for free or even at a nominal fee. To those that simply sit on their "intellectual property", well, you could have probably had my money. Instead, I'll just take it. Maybe eventually you'll figure it out. DRM is useless. It is cumbersome, hampers even legitimate users' ability to use their purchases, and, like all schemes, will be cracked, sooner, rather than later, by a dedicated cadre of computer geeks, many of whom do it for the same reason a dog licks his nuts: because they can. In the end
In the end, you'll never stop piracy with laws. There's too many of us, it's too easy, computers manipulate media, any type of media, effortlessly, and the Internet lets us pass it around. Companies need to consider how they treat their customers, what they charge their customers, the quality of product they are producing, how much they pay the people that actually produce the content (hey! Writers' strike anyone? And musicians, I'm talking to you too) ... and so on. It's not the 1950's anymore. You aren't in complete control of distribution anymore. Adapt or die.
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