ex_banana-eater Posted July 7, 2004 Report Share Posted July 7, 2004 Here is a news article that came out today: More than three programs in a computer around the globe are thought to be illegal copies of software. China and Vietnam stats are at all time high with the figure rising to 9 out of 10, according to Financial Times.... The research firm also reported that if piracy could be lowered to 10 percent over the next four years, it would create more than 1 million jobs and $400 billion in economic growth. What are your thoughts? [Edit] While searching todays news I came across another topic, one that software piraters often bring up in defence of themselves, saying pirating does not lower industry income: http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/story/...ory/Technology/ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spearmint Posted July 7, 2004 Report Share Posted July 7, 2004 While searching todays news I came across another topic, one that software piraters often bring up in defence of themselves, saying pirating does not lower industry income: http://www.globeandmail.com/servlet/story/...ory/Technology/ Will be interesting to watch how/if this changes now that record labels have started to move towards more practical distribution mediums (iTunes music store being a prime example, as well as the relaunched Napster etc). Physical media such as CDs have been obsolete to many people for quite some time - there is simply no need to actually own a disc containing a song when all you need is 'the song itself'. Charging people for downloads seems like a far more feasible way to distribute music, and I suspect that a lot of people who stopped purchasing CDs will start paying for songs on services such as iTunes, especially since they often require a lot less time to locate what you're after than certain popular p2p networks. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
blank_frackis Posted August 8, 2004 Report Share Posted August 8, 2004 Yeah, I agree that buying media items in a physical form (Cd's, DVD's, computer games etc) is going to die out. One of the only reasons I buy CD's is just because I enjoy having the physical item, reading the lyrics booklet etc, for the less sentimental consumers however, buying downloads is definitely the way to go. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AshRyan Posted August 9, 2004 Report Share Posted August 9, 2004 Yeah, I agree that buying media items in a physical form (Cd's, DVD's, computer games etc) is going to die out. One of the only reasons I buy CD's is just because I enjoy having the physical item, reading the lyrics booklet etc, for the less sentimental consumers however, buying downloads is definitely the way to go. Maybe so, but there will always be sentimental consumers like us. I laugh whenever someone claims that actual books are going to go extinct eventually. Somehow, I really doubt it. It certainly ain't gonna happen anytime soon. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Spearmint Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 Maybe so, but there will always be sentimental consumers like us. I laugh whenever someone claims that actual books are going to go extinct eventually. Somehow, I really doubt it. It certainly ain't gonna happen anytime soon. Well books are different - reading a physical book is a lot more comfortable than reading a large amount of text on a computer monitor, and then you have the portability issue as well. I doubt that even portable ebook readers would be as nice to read as an actual paper book, although I haven't used one. Also, theres the locatability factor - its a lot easier to find a physical copy of an obscure(ish) book than an e-book version. Although having said that, perhaps something like electronic ink will replace paper books in the future, for popular stuff anyway. With music though, the CD is completely redundant (for me anyway). In order to use a CD have to first rip it onto my computer and then download the songs onto my portable mp3 player, after which I can basically throw the CD away (although I'll generally keep it in case I ever reformat). It's quite a hassle, and downloading songs directly is a lot easier. I think a lot of others feel the same, which is why legal downloading services such as iTunes have become so popular. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
AshRyan Posted August 10, 2004 Report Share Posted August 10, 2004 Well books are different - reading a physical book is a lot more comfortable than reading a large amount of text on a computer monitor, and then you have the portability issue as well. I doubt that even portable ebook readers would be as nice to read as an actual paper book, although I haven't used one. Also, theres the locatability factor - its a lot easier to find a physical copy of an obscure(ish) book than an e-book version. Although having said that, perhaps something like electronic ink will replace paper books in the future, for popular stuff anyway. With music though, the CD is completely redundant (for me anyway). In order to use a CD have to first rip it onto my computer and then download the songs onto my portable mp3 player, after which I can basically throw the CD away (although I'll generally keep it in case I ever reformat). It's quite a hassle, and downloading songs directly is a lot easier. I think a lot of others feel the same, which is why legal downloading services such as iTunes have become so popular. I agree that books are somewhat different, for the reasons you mentioned. But even for music, as I said before, there will always(?) be sentimental consumers like blank_frackis and myself. I even still buy vinyl records on occasion. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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