Linked by Thom Holwerda on Thu 9th Jun 2011 18:51 UTC
Thread beginning with comment 476818
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
To view parent comment, click here.
To read all comments associated with this story, please click here.
I bet if you really think about there are other things too. It's quite hard not without crippling yourself.
Nope. Old games that are no longer being produced is literally the only thing I download that is questionable as far as copyright violation. All of my music, software, and movies are legal.
There was a time that I did download music illegally. I admit that. But that was before the days of legal online music services where I could buy individual songs instead of entire albums. Now that iTunes and various other online stores allow me to do that, I don't have any illegal music anymore. All of it is legally purchased.
In the cases where I can't afford to buy a legal copy of some piece of software. I just use an open source alternative instead. GIMP instead of Photoshop. OpenOffice instead of MS Office, etc.




Member since:
2007-03-07
[q]You may well be against file sharing, but I bet you have, or still do, do it.
Ok. I take that back. There is one thing that I do that is technically a copyright violation. I download SNES ROMs. But given that the game publishers don't even sell those cartridges anymore, and I *can't* buy them, that's one of those areas where I think copyright law is abused. It's not hurting the publishers if I download the ROMs because they don't even sell them anymore. So it's not even possible for me to buy them from the publishers.