Not sure if I'm alone on this, but I don't think piracy (not referring to the hardcore murderous piracy) is wrong and I don't believe in Imaginary Property. However, I do think that financially supporting artists, developers, writers, film makers etc for their work is a good thing. I buy games on GoG, much for this reason.
A wonderful effect of digital computing & huge networks, is that people from all over the world can communicate, exchange ideas, thoughts, pictures, films and music with each other. They can do this very quickly & efficiently. Out of all of this we get amazing websites like Wikipedia, which let us share & access vasts amount of knowledge. If you create something made of, or that can be easily converted into 0s & 1s, then people are going to want to share and enjoy it freely (free as in freedom and as in price). This is human nature. The only way I can see that people can force other people to pay for their 0s & 1s is with very advanced DRM (check out the NGSCB article on wikipedia) and/or very privacy invasive laws (see ACTA). So that's too extremes: extremely closed, secret and hidden (NGSCB), or extremely open, exposed and public (ACTA), as in, everyone know's who you are and what you've done.
To date I've never met a person AFK that has claimed to not have pirated (read: shared) at least 1 copyrighted digital artifact, which they did not receive permission to obtain. I'm not saying that because lots of people do something it's right (I don't believe that). I am suggesting that piracy is normal behavior. As for the statement:
RetroVortex: the only people who pirate are the ignorant
. I don't see things as black and white as that. It's a complicated problem, with many interested parties, each with their own agenda. In my opinion, the people writing these laws (ACTA), are not acting in the interest or needs of artists, writers or other people; I think they are acting in the interest of shareholders. I think the shareholders are purely thinking about profit. I'm not sure people buy shares because companies "do the right thing".
Richard Stallman has an
interesting perspective on copyright. Might be interesting / enlightening / enraging reading for some of you.
-Kom