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- Path: sparky!uunet!europa.asd.contel.com!emory!swrinde!cs.utexas.edu!uwm.edu!zaphod.mps.ohio-state.edu!pacific.mps.ohio-state.edu!linac!att!cbnewsm!benw
- From: benw@cbnewsm.cb.att.com (bennett.weber)
- Subject: Re: PIRACY
- Organization: AT&T
- Date: Tue, 17 Nov 1992 05:07:12 GMT
- Message-ID: <1992Nov17.050712.28158@cbnewsm.cb.att.com>
- References: <1960@lysator.liu.se> <XcL9TB2w165w@lakes.trenton.sc.us>
- Lines: 47
-
- In article <XcL9TB2w165w@lakes.trenton.sc.us> rock@lakes.trenton.sc.us (Rockerboy) writes:
- >
- >Duh! Gee, George, ain't that the whole reason there is an argument?
- >You equate piracy with theft, and then tell us you can't come up with an
- >example because it is so very different from theft!
- >
- >Piracy _is not_ theft. I will concede that piracy may be morally and
- >legally _wrong_, but it is _not_ theft. Theft, by definition, implies
- >depriving a person of his physical property, and anticipated profits _are
- >not physical property_.
-
- Actually, even the dictionary is unclear about the meaning of theft...
- definitions are given both implying deprivation for the original owner,
- and simply the act of illegally taking something. But let's not reduce
- the problem to semantic quibbling...that trivializes it.
-
- Consider the following situations
-
- 1) Someone illegally photographs U.S. military secrets
- and sells it to the Soviet Union
-
- 2) Industrial espionage gets the business plans of a
- corportation into the hands of a comptetor.
-
- 3) Someone Xeroxes the paper you wrote after 2 years
- of intensive research and presents it as his own,
- taking credit for an important discovery
-
- 4) A student plagiarizes (without credit, of course)
- passages from literature and includes them in her term paper.
-
- In all cases, no one is deprived of their original "merchandise", but
- few people would hesitate to use the word "theft" in describing the
- crimes. What IS stolen is information, and if you think information
- does not have value in and of itself, you're dead wrong.
-
- Piracy if theft of intellectual property. If you don't want to
- use the word "theft", pick another. But don't delude yourself
- by hair-splitting.
-
- Ben Weber
-
-
- --------------------------------
- Not speaking for AT&T
- --------------------------------
-
-