no, it's not.Jay wrote:
That's just romanticism
libertarian benefit collector - anti-academic super-intellectual. http://mixlr.com/the-little-phrase/
no, it's not.Jay wrote:
That's just romanticism
you're not immoral, you're just lazy. and if you really liked someone's music, why would you suffer it at shitty youtube quality? how do you take it with you into the car, or on a run? you have a laptop on your passenger seat or something?(HUN)Rudebwoy wrote:
What Im curious about is your opinion about the morality of it. What Im getting is that Uzique says you should support the artists you like. Am I immoral if I dont pay directly(or in this case even indirectly) for the records, but I watch/listen to them in legally green lit ways provided to me?
Umm, well... I dont have car... Or an mp3/4 etc player...Uzique wrote:
you're not immoral, you're just lazy. and if you really liked someone's music, why would you suffer it at shitty youtube quality? how do you take it with you into the car, or on a run? you have a laptop on your passenger seat or something?(HUN)Rudebwoy wrote:
What Im curious about is your opinion about the morality of it. What Im getting is that Uzique says you should support the artists you like. Am I immoral if I dont pay directly(or in this case even indirectly) for the records, but I watch/listen to them in legally green lit ways provided to me?
Well, I wanted to but what Im a bit afraid of is that I would just be another immigrant minority. If things keep going the way the are now, then maybe I wouldnt even mind that eventually. So maybe you'll see me mowing the lawn of some middleclass person in a few years...Uzique wrote:
you could move to england and pick strawberries with polish people and still be able to afford an album a week.
Because that 17 yr old kid hasnt actually listened to his 500 albums, he doesnt give a fuck about them, its just a number to brag about. I'm a filthy pirate, and every album in my library has been carefully added. When i was 17 i did the same thing though. Huge library, no appreciation. On the other hand, without money/a trust fund I'd never have gotten into music anyway.FatherTed wrote:
it's funny really, pre internet mass useage (lets say late 90s?) you would be considered a music aficionado to have maybe 500 albums? now any 17yr old with enough gb/tb and a private tracker amount has that.
and how does this help the artist, exactly? come on, don't be dumbJay wrote:
Or... buy used.
How does buying anything used help the initial manufacturer? Doesn't mean it's not a legitimate way to get it.Uzique wrote:
and how does this help the artist, exactly? come on, don't be dumbJay wrote:
Or... buy used.
Theres the burn, they are ok as long as each buyer can only sell the one copy they bought. Buying one copy and distributing that one to millions is where the industry and artist take the hit. Acceptable losses I guess. But you own that one copy, so it is yours to sell.Uzique wrote:
well if most people's complaints and most piracy defenses are "against the industry", it doesn't make much sense to behave in a way that only spurns the original artist.
You can run enough data sets through your unstealable software to figure out the algorithm - derp.HaiBai wrote:
lol... brute force an algorithm... you can't brute force an algorithm /facepalmDilbert_X wrote:
So you're not selling uncrackable software, you're selling access to your system.Mutantbear wrote:
why should I download a program that doesnt do anything
if 100% of the calculations are on your server then whats the point of the client. You are charging for an online service which is different from software piracy. All the load is on your servers since the client is useless; youll probably lose more money having to maintain the servers than from internet piracy if you actually created a piece of software
No doubt someone moderately smart could use a brute force approach to figure out your algorithms and just write their own software.
you're naive in thinking there's that many reverse engineers running around with enough time to reverse everything they see.Uzique wrote:
if it's profitable for you... it's worth cracking by someone more skilled than you. anything engineered by humans can be reverse engineered. this is pretty logical. no system is perfect, not even the military's. i think you're being a naive kid.HaiBai wrote:
yeah i guess you raise a good point.. it depends on how popular my product is and how intense the calculations are.Mutantbear wrote:
why should I download a program that doesnt do anything
if 100% of the calculations are on your server then whats the point of the client. You are charging for an online service which is different from software piracy. All the load is on your servers since the client is useless; youll probably lose more money having to maintain the servers than from internet piracy if you actually created a piece of software
if it is indeed not worth the effort to do that, ill just pack my software with my own method, followed by themida. ill also implement a bunch of tricks ive learned simply from experience. ill put checks and other studd everywhere just to annoy the fuck out of the cracker. after that i guess you just pray nobody with a high enough skill level comes anywhere near your software
you're honestly retarded. seriously, stfu.Dilbert_X wrote:
You can run enough data sets through your unstealable software to figure out the algorithm - derp.HaiBai wrote:
lol... brute force an algorithm... you can't brute force an algorithm /facepalmDilbert_X wrote:
So you're not selling uncrackable software, you're selling access to your system.
No doubt someone moderately smart could use a brute force approach to figure out your algorithms and just write their own software.
I don't go to any real 'underground' events, the one thing I can say is the warm-up acts at mainstream events are with few exceptions utter shit.Uzique wrote:
only mainstream music is shit, and that has more to do with the inevitable, logical endpoint of a mass culture so obsessed with instant gratification and instant wealth and bling and all of these other cultural currents than to do with 'music getting bad'. the mainstream mass culture simply desires these shitty, candy-coated 'products' and so the record companies sell to them. music is not suffering, just mainstream music has reached a destination that it has been heading towards for as long as 'pop' music has existed: the super-stream of hyper-coloured shite.
Last edited by Dilbert_X (2011-12-25 13:30:41)