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Companies Coming Around To Piracy's Upside?

traycerb writes "The Economist has an article detailing how numerous companies are finding piracy's silver lining: 'Statistics about the traffic on file-sharing networks can be useful. They can reveal, for example, the countries where a new singer is most popular, even before his album has been released there. Having initially been reluctant to be seen exploiting this information, record companies are now making use of it. This month BigChampagne, the main music-data analyser, is extending its monitoring service to pirated video, too.' The kicker is Microsoft's tacit endorsement of Windows piracy in developing markets, namely China. The big man himself, Bill Gates, says it best in an interview with Fortune last year: 'It's easier for our software to compete with Linux when there's piracy than when there's not.'"

2 of 259 comments (clear)

  1. Pretty poor by clang_jangle · · Score: 0, Troll

    The writer of TFA still has head up his butt, qualifying the presented "silver linings" stories with lots of good old-fashioned "unauthorized copying is theft" crap and "imaginary property is a god-given right" style assumptions.

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    Caveat Utilitor
  2. Re:I'd be happy if pirates* would acknowledge... by Jasonjk74 · · Score: 0, Troll

    You are not very bright, are you? When you steal copyrighted material, you are stealing, regardless of your pathetic stale nonsense about no theft taking place due to the author not being deprived of the original. You have no business taking something you are not entitled to. You try creating something, get your "facts" straight, then reply to me with your vacuous nonsense. Which is why you need to be modded an insipid moron.