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Sometimes It's OK To Steal My Games

spidweb writes "One Indie developer has written a nuanced article on a how software piracy affects him, approaching the issue from the opposite direction. He lists the ways in which the widespread piracy of PC games helps him. From the article: 'You don't get everything you want in this world. You can get piles of cool stuff for free. Or you can be an honorable, ethical being. You don't get both. Most of the time. Because, when I'm being honest with myself, which happens sometimes, I have to admit that piracy is not an absolute evil. That I do get things out of it, even when I'm the one being ripped off.' The article also tries to find a middle ground between the Piracy-Is-Always-Bad and Piracy-Is-Just-Fine sides of the argument that might enable single-player PC games to continue to exist."

3 of 438 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Sounds like some kind of liberal! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Uh, you have that backwards friend.

    The Constitution explicitly denies the federal government any powers that weren't granted to it explicitly by the Constitution itself, and reserved them to the states individually.

    It's PEOPLE who have allowed the federal government to slowly, and carefully usurp those powers. The CONSTITUTION forbade it, in the form of the 9th amendment.

  2. Re:Exactly. by TheEyes · · Score: 5, Informative

    Okay, how about the Humble Indie Bundle then? They made over a million dollars in a month, with basically no advertising other than word of mouth (which turned into news coverage), despite the fact that the games have no DRM and were--and still are--easily pirated.

  3. Re:Actually.. by Jerslan · · Score: 5, Informative

    Actually, there *is* an alternative repository that is 100% binary compatible with the enterprise editions of the distro you refer to. You may have heard of it...
    http://www.centos.org

    The distro you refer to also has their own totally free Linux distro/repository, which you also may have heard of...
    http://fedoraproject.org/

    The business model of your example is not simply repository access. What you're paying for with their "main distribution" is easier access to support and updates/patches.