B2L
Android Expert
Was that a recorded response?
Nope it was supposedly Jason Chafetz secretary. Lol. I bet they are busy today.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Was that a recorded response?
So...I might have been living under a rock for the past couple of months. I learnt about the whole SOPA and Blackout Jan 18...yesterday.
Please note...I don't have the time to read 150+ posts in this thread...so if it's already said...you can link me to the post So, I was reading up on SOPA a bit (like the wiki part) and I wonder if a USA site has its domain hosted in another country, like Canada, how would SOPA affect the site? I mean...whatever company can't sue that site for copyright infringement if the site's domain isn't in the USA, right?
PS - Rather surprised you didn't see the flaw in your logic when you used the word copying, as it shares a root word with copyright.
We've been down this road already but this time I will put it in as simple of terms as I can. If you don't own it copying is stealing period, simple, end of story.
Let's say you wrote the biggest most awesome OS ever created, you have patents, copyrights and all the protection you can think of, I come along and copy it without permission I stole it and can be convicted in a court as such.
Your logic is not far from "I didn't steal your car, I borrowed it for an undisclosed amount of time"!
Copyright infringement is a different thing than stealing.
You guys are very obtuse.
Dude, you're the artist one right?
If you aren't creating your "art" under a contract to be paid by another individual, you have no reason to be upset if someone right-clicks and COPIES a picture you made. You weren't making money from it anyway.
Stealing a car is completely different from making a copy. Even if you return the car. That analogy makes no sense whatsoever.
Copyright infringement is a different thing than stealing.
You guys are very obtuse.
Dude, you're the artist one right?
If you aren't creating your "art" under a contract to be paid by another individual, you have no reason to be upset if someone right-clicks and COPIES a picture you made. You weren't making money from it anyway.
Stealing a car is completely different from making a copy. Even if you return the car. That analogy makes no sense whatsoever.
Once 5 pounds of manure is out of the bag, no one wants to put it back in.
seriously though, don't believe everything you hear. how the heck is someone going to censor the internet? relax people.
OH MY WORD!!!! your right just go back to sticking your head in the sand my friend.seriously though, don't believe everything you hear. how the heck is someone going to censor the internet? relax people.
You are missing the fact that unless you outright sell something to someone there are usually royalties attributed to whatever it is, so copying without permission is stealing because you deprive the artist, author, creator or whatever of royalties.
In simplest terms, the model can be defined as:
Connect with Fans (CwF) + Reason to Buy (RtB) = The Business Model
Trent Reznor, the man behind the band Nine Inch Nails, has done so many experiments that show how this model works that it's difficult to describe them all. He's become a true leader in showing how this model works in a way that has earned him millions while making fans happy, rather than turning them into the enemy.
Reznor has always reached out to his fans, and has an amazingly comprehensive website, with forums, chat rooms and many other ways of interacting. He encourages fans to better connect with each other as well. While companies like Warner Music forced all the music videos of their artists off YouTube for many months, Reznor actually aggregates all the videos his fans take at concerts (he encourages them to bring cameras) on one page on his own website. He does the same for photos. He released a (free) iPhone app that allowed fans to locate each other, and communicate with each other, while sharing photos and videos as well. It's all about connecting with those fans, and helping them better connect with each other, so they feel like a part of a club.
From there, he gives fans real reasons to buy. Lately, he's taken to releasing everything he records for free online, knowing that the music will show up on file sharing sites anyway, so he sees no reason to fight it. Yet, he adds many other options that people might want to buy. With his release of the album Ghosts I-IV, he released all the tracks under a Creative Commons license that allowed anyone to share them online for free. Yet, he also set up some cool "reasons to buy." You could get the two disc CD, if you wanted, for just $10. Above that, though, was a Deluxe Edition Package, for $75. It was, effectively, a box set, but around a single album. Beyond the two CDs, it also included a DVD and a Blu-ray and a photobook of images.