I look at it in a much simpler manner tbhIf you buy a game, you paid to play it.If you rent a game, you paid to play it for a short time.If you buy a used game, you still paid to play it but someone else paid to play it first.If you steal it, you are paying nothing to play it and you are a god damn thieving dindu who deserves the gibbet rather than gibs.I personally like the ''''b-b-b-b-b-b-ut i'm trying it out to see if i like it/can run it abubububub''''Steam has done refunds for a while now, there is no excuse.
I think there is actually a clause in the EULA about pay for play and renting.Basically, you are not permitted to rent out a game and if you do, you are breaching the eula.So renting is as bad as piracy.
If you rent a game, you paid to play it for a short time.If you buy a used game, you still paid to play it but someone else paid to play it first.
All of them provide one common service: providing me with a valuable product, and that to me is worth money.
Quote from: Mr. Psychologist on April 08, 2017, 10:57:33 AMIf you rent a game, you paid to play it for a short time.If you buy a used game, you still paid to play it but someone else paid to play it first.But you don't pay to play it; the publishers (and developers) get nothing from rentals or used sales. If you feel this way, how would you respond to my question about paying a nominal fee for a pirated copy?
Quote from: Töqi on April 08, 2017, 11:12:53 AMQuote from: Mr. Psychologist on April 08, 2017, 10:57:33 AMIf you rent a game, you paid to play it for a short time.If you buy a used game, you still paid to play it but someone else paid to play it first.But you don't pay to play it; the publishers (and developers) get nothing from rentals or used sales. If you feel this way, how would you respond to my question about paying a nominal fee for a pirated copy?Someone also had to buy a copy, so they could make a copy of it and distribute it out.
But you don't pay to play it; the publishers (and developers) get nothing from rentals or used sales. If you feel this way, how would you respond to my question about paying a nominal fee for a pirated copy? And at that point, how are rentals and used sales not worse than pirating, since those retailers get profit from selling the game, whereas people that upload copies of games make no money at all?
This is actually something I haven't thought of. Technically renting is worse than piracy.
Quote from: Mr. Psychologist on April 08, 2017, 10:57:33 AMI look at it in a much simpler manner tbhIf you buy a game, you paid to play it.If you rent a game, you paid to play it for a short time.If you buy a used game, you still paid to play it but someone else paid to play it first.If you steal it, you are paying nothing to play it and you are a god damn thieving dindu who deserves the gibbet rather than gibs.I personally like the ''''b-b-b-b-b-b-ut i'm trying it out to see if i like it/can run it abubububub''''Steam has done refunds for a while now, there is no excuse.This 100%, it really is that simple in my mind as well.Demos also exist, as well as SystemRequirementsLab.com.
Quote from: Töqi on April 08, 2017, 10:49:38 AMbecause that person never intended to buy the game in the first place, therefore no sale was lost. Regardless of how dubious and absurd that premise isWhy is that such an absurd premise? It holds true for pretty much everything I end up downloading.
because that person never intended to buy the game in the first place, therefore no sale was lost. Regardless of how dubious and absurd that premise is
tbh systemrequirements lab is full of shit, youll run games at max it says you dont meet minimum requirements for and itll say you can max games with a toaster
Quote from: Pepsi on April 08, 2017, 12:43:57 PMtbh systemrequirements lab is full of shit, youll run games at max it says you dont meet minimum requirements for and itll say you can max games with a toasterMaybe there's a better website, I don't know. Not a PC gamer.
Like I said before--I'm okay if the pub and devs don't make a profit as long as someone's palms are crossed with silver for the one copy, legally. The original copy was already paid for, just as Psy said, and now it's just trading hands, which is perfectly fine. Producing multiple copies without permit is probably the bigger issue.
Is the justification in the scale of the distribution, i.e., one purchased copy may be pirated thousands of times, whereas a single rental disc may only be used a handful of times? At that point, when does rental becoming piracy -- 20 times, 50, 100, etc.? What if a user buys a game, uploads it, and it's only downloaded once?
Quote from: Verbatim on April 08, 2017, 12:39:57 PMQuote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 12:35:24 PMThis is actually something I haven't thought of. Technically renting is worse than piracy.But not in the least.Why not?
Quote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 12:35:24 PMThis is actually something I haven't thought of. Technically renting is worse than piracy.But not in the least.
On the other hand, an incorporated business isn't a requirement to sell or trade things; Craigslist and eBay are two examples of private selling mediums that are perfectly legal. And if, as I asked in the OP, pirates paid some sort of nominal fee (or maybe not even nominal; what if alternatives to Steam sold cracked game keys for competitive prices, like $30 for new games), would that justify it? Is the simple act of a transaction enough to eliminate the moral issues?I think the bigger issue here is that used sales and rentals involve a single copy trading hands (and a rental is more or less like a repeated used sale), rather than a pirated version being highly distributed. But there's just something off about retailers making money off the sale of used or rented games. Surely anyone that copied or distributed any other form of IP for profit would be smacked with a lawsuit.
Quote from: Verbatim on April 08, 2017, 01:08:36 PMQuote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 01:02:18 PMQuote from: Verbatim on April 08, 2017, 12:39:57 PMQuote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 12:35:24 PMThis is actually something I haven't thought of. Technically renting is worse than piracy.But not in the least.Why not?I already explained above. Retailers are legally permitted to provide paid rental services.Morally, why should I not be able to try out a game--or any product--before committing to a purchase?It's consumer protection, if anything.morally the pirates are in the right
Quote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 01:02:18 PMQuote from: Verbatim on April 08, 2017, 12:39:57 PMQuote from: challengerX on April 08, 2017, 12:35:24 PMThis is actually something I haven't thought of. Technically renting is worse than piracy.But not in the least.Why not?I already explained above. Retailers are legally permitted to provide paid rental services.Morally, why should I not be able to try out a game--or any product--before committing to a purchase?It's consumer protection, if anything.
Is it ethically wrong?
Is it ethically wrong for us to sit on our asses and play video games or banter on a forum when we could be spending that time and energy on feeding the homeless, raising money for charity or helping others in need? Maybe.