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326 points hn_acker | 3 comments | | HN request time: 0.001s | source
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bastard_op ◴[] No.42200020[source]
Some 28 years ago I taught myself everything could get/find from graphic design, basic development, server administration, etc, all downloading commercial warez over dial-up with AOL and Usenet. I didn't need a class or subscriptions, with every software and book I could have wanted, I had the best lab in the world with any software available I could want with piracy.

Fast forward 30 years now it's mostly the same as it was, only open source replaced all the commercial, and little has changed that I can still get the rest too. You can pay as much or little as you want in life if you know how.

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jjtheblunt ◴[] No.42200079[source]
You said you relied on piracy.

But piracy means you were in spirit and partly in reality stealing the work product of those who learned a few years before you.

Would you want your work value to be diluted by piracy?

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LennyHenrysNuts ◴[] No.42200133[source]
If I take your car, you are now without a car. If I copy your software, you still have your software. If I was never going to buy your software in the first place, you have lost nothing.

Enough with the false equivalence.

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1. fragmede ◴[] No.42200348[source]
If.

I've paid for things when I could have gotten it for free, and also taken things for free when I should have paid for it.

Enough with the false dichotomy.

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2. ◴[] No.42200360[source]
3. PittleyDunkin ◴[] No.42201236[source]
You could just as easily argue the software or content should be released for free as it's associated with effectively zero marginal cost.