> Copyright violation is not theft. ... The PDF
"sellers" are not
> selling their property; they are selling right-to-copy.
(A perhaps better way for me to have phrased that might be, they are
selling right-of-access to their (intellectual) property.)
And "escorts" aren't hookers because
they sell their time, not the
sex, right?
Possibly, in some cases - I don't know either industry (either the
escort trade or the sex trade) well enough to be competent to comment.
But what's your point? It looks to me as though you are trying to draw
another analogy between copyright violation (and non-violation, eg,
paying for a legitimate PDFed manual) and another industry, a service
industry in this case - and, while I'm speculating here, your phrasing
sounds to me as though it's trying to invoke disapproval by appealing
to a culture in which the sex trade is illegal, or at least sub rosa.
Any such analogy is bound to be flawed; if copyright violation were
theft (of either property or service), we wouldn't need special
intellectual property law. It's a fundamentally different thing and
any attempt to shoehorn it into a framework designed for other things
is bound to be a bad fit.
That's why I speak out against attempts to paint copyright violation as
other things, such as theft: it's an appeal to emotions, trying to
equate "thing I want people to oppose" with "very different thing I
expect people already consider bad". It's a fundamentally dishonest
bit of oratory.
I don't support copyright violation. But I also don't support attempts
to bias people against it by depicting it as something it's not,
whether the "something" is theft or selling sex.
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