But then if you report something nobody should see, say CP for example, you’re suddenly subjecting 20 random people into seeing it.
But then if you report something nobody should see, say CP for example, you’re suddenly subjecting 20 random people into seeing it.
I mean, maybe it should be. Maybe the government should be paying artists instead like somebody else suggested somewhere. Idk, it’s an interesting topic. But that’s in these peoples ideal world that we clearly do not live in. I am in complete agreement that, pirating all forms of art being the morally just thing to do (like the very first commenter suggested), is very incorrect. At least in our timeline it is.
To preface this, I do agree it’s not morally correct to pirate. At BEST it’s morally neutral, and usually it’s not even that. I don’t know why people think they’re entitled to another person’s work without paying just because it’s “art”. They’re not.
However…
I completely disagree that your analogy is spot on. If I have zero plans to ever buy a certain car, but then one day decide to just steal it to see if it’s fun to drive, that car can no longer be sold to somebody else and the dealership or whatever just lost a lot of money.
On the other hand, if I have no plans to ever buy a game, but decide to pirate it to see if it’s actually fun, the developers don’t lose money from that. I never would have bought it in the first place, and they can still sell it to others because I didn’t actually take it from them.
That’s the difference. Now, if I had already planned on buying it but decided, “nah I’ll just pirate it instead”, then I would agree they’re losing out on a potential sale. That’s still different from losing a car though, because the dealership isn’t only losing a potential sale, they’re also losing an item in limited supply that takes physical time and labor to make (as opposed to just fabricating another Steam key).
This is how I handle pirating. I more or less treat pirating as a demo for the game. If I liked the game enough to finish it, 9/10 times I’m going to actually buy it unless I have some personal reason not to, like the dev being a pos I don’t wish to support or something.
I imagine phones no longer having headphone jacks isn’t helping the wired headphones market. I’d gladly use wired headphones if it meant I didn’t need to charge mine or worry about them dying on me. Aside from working out, it’s not like the wire is exactly in the way…
I’m personally a big fan of these.
Fair, but these are all perfectly valid reasons to do so on Lemmy as well, so I still think it makes more sense to do so here than on Reddit.
This is very specific to DnD while the meme itself could really be talking about any game, be that some other tabletop RPG or video game.
Why? I feel like that would be more common on Lemmy than anything. There is an actual point in using different instances here, I don’t see any point whatsoever on Reddit.
I had never heard of one either, so I looked it up and found nothing by the name. The closest thing I could find to the description is these, and I’ve got to say, I like how they look. I’m curious if this is actually the type they were talking about though.
It’s okay little buddy, you tried your best.
It’s very easy to do once you know what you’re doing. This took me like 2 minutes to throw together. I gave the text a background and everything so it should be easily visible no matter the picture’s background color.
My problem with your watermark is it’s basically worthless to anyone who doesn’t already know what Lemmy is. Unless I’ve somehow missed it, nowhere on the watermark does it actually mention Lemmy. A logo by itself is completely worthless if you’re not well known. You really ought to add ‘join-lemmy.org’ in there under the logo imo, which would make it infinitely more useful.
I see. I had noticed people using that term instead, but I never knew why. Thanks for the info.