I am not twisting any argument to justify myself. I am trying to understand if any civil law must be followed, and I think that one is not morally obliged to follow any civil law. There are some morally irrelevant. They do not have to be unjust in order to be able to break them without doing something immoral. They might be just irrelevant, as in the examples I gave before.
The issue here is if violating copyright is stealing or not. I think it is not, it is just a violation of a civil law that interested people are trying to identify as stealing.
An example why the issue is not clear at all is the little advert shown in Spain before films or in some DVDs, where a person is stealing a TV and comparing this with copying the DVD. This is absolute nonsense. It is not the same, but they need this campaign to try to impose an idea that is not immediate clear to everybody. The same people are now trying to impose a tax in Spain to every virgin and empty DVD you are buying justifying this with the idea that you COULD use that DVD for copying a film. It is all about money.
Copying is not stealing. Violating copyright is just violating copyright but it is not stealing. If I copy a song I am not making any harm to the author. As we did not do it when we were recording films from TV or song from the radio on tape.
What is that?
IF IT WAS NOT A SIN IN THE ANALOGIC ERA WHY SHOULD IT BE NOW IN THE DIGITAL ONE?
I did know that changing from tape to CDs could modify the nature of the moral act and convert it in a mortal sin!!!
There was no Church document, no theologian talking about recording films from TV or songs from radio on tape in the last 30 years and nobody cared about it. Why should it be now a sin?
Firstly, music is a luxury, so any civil laws regarding it are to be adhered to.
I agree that one cannot follow any civil law, but we are discussing music here. Copyright law affirms the property of the copyrighted material to the correct person.
“Violating copyright is just violating copyright but it is not stealing. If I copy a song I am not making any harm to the author. As we did not do it when we were recording films from TV or song from the radio on tape.”
I think you need to further read the finer points before ranting. Recording from radio is different because radio quality is horrible, it’s 64kbps. What you see floating around on the web are 128kbps and upward bitrates, they are also pristine copies. The RIAA knows that recording directly from the radio is rubbish quality, do you see people doing this often? No, even if they do, they eventually get rid of it, do you see a large radio recorded collection of the beatles hits somewhere? I presume everyone wants to be surprised by a D.J’s voice in the middle or before the start of every song on the radio.
Recording from T.V is actually stealing, laws enforcing copyright were not as stringent as they are now. Since music and movies remains luxury items by economic definition and I guess theological too because we don’t ‘need’ music, the civil laws surrounding them MUST be followed, cases regarding music is not the same as the laws regarding abortion for e.g.
I did know that changing from tape to CDs could modify the nature of the moral act and convert it in a mortal sin!!!
Very funny, do not bring mortal sin directly in here when you haven’t read much into copyright law and can’t make a distinction between civil laws regarding luxury items and civil laws regarding issues that the Bible addresses.
As far as I know there is nothing wrong with making a copy of your music from tape into CD or vice versa for your own use.
Violating copyright is just violating copyright but it is not stealing. If I copy a song I am not making any harm to the author
You clearly haven’t read much on this issue at all. Music industry profits have dropped massively, artists now have to extensively tour instead of depending on CD profits. I frankly don’t care about the profits of the music industry, but I’m bringing this up because you said it doesn’t ‘harm’ the author.
Are you wilfully ignorant or do you not take care in what you type?
Is it that hard to notice that if you download something say a song from Britney Spears’ latest hit you deprive her of a revenue she could have made if you bought it? Now multiply that by the 10 million+ users downloading her songs on the web.
Is this clear or do I need to graphically illustrate this for you?
There was no Church document, no theologian talking about recording films from TV or songs from radio on tape in the last 30 years and nobody cared about it. Why should it be now a sin?
Firstly, theologians aren’t going to go wandering into these kind of areas as laws regarding music and such are changing. I do not know what the law regarding copyright was 30 years ago, but I do know that it has been amended many a time since Napster came into play. Furthermore it’s an error to presume that because no one has said anything about that it’s automatically OK, or to presume because 'everyone did it in back in the day now it’s ok to do it, it’s logically flawed.