T
The_Otaku
Guest
In the past I made a thread here asking about the legality and morality of downloading mp3s. I’m not surprised to see I’m not the only one who has done this. It’s always that fine line between morality and legality, sometimes.
I come with an updated question:
If I want to make an mp3 for a song that belongs to a soundtrack, and the soundtrack itself is rare, an import item, and something not found in stores, how far do I have to go out of my way to acquire the cd, before I defer to simply downloading an mp3 illegally?
For instance, there’s just a few songs I want from the disc, but the disc can usually only be found on e-bay and specialty sites, and the price is ridiculously inflated (usually in the 40 dollar range, not counting what it would cost to ship it to you…this cost is further increased if it’s an international shipment).
If all I want are several songs from the cd, and this series does not exist in the iTunes library, etc, and it is not likely it ever will be, morally, am I allowed to download the few songs for free via another means, provided it was just for these few songs? Or, in order for this to be completely right morally and legally, I’d have to spend the ridiculous price of 40+
I can see how in most instances the case it easy to answer: just buy the cd at your local store or download the songs on iTunes, etc. It’s easy to say that if you are expecting to pay 5-12 bucks for the cd or iTunes is even an option, not 40 or more and iTunes is not an option!
But in cases like this, with an item that’s extremely rare, hard to find, or ridiculously priced because of it’s rarity, is it at all morally permissible to download the few songs since there is no other way of acquiring them other than to bite the bullet and pay the unreasonable price of the cd?
Threads like these can annoy people, and I understand why, because in the process of asking the question, you answer it for yourself. I know the answer and the answer is it’s never right and that even if I want just one song, I have to buy the cd in this case, even if the price is inflated.
It’s just frustrating at how unreasonable this is. Personally, I don’t think God really cares about petty little human matters like this. He only cares if it damages our soul. I don’t see how doing something nice with a song, more than just downloading it to listen to it, hurts anyone.
You might say it hurts the company who made it. Well, what if that company doesn’t exist anymore? Or what if this is not an item they make money off of anymore? Or what if it’s an item that’s discontinued or no longer in production or circulation? Is it ok then? If you can say yes it’s ok after thinking of this, and you don’t feel guilty saying it, then why is it all that immoral?
You can’t say you’re cheating the seller either, because when you’re talking about e-bay, you’re not really shopping in a store so your business is not required to be with any one individual whom you could buy the product from. So in downloading it illegally, you’re not hurting them, it just means they were unable to sell that auction item which you were not obligated to buy, and can try again later if they want.
So if neither the seller is hurt, and most likely not the creator, are downloading the songs ok morally speaking? At points like this when everything seems to favor doing it, you question why you’re still hesitating and you think it’s foolish. Even more than that, you wonder if anyone even cares whether you do it.
I’d gladly pay the few dollars to download a few songs if that was an option. But 40+ shipping and handling? That’s really pushing it, and asking alot…not because it’s expensive, but because it’s ridiculous that you’d have to go that far just to do the right thing. It’s like your conscience forces you to go farther than you should have to to do the reasonable thing. But how is this reasonable? It feels like your own morals are doing you in or scalping you, or you’re allowing the system to take advantage of you simply because you want to do the right thing.
Suppose it wasn’t just one soundtrack, but 3 or 4. And altogether, I wanted a total of 6 songs from all of them. This is just an example. Lets say they all cost upwards of 50 dollars. Am I really, in good conscience supposed to not get angry and willingly pay hundreds of dollars for a few songs because there’s no other legal way of acquiring the songs?
I can understand how its’ easy to answer those who want to steal when it’s easy for them just to pay the dollar or buy the cheap cd. Those people just want something for nothing and they shouldn’t gripe about having to pay a measly buck. But when you’re talking big money and your options for doing the right things are all but eliminated, when does doing the right thing becomes foolish and a form of self punishment? Purposely putting roadblocks in front of yourself just so you think you’re doing the right thing seems delusional almost.
And if you’re going to do it over something as simple as mp3s, then how much more for the things that really matter.
I come with an updated question:
If I want to make an mp3 for a song that belongs to a soundtrack, and the soundtrack itself is rare, an import item, and something not found in stores, how far do I have to go out of my way to acquire the cd, before I defer to simply downloading an mp3 illegally?
For instance, there’s just a few songs I want from the disc, but the disc can usually only be found on e-bay and specialty sites, and the price is ridiculously inflated (usually in the 40 dollar range, not counting what it would cost to ship it to you…this cost is further increased if it’s an international shipment).
If all I want are several songs from the cd, and this series does not exist in the iTunes library, etc, and it is not likely it ever will be, morally, am I allowed to download the few songs for free via another means, provided it was just for these few songs? Or, in order for this to be completely right morally and legally, I’d have to spend the ridiculous price of 40+
I can see how in most instances the case it easy to answer: just buy the cd at your local store or download the songs on iTunes, etc. It’s easy to say that if you are expecting to pay 5-12 bucks for the cd or iTunes is even an option, not 40 or more and iTunes is not an option!
But in cases like this, with an item that’s extremely rare, hard to find, or ridiculously priced because of it’s rarity, is it at all morally permissible to download the few songs since there is no other way of acquiring them other than to bite the bullet and pay the unreasonable price of the cd?
Threads like these can annoy people, and I understand why, because in the process of asking the question, you answer it for yourself. I know the answer and the answer is it’s never right and that even if I want just one song, I have to buy the cd in this case, even if the price is inflated.
It’s just frustrating at how unreasonable this is. Personally, I don’t think God really cares about petty little human matters like this. He only cares if it damages our soul. I don’t see how doing something nice with a song, more than just downloading it to listen to it, hurts anyone.
You might say it hurts the company who made it. Well, what if that company doesn’t exist anymore? Or what if this is not an item they make money off of anymore? Or what if it’s an item that’s discontinued or no longer in production or circulation? Is it ok then? If you can say yes it’s ok after thinking of this, and you don’t feel guilty saying it, then why is it all that immoral?
You can’t say you’re cheating the seller either, because when you’re talking about e-bay, you’re not really shopping in a store so your business is not required to be with any one individual whom you could buy the product from. So in downloading it illegally, you’re not hurting them, it just means they were unable to sell that auction item which you were not obligated to buy, and can try again later if they want.
So if neither the seller is hurt, and most likely not the creator, are downloading the songs ok morally speaking? At points like this when everything seems to favor doing it, you question why you’re still hesitating and you think it’s foolish. Even more than that, you wonder if anyone even cares whether you do it.
I’d gladly pay the few dollars to download a few songs if that was an option. But 40+ shipping and handling? That’s really pushing it, and asking alot…not because it’s expensive, but because it’s ridiculous that you’d have to go that far just to do the right thing. It’s like your conscience forces you to go farther than you should have to to do the reasonable thing. But how is this reasonable? It feels like your own morals are doing you in or scalping you, or you’re allowing the system to take advantage of you simply because you want to do the right thing.
Suppose it wasn’t just one soundtrack, but 3 or 4. And altogether, I wanted a total of 6 songs from all of them. This is just an example. Lets say they all cost upwards of 50 dollars. Am I really, in good conscience supposed to not get angry and willingly pay hundreds of dollars for a few songs because there’s no other legal way of acquiring the songs?
I can understand how its’ easy to answer those who want to steal when it’s easy for them just to pay the dollar or buy the cheap cd. Those people just want something for nothing and they shouldn’t gripe about having to pay a measly buck. But when you’re talking big money and your options for doing the right things are all but eliminated, when does doing the right thing becomes foolish and a form of self punishment? Purposely putting roadblocks in front of yourself just so you think you’re doing the right thing seems delusional almost.
And if you’re going to do it over something as simple as mp3s, then how much more for the things that really matter.