Yes, I used offline mode to play Steam games on my laptop when traveling outside a wifi connection. :)
Steam is actually very useful. It keeps all my games patched, I can play wherever I want and many games I can even use the "cloud" to save my games. So if I am on my laptop (connected to the Internet for this of course) and I progress in a game and save it, I can pick up where I left off when I get back to my PC.
Also, when getting a new computer, reinstalling games is NO effort at all. :) All this and NO monthly service fee. Not to mention great deals. I bought Civ 5 recently for $17 from Steam instead of $50 at the retail store.
If you believe most U.S. citizens are not decent, intelligent people, are you any better than the ones you denounce? Judgmental generalizations don't work no matter what piece of land you are standing on when you make them.
You must be one of the majority of Americans who are not decent, intelligent people. :) Otherwise you would have been able to infer this meaning from the evidence that is invisible to you due to your lack of decency and intelligence.
Don't you believe your viewpoint to be true? Is it not based entirely on something someone told you. Something that is theory, since scientifically, this theory has not been proven by testing and recreating the result.
Your belief in an unproven theory is your choice, but criticizing others who believe in an unproven theory does nothing for your own credibility.
That being said, I believe Hanes should be able to terminate a relationship with a sponsor if that sponsor's positions could cause controversy and damage to their reputation and sales. Nobody is telling the NFL player he can't express his opinion, but when those opinions can cause moral outrage, I believe it's well within Hanes' right to separate themselves.
It's not about anyone being interested, it's just about money.
Personally, I think the footage should be considered historical, but I don't agree that the video footage should be able to be used by someone else for profit, and that's what a political campaign is all about these days.
If a child kicks a man in the knee and the man respond by punching him in the face with his fist, the man can be seen as a bully. When people see an action that seems heavy handed, that is the perception. The couple seems to me as if they connected the bugs to the hotel in their head. It also seems to me that their assumption was inaccurate.
Simply responding to the review with factual evidence refuting the review should have been enough. Going one step further and taking some sort of conciliatory action to make the couple feel their wrong, even if it was unfounded, had been righted would have been better.
Filing a hefty defamation lawsuit not only appear excessive, but leaves a negative on top of a negative in the eyes of observers. Even if they win the lawsuit, they have lost much more than they will gain.
The error here is the misconception that if someone strikes you, your best option is to strike back harder. Which is the point of Mike's post as I see it.
Fighting back is not always the best option. Many business' and people have learned this. A negative response to a negative stimulus rarely results in a positive resolution.
However a positive, defensive rather than offensive, response can refute the attack and generate goodwill from observers and even the attacker.
"Correct, it is not a human right: it is only a law the majority of the population had enacted as legislation at some point in history."
When did the majority of the population vote to enact IP legislation? Did lawmakers all run on a platform of "if you vote for me, I will create a new, made up property of the mind so you, my constituents, can be legally harassed and shaken down for sharing things you like".
They need to disable all these rogue recording devices: cassette tape decks, CD/DVD burners. They are obviously tools for stealing sales. Without these rogue devices, we can win the war on piracy. Confiscate any such device without a warrant and without a court order. Only by such decisive action can we protect the artists and the dying music and movie industry.
Then everyone who has taped a song off the radio should be arrested for theft. Everyone who has copied an article from a book or a magazine should be arrested for theft. Everyone who has taken photos of anything covered by copyright has committed theft and should be arrested.
Sharing copyrighted works have been around since the photocopier. People would make copies of interesting things they read and share them around the office. Now days they just copy/paste to e-mail.
Equating theft with infringement is less a flaw in logic and more an act of desperation to attempt to garner public support for outrageous claims.
Except the public isn't as stupid as they want to believe.
Seriously, do you think a completely different company can use the Verizon graphic with the red corner check and the stylized red Z in the name Verizon and then put a different word under it like say "Haircuts" and not get sued?
Or would Verizon.com put a link directly to Verizon Haircuts on their main page just as they do to the Wireless company. Which is a completely different company as well.
While they are on paper different, they try and appear as separate divisions of Verizon. At Verizon.com the first link is to "Wireless". Maybe that explains why I have trouble separating the two: shared graphics, shared website style, shared links, bundling services together on a shared bill.
Looks completely different to ... no, actually. It doesn't.
Why does anyone need to mine materials from a replicator? All you need is protons, neutrons and electrons. It breaks them down and reassembles them. Sort of like transporters. The fuel for a replicator is any sort of matter. If you want earl grey tea, you only need enough matter to equal the amount used in final product.
Like many who have stated this, if replicator technology existed, jobs in the normal sense would vanish and everyone would have all their needs easily taken care of without the need for money or property.
People would likely be devoting their time to academic pursuits, exploration and arts.
Except Google does not have a monopoly. There are dozens of search engines which are all equally accessible. Just because Google is more popular does not mean it has a monopoly. Having a monopoly implies no choice.
On the post: Copy Protection Does Not Mean More Sales
Re: Re:
Steam is actually very useful. It keeps all my games patched, I can play wherever I want and many games I can even use the "cloud" to save my games. So if I am on my laptop (connected to the Internet for this of course) and I progress in a game and save it, I can pick up where I left off when I get back to my PC.
Also, when getting a new computer, reinstalling games is NO effort at all. :) All this and NO monthly service fee. Not to mention great deals. I bought Civ 5 recently for $17 from Steam instead of $50 at the retail store.
I don't see Steam as a form of DRM.
On the post: Copy Protection Does Not Mean More Sales
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
https://support.steampowered.com/kb_article.php?ref=3160-agcb-2555
On the post: Football Player Sues Hanes; Says It Can't Fire Him Over Controversial Things He Said On Twitter
Re: Re:
On the post: Football Player Sues Hanes; Says It Can't Fire Him Over Controversial Things He Said On Twitter
Re: Re: Re:
lol
On the post: Football Player Sues Hanes; Says It Can't Fire Him Over Controversial Things He Said On Twitter
Re: Re: Re: Re: there's more to it, right?
Your belief in an unproven theory is your choice, but criticizing others who believe in an unproven theory does nothing for your own credibility.
That being said, I believe Hanes should be able to terminate a relationship with a sponsor if that sponsor's positions could cause controversy and damage to their reputation and sales. Nobody is telling the NFL player he can't express his opinion, but when those opinions can cause moral outrage, I believe it's well within Hanes' right to separate themselves.
On the post: ABC Sports Threatens To Hit Tim Pawlenty With Copyright Infringement Claim Over Miracle On Ice Footage
Re: Re: My god! A cease & desist letter!
Personally, I think the footage should be considered historical, but I don't agree that the video footage should be able to be used by someone else for profit, and that's what a political campaign is all about these days.
On the post: Swedish Appeals Court Increases File Sharing Fine By A Factor Of Six
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Is Filing A Defamation Lawsuit Really The Best Way To Respond To A Potentially False Hotel Review?
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Simply responding to the review with factual evidence refuting the review should have been enough. Going one step further and taking some sort of conciliatory action to make the couple feel their wrong, even if it was unfounded, had been righted would have been better.
Filing a hefty defamation lawsuit not only appear excessive, but leaves a negative on top of a negative in the eyes of observers. Even if they win the lawsuit, they have lost much more than they will gain.
On the post: Is Filing A Defamation Lawsuit Really The Best Way To Respond To A Potentially False Hotel Review?
Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Fighting back is not always the best option. Many business' and people have learned this. A negative response to a negative stimulus rarely results in a positive resolution.
However a positive, defensive rather than offensive, response can refute the attack and generate goodwill from observers and even the attacker.
On the post: Swedish Appeals Court Increases File Sharing Fine By A Factor Of Six
Re: Re: Re: Re:
When did the majority of the population vote to enact IP legislation? Did lawmakers all run on a platform of "if you vote for me, I will create a new, made up property of the mind so you, my constituents, can be legally harassed and shaken down for sharing things you like".
On the post: The Absurdity Of Comparing Copying To Stealing
Re: You forget what is being "stolen"
On the post: The Absurdity Of Comparing Copying To Stealing
If Copying is Theft
Sharing copyrighted works have been around since the photocopier. People would make copies of interesting things they read and share them around the office. Now days they just copy/paste to e-mail.
Equating theft with infringement is less a flaw in logic and more an act of desperation to attempt to garner public support for outrageous claims.
Except the public isn't as stupid as they want to believe.
On the post: 54-Year Old School Teacher Who Doesn't Know How To Download Movies First To Be Kicked Off The Internet In France
Re: Re:
On the post: Verizon Tells Customer To Get A Lawyer & A Subpoena To Get An Itemized Bill
Re: Re: Re:
Or would Verizon.com put a link directly to Verizon Haircuts on their main page just as they do to the Wireless company. Which is a completely different company as well.
While they are on paper different, they try and appear as separate divisions of Verizon. At Verizon.com the first link is to "Wireless". Maybe that explains why I have trouble separating the two: shared graphics, shared website style, shared links, bundling services together on a shared bill.
Looks completely different to ... no, actually. It doesn't.
On the post: One More Time, With Feeling: Winklevii Lose Yet Again
Re: Re: Winklevii
On the post: Star Trek In The Age Of Intellectual Property
Replicator Needs
Like many who have stated this, if replicator technology existed, jobs in the normal sense would vanish and everyone would have all their needs easily taken care of without the need for money or property.
People would likely be devoting their time to academic pursuits, exploration and arts.
On the post: AP Finally Learns That On The Internet, You Can Link To Other Sites
Re: They've still missed part of the html spec
On the post: You Know What's Missing From The Aaron Swartz Indictment? Any Mention Of Copyright
Re: Where does the law say infringement and theft are different.
if copyright is a law then breaking copyright is breaking a law,
theft is a law,
and therefore theft is infringement of said law...
---------------
Also indecent exposure is a law
and therefore indecent exposure is infringement of said law...
Irrational connections are fun!
On the post: Copyright Troll John Steele Insists That 70-Year Old Is Responsible For Porn Downloads... Even If Someone Else Used WiFi
Re: Re: Re:
On the post: Newspapers Win Suit Against Google, Get Their Wish To Be Delisted, Then Complain
Re: Argument for Monopoly?
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