Post
by Hermit » Tue Aug 11, 2015 4:24 am
Collector1337 wrote:Strontium Dog wrote:When I was at school, everyone used to copy everyone else's computer games. It was very easy as most were on cassette tape. One classmate's father was a police officer, and he would use the police station photocopier to duplicate the instruction booklets for his son. As an analogy for how seriously law enforcement has historically treated breach of copyright, it cannot be beat.
>computer games
>on cassette tape

Well, it was an advance on storing programs in a stack of cardboard cards by punching holes in them.
My early piracy of copyrighted music consisted of soldering a couple of strands of telephone wire to a radio speaker and connecting it via DIN plug to a Grundig reel to reel tape recorder. that would have been around 1963 or 4. I was eleven years old. Despite that the Beatles and Bill Haley still got filthy rich, and the record companies that contracted them even more so.
In fact, I think piracy actually increases sales. A few weeks ago I downloaded a recording of the Brandenburg Concertos that the copyright holder, Euroarts, made available on Youtube. After a few listens I decided that I liked it enough to order the DVD. It arrived last week.
Last edited by
Hermit on Tue Aug 11, 2015 4:36 am, edited 1 time in total.
I am, somehow, less interested in the weight and convolutions of Einstein’s brain than in the near certainty that people of equal talent have lived and died in cotton fields and sweatshops. - Stephen J. Gould