words
Just beacuse you keep saying its theft, and ignoring all the evidence to the contrary, doesn't make it so. It's not prosecuted as theft, FYI. This is why it's not called theft in court. A lost sale is not the same as theft. Taping a movie off the tv isn't theft. Taking a picture of a painting isn't theft. Writing a tablature of a popular song isn't theft. The media corperations would love to have you belive this of course, but it's simply not true. Theft involves you taking something into your possession
deliberatly depriving someone else of that SAME THING. not copying it, not creating a facsimilie, not doing something which leaves that person still in possession of the item. This is simple word definition stuff here guys. A quick google search would clear this up for you... (sorry to keep harping on this, but it really annoys me how the music and movie industries are trying to change the definition of this word to suit their own needs ¬_¬)
You're oversimplifying a complex concept because you want to villify people you dont agree with. Anyone could easily do the same thing to the coorperations who have completely bloated the concept of copywrite to the point that there is no such thing as public domain anymore, and monopololies are easy to maintain. Copywrite was intended to encourage competition and creativity, instead it punishes those things and rewards huge media conglomerates for flooding the market with crap.
Funny how we were talking about how horrible DRM is, and you've turned that into a discussion about how pirates are vile evil sub-human creatures unworthey of life, or whatever hyperbole you're spouting. We simply said that the pirates fix the game ubisoft intentionally broke. I was reading the ubisoft forums this morning, and someone posted a link to a crack, so people could play the game they paid for, and the ubisoft forum drones banned him for posting illegal links, guess you'd agree with that?
As we were saying DRM has very little to do with piracy, and very much to do with producers robbing you of your rights as a consumer. Piracy is a good excuse for this, nothing else.
Pirates arent some faceless amorphous mass of hatred and villany. They're people, just like the publishing execs, and the movie moguls. Different people pirate different amounts for different reasons. One guy may download any and every game that comes out, another may just download cracks to fix his broken games, yet another may download games to test them out (most games don't have demos, are released buggy or broken, and over marketed to the point of blatantly lying about the game itself).