Owning information is obsolate, just like owning items will be once we have nanotech, and owning land will be once we have cheap spacetravel.
NSA and other intelligence communities will probably beg to differ with you, and place information at paramount height of importance especialy with those who know it.
That's
knowing information, not
owning it. And though a case could be made for
restricting the proliferation of certain knowledge, that's a different matter entirely from obtaining an unlicensed copy of Avatar or Spore.
ID theft is real and harmful you own your ID.
That's not
theft though, unless actual documents/goods were stolen, it's bank/insurance fraud (although gaining fraudulent access to someone's bank account almost certainly leads up to actual theft). The trend of calling it "identity theft" is a propaganda move by the credit industry to pass the blame onto the victims "who weren't guarded enough", rather than rightly taking the blame for their own failure to properly validate identities.
Celebrities sell small variations of their ID for in return of money. Such as liklness.
Which is just egocentric and silly, if sadly true. Although taking or distributing their picture, or using their name (say, in referencing them, or if referring to someone else with the same name), would be "copyright violation" (absurd as any sane mind can see...), it would not be
theft either.
How are you not taking? How can you come into possession without taking? You have the definition right there in the quite. Into one possession.
Because you are not
acquiring, you're altering the state of your own possession (which you "acquired" at some point, presumably legally, unless you stole the computer/harddrive) to look like something else.
Because it's not taking anything. It is, quite literally, asking someone what the content in question looks like, and reproducing it on your own machine. Trying to label that "theft" would be like trying to label "creating, at your own labor and expense, an exact copy of a given car, by asking someone who owned one what it looked like" as "grand theft auto".
Yes, clicking a download link and building a car are exactly the same thing.
You're right, the processor on your computer is doing many magnitudes more work than the individual building the car.
And that would still be illegal, because you're not a licensed manufacturer of the design, and you're not paying the designer any royalties for using their car design. Really, this argument just keeps coming back to a myopic, egotistical interpretation of a very shallow understanding of the law, where murder and theft are the only crimes, and if you can use good enough wordplay, anything you do is perfectly legal because it doesn't fit an incredibly strict interpretation of that shallow understanding of the law.
But it would not be
grand theft auto, which was the point I was making. It violates patent and trademark law, sure, but it is, in no way, theft of a fucking car.