Skip Navigation

Piracy is not immoral (sometimes)

I'll go straight to the point:

  • Piracy is useful to bypass regional frontiers and access to censored content
  • Piracy is helpful to watch content without supporting it if you consider it not worth of it
  • Piracy might be helpful for content preservation and survival
  • Piracy is useful to ACTUALLY evaluate whether to spend money on some digital content or not
  • Piracy is sometimes the only way to actually own DRM-protected content
53 comments
  • Access to media that companies arbitrarily remove to cut costs in their billion dollar company.

    Access to media since companies refuse to put out physical versions now in the age of streaming.

  • We live in a reality where corporation rule the world. They monopolize markets, pay little to no taxes, hold no accountability for their actions against people, communities, the environment. They cut off corners and feed you whatever bullshit is more profitable for them and this endless greed of theirs is only growing.

    If you're not stealing some every-day, average Joe's work (looking at you fuckfaces who steal content and resell it on platforms like RedBubble), then piracy is always the (only) moral choice.

  • People here don't need convincing, I think, but I still wouldn't pay if piracy wasn't an option. I'll find another hobby. Besides, laws making it illegal are quite recent, thanks to greedy corporations. If it was immoral, there wouldn't have been that much discussion about it.

  • Can you even buy ebooks these days without going though Amazon? Aside from an incredibly small amount of indie authors (who probably got kicked from Amazon for unknowingly pissing off some algorithm) there's no place to download them and support the authors.

  • Can you even buy ebooks these days without going though Amazon? Aside from an incredibly small amount of indie authors (who probably got kicked from Amazon for unknowingly pissing off some algorithm) there's no place to download them and support the authors.

    • Actually you can. Kobo for example has a great selection of ebooks. Those books will still be drm protected tho.

      • That's fair, I didn't specify DRM-free. Still probably better than buying through Amazon.

        But I'd prefer to use my own ebook reader.

53 comments