Yes or no?
Here's my stance on the matter. I have only pirated a few programs. One was because the license wouldn't let me use it on more than one (er... five) computers. I only ever used one computer at a time, so I figured I stayed in with the license, but no, had to crack it to use it.
Second, was a game, which my friends were modding. I downloaded it, cracked, to play their mods. I would never have bought the game in real life - partly because I don't like the genre of game it was, and secondly because after playing the cracked game I realised how awful it was.
Now, that is one reason I support piracy: it lets you try out programs FULLY before you buy them.
My second argument for piracy is this: cracking programs that you would never, ever buy, and probably won't use very often. Take photoshop for example. £1,000 (probably more than that now). I will never, ever spend £1,000 on software. Not unless it was for a commercial product and I had the budget. I would instead use free programs, such as The GIMP. Now here's the thing. Whether I pirated photoshop, or downloaded GIMP, Adobe gets no money either way. Adobe would never get money from me, not in any scenario, because I would not pay £1,000 for software. Therefore, cracking it is not immoral, it is not stealing anything from the company and is not losing them any money - because they would never have had the money from me in the first place. So why can't I crack it? (For the record I haven't cracked Photoshop as I wouldn't know where to begin, haha).
Now, for some arguments AGAINST piracy...
I understand that companies need to make money. Pirating something like a £5 DVD, or a film that is currently in the cinema, I would not do, purely because I could afford that and would (depending on the film in question) be willing to pay anyway. Secondly, an independant product, such as... Aveyond, I would not pirate (bad example on Aveyond as I was turned away by the poor gameplay in the demo, but nonetheless). Perhaps it is for a nonsensical reason; I like supporting small developers. Yes, I know, there is no difference between a small developer and a large one.
Here's my stance on the matter. I have only pirated a few programs. One was because the license wouldn't let me use it on more than one (er... five) computers. I only ever used one computer at a time, so I figured I stayed in with the license, but no, had to crack it to use it.
Second, was a game, which my friends were modding. I downloaded it, cracked, to play their mods. I would never have bought the game in real life - partly because I don't like the genre of game it was, and secondly because after playing the cracked game I realised how awful it was.
Now, that is one reason I support piracy: it lets you try out programs FULLY before you buy them.
My second argument for piracy is this: cracking programs that you would never, ever buy, and probably won't use very often. Take photoshop for example. £1,000 (probably more than that now). I will never, ever spend £1,000 on software. Not unless it was for a commercial product and I had the budget. I would instead use free programs, such as The GIMP. Now here's the thing. Whether I pirated photoshop, or downloaded GIMP, Adobe gets no money either way. Adobe would never get money from me, not in any scenario, because I would not pay £1,000 for software. Therefore, cracking it is not immoral, it is not stealing anything from the company and is not losing them any money - because they would never have had the money from me in the first place. So why can't I crack it? (For the record I haven't cracked Photoshop as I wouldn't know where to begin, haha).
Now, for some arguments AGAINST piracy...
I understand that companies need to make money. Pirating something like a £5 DVD, or a film that is currently in the cinema, I would not do, purely because I could afford that and would (depending on the film in question) be willing to pay anyway. Secondly, an independant product, such as... Aveyond, I would not pirate (bad example on Aveyond as I was turned away by the poor gameplay in the demo, but nonetheless). Perhaps it is for a nonsensical reason; I like supporting small developers. Yes, I know, there is no difference between a small developer and a large one.