Damn it, I really didn't want to be in this topic, but here I am, devil's advocate.
Let me start off by saying that I don't really agree with most of what I am about to say, but the issue is really not as simple, I don't think.
I'm curious how you can get away with justifying that piracy is not theft because "nothing physical is taken".
That only makes sense if you believe that the issue has nothing to do with payment. Theft if taking something without paying, not simply removing something from anothers possession without permission.
When you wrongfully take something without paying, it's stealing, that's pretty basic. How does a taking a digital item from a digital store make a difference.
Well, of course theft can be removing something from someone's possession without permission. If that wasn't the case, no one could ever steal something from a private party, because that party never had it for sale.
The difference, and where things are less clear when it comes to digital content, is that fact that really nothing is
taken. It isn't a zero sum game here, so where with any physical object someone taking something is a loss on the other party's part, a digital object is often quite different. What is really at issue isn't theft, or stealing, it is unlawful duplication and distribution.
Consider, if I payed for a music CD, then make 100 copies and gave them to everyone I know, did I steal anything? Did the people who got a copy steal anything? No one has lost anything.
To me, by that logic, if someone took all the money from your bank account, it's not stealing because it's all just 1s and 0s? How is pirating a song any different?
It's called "getting your identity stolen" when someone gets enough digital info on you to buy stuff with your name. Is that not stealing? Again, how is that different than stealing an album?
For that matter, taking a record from a store is stealing, but as soon as it's online it's somehow not?
Again, there is the issue of the Zero Sum here. If someone changes your bank account from $1,000 to $0 and their own from $0 to $1,000, there is certainly an issue that property that was had lawfully by one party is no longer in their possession. Again though, if I had a CD I purchased, and someone makes a copy (perhaps while I was not looking) did they steal from me? I still have mine and now they have one too. The Zero Sum is violated, no property
changed hands.
Idenity "theft" is really just fraud though, so I am not sure that just the fact that we use "theft" and "stolen" colloquially to refer to it, doesn't really mean that someone literally takes away possession of you identity. You still have your own social security number, but someone else is fraudulently using it.
Argue that it's helpful if you want, but let's all call it what it is. Plain and simple, if someone is doing it, they're a thief. If that's not the case, please enlighten me.
If someone decides to give away their stuff for free and you get it, then you aren't pirating it. But otherwise, yes, that's theft.
I don't know. Is there something unlawful going on? Yes. Does giving the simple label of theft make it a simple issue? I don't know about that.
Interestingly enough, I think this is sort of the thing that Bakker talks about as a "crash space," a place where technology has us in a position where our language and our thinking don't really line up to the technological reality...