Well, #1 came from your own favorite "Harvard study" amongst other validated studies also referenced in that one. #2 is common sense; people would not steal something they didn't value. #3 is one you can see for yourself just by looking over the shoulder of any one of one's family and friends who are regular users of the pirate networks. #4 you seem to accept, OK. And #5 is like #3, just look at your average buddy's PC and look at what they use regularly for several years without bothering to lift a finger to buy a legit copy of it. That's FAR more common than any genuine try-before-buy situations. To say otherwise is just to ignore the reality.
And the only reason you can't see a way to measure it is because you haven't been taught what the measurement tools are and how they work. It's just stuff you haven't been exposed to yet. People have earned Nobel prizes in economics for developing such tools that are now taught in your typical college economics classes. I don't claim to be an expert at all that myself as that was not my major in college, but I have taken enough classes to understand that there are scientifically and mathematically legitimate tools that can do just that. My cousin Russ just retired from a career as a high-level sales manager at Motorola. One of his main tasks in that position was to create future sales forecasts and past sales analysis using these very kinds of economic tools we're talking about here.Oh, come on, Dave, I know you know just how silly that attempt at an analogy actually is. And yes, that kind of stuff (economic temperature, consumer purchasing power, costs-of-living, adjustments for inflation rates, etc.) IS factored in to such studies and into sales analysis, including the one from HarvardMan that's your favorite.Actually by most metrics, the economy is stronger now than it was in 1997, before the Internet bubble. And even if you count the Internet bubble years, we still compare today. The biggest difference now is the cost of petroleum products, which is starting to have a ripple effect into corn and dairy prices. But even there, if you adjust for inflation, we had it worse during the embargo of the early 70s (which you may not remember, but I sure do.) And that had no effect upon the music industry (I can't comment on the software industry as there really was no consumer software industry in 1973

).On a person-by-person basis, no. One cannot prove that Joe Smith might or might not do one thing or another. However, like it or not, much of human behavior is predictable on a statistical level. And there are few aspects of human behavior that are as well analyzed and understood as their purchasing habits, because that's what the economists pour all their money and efforts and Nobel-winning knowledge and tools into, because that's what the economy is ultimately based uopn.
It's far, far more than just an assumption.
And even if it were, Dave, it's irrelevant whether they would have bought it or not. That has nothing to do with the points in my post that you were responding to.
You yourself say that software piracy is a bad thing. What more do you need to know? Why the need to knock down further justification? Why do you spend your energy and time trying to pick apart what you see as weaknesses in my (and other's) pro-rights posts, and then remain silent about the problems with the posts that support or advocate piracy?
Why do you say that to argue against the pirates is soapboxing and judgemental and none of your business, but you have made it your business over the years of this thread to soapbox against and be extremely judgemental about those of us who you say you fundamentally agree with?
Let me repeat part of what was in my post yesterday, which you have not yet responded to:
Enough of the "I am against it" single sentences followed by a big
BUT several paragraphs long trying to demonstrate why piracy ain't so bad after all.
Vurtually everybody believes you are actually pro-piracy, depite your protestations otherwise, because that is exactly how your posts look to the outside world.
Prove us wrong, Dave. Slap around the other side of righteous beliefs for a change, and actually stand up for your anti-piracy beliefs.
Stand up, or stand down.
G.