The only reason people use pirated or cracked software is that it is done virtually undetected. Any other argument is a completely worthless attempt at covering the fact that they're cowards who do it because they know they won't get caught. If there was a higher chance of getting caught, found guilty, and being imprisoned then NONE of their other so-called "arguments" advocating the act would hold water. If there was any validity to any of those arguments they'd also steal their guitars, keyboards, computers, mics, drum sets, etc.
It's easy to do, you know you won't get caught, so you it. Fine. At least show some balls and admit that's the real reason you do it. Don't insult anyone's intelligence with stupid, poorly thought out rationales about how fat cat companies laugh when they rip off poor people with high prices that are knowingly too high, how greedy programmers get paid too much, how illegal copies actually IMPROVE sales, how software only costs 30 cents to make because all the manufacturer has to do is dump some files on a CD, how a demo copy is useless because some capabilities of the licensed version are intentionally, how it's OK as long as you aren't making money from it, or any of your other nonsense.
Want to get someone to pay attention to your arguments? Show some balls and walk into a Guitar Center, take a Gibson Les Paul off the wall, and as you're walking out the door with it, flip off the security camera and tell those greedy, black-souled corporate executive bastards that their prices are too high and since you're too poor to pay their exorbitant prices you're entitled to just take it instead of earning the money to pay for it. Maybe THEN your weak arguments will have a little more validity.
why is calling someone a coward so misused.. lol The thing is, which has been said over and over in this thread, is that there is a huge difference between a physical object, which has actual monetary value, as it has physical parts, materials, and manufacturing involved for each individual unit...then, after the product has been manufactured, it's sold at a wholesale value to the store selling it to the public, which is another actual cost involved.
The only real costs involved in developing a piece of software is just that, developing the master copy...marketing, and a small cost to manufacture the physical copy if it is available in hard copy (manuals, dvds/cds/ registration cards, box, shrink wrap). So, any of their perceived losses are impossible to gauge because they are only projected income, because of the nature of digital information. There is one fixed production cost, regardless of how many copies exist of the product, especially since these days most software follows a pay by credit card/download soft and pdf manual model, so in that case there is not much overhead, other than the initial development cost,, then just maintaining the site, and advertising.
There are many reasons why this comparison doesn't actually work (even though it's the most overused answer...look back, it's literally the first thing every single person says when trying to prove their point against. For one, there is no way to perfectly replicate the act of pirating software with this scenario... in a sense, you'd have to have the ability to clone the gear (leaving the original intact) and taking home the clone, which actually wouldn't be an enforceable crime, as long as you weren't selling it to people, or not at all if it's not infringing on any patents (i.e. all of the strat copies that exist, or u47 clones etc..)
It also doesn't work to compare, because if you take a physical object, you are taking something which had cost the company actual money to produce that actual object.. the materials, the machines or people that put it together, testing/quality control...and then the store is losing money because they actually bought the gear at a lower price..the only way to replicate that in reality, where if software developers literally completely recompiled every single copy that existed physically, or literally re-wrote the code, or had some sort of industrial robot poking away at a keyboard writing code on every single disc before it's burned, or every copy before it's zipped. (that would do wonders with waiting for software to come out, eh? haha)
Digital information by nature is different than a physical object in many ways. Digital information is just ...information. A set of instructions for your computer to cary out a task. The act of "pirating" digital information is literally just making a digital copy of it, not actually swiping any sort of original object, which won't exist any more to whomever it was taken from. I have been stolen from many times, my car has been stolen, house robbed many times, etc... I've had a nice dSLR camera with all the lenses ripped off..and let me tell you, you really understand the different between these two things when you've actually been a victim of real theft. my dSLR camera will never return, I'll be forced to take half assed photographs or pay photographers money every time I need a photo of something, until I can afford to buy a replacement... There is a world of difference between someone putting up one of my albums on bit torrent for people to download without my permission, and stealing my car... what do you think will actually hurt me in a great way... The people who want to buy physical copies of my music will, and do...and people who can't afford it, can enjoy it anyway... I neither promote or condemn piracy of my own works, because it's simply a staple of the time we live. Is there loss of income? hmmm... maybe a tiny bit, but probably not that much.
Now to further disprove your connections on your last point. with physical gear.... guess what, 9 times out of 10 I don't pay the inflated prices for that gear, which is set at a price that they know people will be forced to play, rather than a fair cost in proportion to what it costs to manufacture, ship, market, and the like (they charge it, because they know you'll pay it) I buy used almost every bit of gear I own..and I always pay a very fair price, and you know, people take care of their gear better than their own children or senile parents..it's always in about the same condition I'd get it new (sometimes with a few scratches in the finish, or having to replace a tube... but really perfectly operational) So is this wrong? that's projected income on their part...I had a need for that gear, so I should be buying it from them so they can profit. If I buy used gear from an ad in the paper, they don't see a penny from it, and never will. That's more of a closely comparable practice to piracy than taking a les paul off of a retail store's wall. In effect it's the same exact "loss" that they're always on about... maybe they should start suing anyone who sells their gear after purchasing it.
Then, what of these folks particularly gifted in electronics who find schematics of high end gear, only to make it themselves at the actual cost that it takes to make this lofty stuff? We should throw them in jail and melt down the key and shoot it into the sun...that's what we should do.
as I said....shades of grey...absolutes are really popular in our modern western society, but they are dangerous to base our worlds around, instead of finding a healthy mental/moral/social balance rather than the nutty extremist minds running around today.