Arathain Kelvar wrote:
Müs wrote:
Downloading music isn't stealing.
Thievery is theivery, regardless of whether or not a theif agrees it's theivery.
You need to establish first that the thief is, in fact, a thief and is stealing.
I don't see how this qualifies as stealing. This reminds me of a case in the Corps of Cadets where, during the Caldwell March (annual event the VT Corps of Cadets does; I'll leave it to those interested to look it up) picked up a walking stick along a portion of the march that passed through someone's land.
Some other cadets that disliked this guy charged him before the Honor Court with Stealing, claiming he didn't have permission from the landowner to take the stick.
The problem, of course, is that in order to be stealing, you must take something
of value to the owner. There's no good reason to think the landowner was going to attach any value to a random banch in the woods. In the same manner, people downloading music they wouldn't pay for aren't depriving the company of any money it would have made anyhow.
There's also common lore about VMI and The Citadel where they "test" people's adherence to the Honor Code by leaving a few coins ont he sidewalk then having someone watch to see if anyone picks it up. If they do they're charged with stealing since it isn't theirs and the owner could theoretically come back and get it. Of course, taking abandoned property isn't considered stealing anywhere
else, so the assertion that this is stealing is really just an excuse to nail people for the sake of nailing them.