Cyclops said:
Well, it's not like it's a product worth stealing, anyway... but if the whole argument is that if you steal it, people lose jobs because FOX isn't making money so you shouldn't see it at all is just kinda stupid.
Because if you don't see it at all, THEY'RE STILL LOSING MONEY.
Look, as much as you guys would love to think it does, pirating X3 doesn't hurt anyone because the movie was a huge success. Sure, it was a terrible travesty, but it made enough money so that nobody's going penniless if some broke college kid downloads the movie for free.
If you're going to argue that film piracy hurts people, at least use an example that WASN'T a success already.
The problem with that mentality is that it will spread, and it will cause people to lose their jobs.
Look at the music industry.
Sure... when you downloaded a song off Napster, you really weren't huring Jay-Z, or whoever's song you downloaded...
But when people start thinking like that, they go get Napster, get their CD's downloaded for free, and don't go buy CD's at the store anymore, because they get them online now for free. It spreads... records don't sell, stores don't make money, they close down, and the employees lose their jobs.
Hell, even LEGAL downloading hurts people like me... people don't buy CD's anymore, because they just get it off of iTunes and put it on their iPods and PSP's. My store sells less CD's, my store makes less money, stops making profit, loses money for the company, they close down the store, and Nell2ThaIzzay loses his job.
That same mentality is starting to happen to movies now.
Yea, sure, some 13 year old kid bunny hopping from
Mission: Impossible 3 to go see
X-Men: The Last Stand without paying for it isn't really gonna hurt anyone at Fox... but when people start downloading the movies online, instead of buying them, or going to see them, soon enough people will stop going to the theatres to see movies. Studios will stop putting so much money into these big blockbusters, people who work on these movies will lose their jobs, and people like me who work in the retail stores selling
X-Men: The Last Stand on DVD will lose our jobs because nobody is buying DVD's anymore.
I'm not totally against downloading and such... I just don't like when people use it as a substitute for going to the movie, buying the DVD, or the CD. I have a pretty sizable .mp3 library of music I don't own, and now I have
X-Men: The Last Stand on my comp. But I also don't use it as a substitution for buying, or going to the theatres. Unless I own the album, I don't have a single full album on my computer, rather scattered songs. I don't download a movie, to see if I want to buy the DVD or see it in theatres. That's when that stuff is wrong, when people use it as substitions. And it does hurt.