From: Imri Zvik (imriz_at_nonexisting.hamakor.org.il)
Date: Thu 26 May 2005 - 13:10:42 IDT
At least know your idols.
And I quote "Open source is a development methodology; free software is a social movement."
The FSF is specifically asking people not to mix both terms on their website.
I am overwhelmed with your contributes to the public. Your freecell solver is a state-of-the-art, bleeding edge software, and I'm sure you gave up on a lot of money when you made it public domain.
Now seriously, you keep missing the point here (not to mention your idiotic, childish examples):
1. the fact you were able to decide your program will be public domain/GPL/whatever is all thanks to the copyrights laws, who let the owner/creator/author decide what to do with his creation (within the other limits of law, which disapproves human sacrifice (do you have any other idiotic example?)).
2. You are not breaking the law "innocently" nor "guiltlessly", as you are fully aware that what you're doing is ILLEGAL (not to mention that even if you weren't aware, not knowing the law, doesn't make you not guilty).
Also, the definition of "crime" is:
crime
n 1: (criminal law) an act punishable by law; usually considered
an evil act; "a long record of crimes" [syn: law-breaking]
Therefore, you *ARE* a criminal, by definition.
To endanger democracy you don't have to use force, threats or fraud. The biggest danger to democracy is when people decide to take the law into their own hands. I thought they teach you that in high school.
In the bottom line, Shlomi, as a couple of people already mentioned here, you are talking about things way over your head here, trolling, and misreading texts (not to mention that you are encouraging people to break the law, misleading them into thinking that what they are doing is OK, and not illegal, which is very wrong too).
You should not abuse stages given to you to encourage people to break the law.
(I wonder if anyone from the Israeli Records Association is reading this thread...)
-- Imri Zvik PGP (2.6.3ia) Public Key: http://mariska.inter.net.il/~imriz/imriz.pgp -----Original Message----- From: Shlomi Fish [mailto:shlomif_at_iglu.org.il] Sent: Thursday, May 26, 2005 12:17 PM To: Imri Zvik Cc: discussions_at_hamakor.org.il Subject: Re: Acting against anti-file-swapping Lawsuits in Israel On Wednesday 25 May 2005 19:11, you wrote: > You cannot say that free-software is bad because "people > download software and use it free-of-charge, instead of paying for more > costy proprietary alternatives." As they are doing so with permission of > the copyrights holder, and that is 100% legal. That was not my point. My point was that by depriving the proprietary software vendors of living, we essentially eliminate a large part of the software industry, and then evoke the domino effect starting from it. So, according to your logic free software is also bad. My point was that by making the consumers more prosperous we will help the economy better than preserving the status quo where the music industry receives a lot of money from many individuals. That said, I don't think people will ever completely stop buying music. > As someone already > mentioned, you are avoiding the REAL problems with the copyrights law, such > as "eternal rights" etc. while the basic idea of copyrights *IS* ok. I am not. I oppose perpetual copyright as much as the next guy. But the rights of the people to share files is also important. > You > created something, *YOU* can decide what to do with it, when and how. Can I decide that by using this thing, you will sacrifice your first born sun to Ra, the Egyptian Sun God? Some things are unethical, and limiting non-commercial copying is one of them. > You > can decide to license it with GPL, or you could decide not to. It is up to > you, it is yours, at least for a defined period of time. Right. > > Also, the "law of the land" is not the "law of god", but there are ways to > protest against it, else than breaking it. As long as this is the law, you > should follow it. I realize that I'd rather follow the law than break it. However, if enough people break the law and do it innocently, guiltlessly, etc. maybe the law is wrong. I haven't done anything wrong by downloading files from the Internet. Neither did my family or any of the people I know who have. If the Israeli Records Association wishes to start a witch-hunt against the file sharers, then I will stand to protect them, because it is not a freeking crime. > Following your line of thinking, I could and should do > whatever I want with GPL'ed programs, including changing them and > redistributing them without the source, as it's not in the author's rights > to tell me what to do with it. Actually, this is within the author's rights. > > Also, I do not think that "open source" is the same as "free software", > please, do not mix them. The fact a program is an open-source program does > not mean it is a "free software" in the way FSF sees it. Get a life! Open Source and Free Software are more or less the same thing. I use each term when appropriate. > > While you keep bringing up the government bureaucrats, you forget that you > have no option but pay taxes - it is not the same here. Music for example > is a luxury - you cannot afford it? Too bad - but getting it illegally is > neither the solution nor the right way to protest against it, morally and > ethically. Again, you *ARE* breaking the law, you are *NOT* using the tools > given to you by the law to protest, you are taking the law into your own > hands, and *THAT* is the biggest problem here. I can afford paying for some music - that's not the problem. The problem is that it's much more convenient to get it via the Internet, and that I'm not going to pay 70 NIS for one CD only to get one really good song I like. I'll look into iTunes, etc. but first would like to find something that is DRM-less, or that I can easily break its DRM. In any case, I or anyone are not criminals by downloading songs from the Internet. It is perfectly OK, morally and ethically. > > You *ARE* a criminal, and I would suggest you will go and lookup the > definition of the word in the dictionary. Very well: <<< 1 : one who has committed a crime 2 : a person who has been convicted of a crime >>> (taken from m-w.com) Since a crime must be objective, I am not a criminal. > > I cannot emphasize more how wrong you are, and how bad it is to take the > law into your own hands (and no, it is not a question of life and death, so > it's not like the examples you keep bringing), and how dangerous your ideas > are for democracy. They are not. I am not harming anyone by downloading songs from the Internet. I did not initiate force, threat or force or fraud against anyone, which are the only real crimes. > > This is the last mail I intend to post, as you are obviously a FSF, > linux-hype infected, overexcited troll, with a double moral. I am neither of these. But don't get me started on my opinion of you. > (how can you > expect people to follow one license while you dismiss your (the > author's/creator) right to decide with what license something will be > distributed with?) FYI, all the software I wrote on my own, and distributed is under a Public Domain license. There is no way you can violate its license, unless you do something ridicolous like suing me for copyright violations, etc. I sometimes contributed to software under a different license and made my modifications available under the same license of the software, (GPL or otherwise) but in this case I don't really had a choice. > and nothing I will say will disinfect you. All I can say > is that I wish people like you would be the first to be stripped out of > everything they own in court for breaking copyrights laws. Hmmm... do all the productive things I did (see http://www.shlomifish.org/ for links), and contribution to the community, change your opinion one bit? I am a good guy, not some asshole. So I downloaded some songs, and think it's perfectly OK, so what? It's ok to disagree with me, but only mystics wish harm on perfectly honest, productive people. Are you a mystic? Regards, Shlomi Fish > -----Original Message----- > From: Shlomi Fish [mailto:shlomif_at_iglu.org.il] > Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 6:06 PM > To: Imri Zvik > Cc: discussions_at_hamakor.org.il > Subject: Re: Acting against anti-file-swapping Lawsuits in Israel > > I'm CCing to the list so they'll be more interested. > > On Wednesday 25 May 2005 16:00, you wrote: > > Comparing attempts to prevent a genocide with breaking the copyrights > > law is an insult to whomever been in the holocaust. > > No it's not. I wasn't comparing anything. I was just mentioning the fact > that if laws are unethical and irrational, a person cannot be held liable > for breaking them, if he does. > > > You cannot dismiss > > any laws you do not agree with, it just doesn't work this way > > I can dismiss them if I can show how irrational and harmful they are. I'm > not saying I will break them at that point. I'm not using or selling drugs, > for example, because although ethical these are immoral activities. > > > - YOU > > should get a reality check (and a shrink or a probation officer, ASAP.). > > No, you should. You seem like a goody-two-shoes who think the Law of the > Land is the Law of God, and don't question it or criticize it. Here's a > newsflash for you: often the Law of the Land deviates a great deal from > anything we can call ethical. (see Nazi Germany, Communist Russia, > Communist China, etc. etc.). In this case, people should voice their > opinion against it and work to remove it. > > The bylaws of Israel are pretty good, but not perfect. Not only do I think > they are bad in some respects, but I voice my opinion about it. If I > violate any laws, it's because these laws are not immoral. > > > It's not that disobeying this specific law will cause chaos, but the > > idea that an individual is obeying only the laws he agrees with will. > > I am not a relativist, and I don't think people should initiate force, > coercion or fraud. But most laws in Israel and most other Liberal > countries, are harmful, and thus are constantly violated, and rightfully > so. I say that we should change the bylaws instead of trying to enforce > anyone not to violate any law, however irrational it is. > > > The music industry supplies work to the software engineering industry, > > hardware, catering, electricity, real estate, and many, many, MANY more, > > not to mention that > > Possibly. However, you evaded my point: I said that making the public more > prosperous on behalf of the music industry will as a general rule > concentrate less money in less hands, and cause these people to invest and > spend them on better venues, than just buying music. (which is now simply > bit-buckets). Another thing, is that even if no-one sells CDs (very > unlikely) there will still be music hobbyists and professionals (who will > supply work for all these industries) and public performances, and other > music ventures like that. > > Let's return to the analogy of Government Beurcracy. Do you know how many > industries supply services to government beaurucrats? Quite a lot. However, > do you think that taxes should not be lowered because it will mean less > beauracrats? > > On the same note, I could say that open source is not good because people > download software and use it free-of-charge, instead of paying for more > costy proprietary alternatives. > > > a couple of other large industries, else than the > > music industry, rely on the copyrights laws. > > Have you read what I said? I never supported completely abolishing > copyright laws. However, I think that media (excluding software) should be > non-commercially shareable. This will not hurt media sales much, and it's > not a crime ethically, and the alternative is a complete witch-hunt of > fully open source people. > > > You are trying to justify your criminal actions with ethics, which is > > just wrong. > > First of all my actions are not criminal. Maybe they violate the letter of > the law, but a criminal action is an unethical one. And why is _reasoning_ > (not justifying mind you) my actions using ethics and logic, wrong? How > else do you expect me to reason my actions? > > There is a saying in Hebrew: "גזרה שהציבור אינו יכול לעמוד בה". It > translates to English as "an Order that the public cannot withstand". The > prohibition of file sharing is exactly such a case. > > > But go ahead, share music and other copyrighted material if you want... > > That I will do. And so will most Israelis who have a fast Internet > connection. > > > I won't be sorry if and when they will rip you off everything you own in > > court. > > If that will happen, I will fight them first. > > Regards, > > Shlomi Fish > > > -- > > Imri Zvik > > PGP (2.6.3ia) Public Key: http://mariska.inter.net.il/~imriz/imriz.pgp > > > > > > -----Original Message----- > > From: Shlomi Fish [mailto:shlomif_at_iglu.org.il] > > Sent: Wednesday, May 25, 2005 3:22 PM > > To: Imri Zvik > > Cc: linux-il_at_linux.org.il > > Subject: Re: Acting against anti-file-swapping Lawsuits in Israel > > > > On Wednesday 25 May 2005 14:45, Imri Zvik wrote: > > > When people start choosing what laws to obey and what not, it is the > > > fastest way to chaos. > > > > The only valid laws are the prevention of initiatory force, threat of > > force, > > or fraud against one's self or property (not the so-called "intellectual > > > > property"). All other laws: against drug abuse, against prostitution, > > against > > gambling, against insider's information, against monopolies etc. etc. > > are > > irrelevant and unethical. > > > > Violating a law that says that one should not share his music over the > > Internet, will not cause any chaos. People do it all the time, and still > > food > > is in supply, stores are open, water is flowing in the pipes, there's > > supply > > of electricity, and the Internet is available for commerce and > > recreation. > > > > You should get a reality check. > > > > > The fact is that you still break the laws of the > > > sovereign, democratic entity you're part of, and that would make you > > > > an > > > > > outlaw, a criminal. > > > > If I lived in Nazi Germany and hidden a Jew in my house, (which was > > against > > the law) would that make me a criminal? (please don't invoke Godwin's > > law > > here) > > > > Laws that are unethical, need not be followed. > > > > > And about the economic system - didn't you ever hear about the term > > > > "The > > > > > Domino Effect"? Music for example pays salaries of numerous of people, > > > allowing them to be able to buy other products and services, and by > > > > that > > > > > help other people receive a paycheck. Producing and trading > > > > copyrighted > > > > > materiel is still producing and trading, which is, as you stated, are > > > the foundation stones of our economic system. Saying that the fact you > > > can't smell/touch it makes it ok, is so... uhmm, idiotic? As far as I > > > know, you're not an ostrich, so don't burry your head in the sand. > > > > Domino effect.. hmmm... according to this logic, if we lower the income > > tax, > > then firing a great deal of government bureaucrats will also cause the > > economy to collapse. ;-) > > > > If people download music instead of buying it, then the public as a > > whole will > > be more prosperous, and will spend this money or invest on better > > things. > > While we may kill the music industry (highly unlikely, but still) the > > other > > industries will be much better off. During the course of human history > > entire > > industries were superceded by other ones, and yet we still live to tell > > the > > tale, and we are better and more prosperous and more advanced than ever. > > > > Again, you're misapplying concepts. > > > > Regards, > > > > Shlomi Fish > > > > --------------------------------------------------------------------- > > Shlomi Fish shlomif_at_iglu.org.il > > Homepage: http://www.shlomifish.org/ > > > > Tcl is LISP on drugs. Using strings instead of S-expressions for > > closures > > is Evil with one of those gigantic E's you can find at the beginning of > > paragraphs. -- --------------------------------------------------------------------- Shlomi Fish shlomif_at_iglu.org.il Homepage: http://www.shlomifish.org/ Tcl is LISP on drugs. Using strings instead of S-expressions for closures is Evil with one of those gigantic E's you can find at the beginning of paragraphs.
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