
ROTE is now available for download as an illegal e-text.
Moderator: Seareach
What I find amusing is SRD mentioned that HE downloaded pirated copies of his earlier work to make his research efforts easier.Myste wrote:If the version you're reading is pirated, then yes, it's piracy--whether or not you own the books already. Since you do own the books, it's not really a heinous crime, but technically it's still piracy--the author isn't getting paid for the pirated version you're reading, even if he did get paid for the hard copy you purchased.
Careful; it may not be that simple. Case law has established that if you own a copy of a book, you can scan it to make an electronic version for your own personal use (usually research, but other things also fall under the Fair Use doctrine). If you own the book, you can ask someone else to scan it for you, provided that only you keep the scanned version when it's finished. (This is very useful for people with impaired vision who want to read a book that does not come in an audio or large-print edition. Once the book is on the computer, you can magnify the font to any size you like for easy reading; or if that isn't enough, you can display it on a Braille terminal.) If you and another person both own the book, and one of you scans a copy and shares the files with the other one, that begins to get into a grey area. IANAL, but I don't believe there are any really solid precedents one way or the other.Myste wrote:If the version you're reading is pirated, then yes, it's piracy--whether or not you own the books already. Since you do own the books, it's not really a heinous crime, but technically it's still piracy--the author isn't getting paid for the pirated version you're reading, even if he did get paid for the hard copy you purchased.
I agree that scanning a copy for oneself or even having someone else scan it for one's own personal use is not a copyright violation. But from his description, it sounds as though the particular e-text file Tom accessed is providing Runes free of charge to everyone. Since there's no way of preventing people who haven't purchased personal copies of the book from downloading this particular file, it seems to me that it falls into roughly the same category as music file-sharing, which has been declared a violation of copyright law--there's your precedent.Variol Farseer wrote: Careful; it may not be that simple. Case law has established that if you own a copy of a book, you can scan it to make an electronic version for your own personal use (usually research, but other things also fall under the Fair Use doctrine). If you own the book, you can ask someone else to scan it for you, provided that only you keep the scanned version when it's finished. (This is very useful for people with impaired vision who want to read a book that does not come in an audio or large-print edition. Once the book is on the computer, you can magnify the font to any size you like for easy reading; or if that isn't enough, you can display it on a Braille terminal.) If you and another person both own the book, and one of you scans a copy and shares the files with the other one, that begins to get into a grey area. IANAL, but I don't believe there are any really solid precedents one way or the other.
I'll refrain from using the word "piracy" in this context--I certainly don't want anyone to think I'm referring to hijacking ships at sea.Variol Farseer wrote:So it is not 'technically still piracy', because the technicalities haven't yet been worked out to that point.
Agreed. But related case law on time- & media-shifting of TV programs suggests that he may well come down on the right side of the law. My hunch is that it will be resolved in such a way that retroactive prosecution is really not an option. Ethically, I have no difficulty with what Tom is doing. It's not as if he were acting as a fence or otherwise rewarding the copyright violator. And it's not as if he could go and buy a legitimate electronic edition of the work. The specific rights he may be violating are not being exercised, and as far as I know nobody is planning to exercise them. He has paid for the work to the very best of his ability.Myste wrote:Under the definitions of electronic distribution rights that I'm personally familiar with, distributing etexts of books without reference to whether or not the downloader already owns a copy of said book is a violation of copyright. You're right to remind me to be more specific.The distributor of the texts Tom downloads is--under the terms as the company I work for defines them--violating copyright. Whether Tom, who only downloads etexts of books he already owns, is violating copyright law or not is still gray area.
Or gets called 'Briny' by the French, yes.Whether Tom is a pirate or not depends roughly on how many times a day he says "Arrrr," calls people "Matey," or hijacks ships at sea.
Runes has been available for illegal download for around 5 months now.JemCheeta wrote:Great that we have a network to catch this stuff fast, on the watch