I hate piracy so much, I'm halfway through writing a book on how terrible it is.
For all the complaints about the "oppressive high prices" for software and content, the odd thing is, I have an average income, and I've never had any trouble affording software, and have always bought originals. My CD collection is big, and I've never felt the need to go to Napster. I own several DVDs. And my standard of living has not declined because of these purchases. As somebody who has bought crap software like "Force 21," I do sympathise with the whole idea that you'd want to try it first, but it's still the producer/developer/creator's right to keep you from checking it out. The solution to that sort of problem is more beta testing, better post-release support, and an active consumer community, not the peice-by-peice destruction of IP-dependent industries.
Sid Meier would be a lonely geek TA'ing a big iron university compusci class in a state university if it weren't for intellectual property. Just imagine, pirates, what a world without IP would be like: goddamn boring, with about half of the opportunities for lower and middle class people to get ahead wiped off the screen, and artists out looking for "patronage" - which John Perry Barlow thinks is a good idea.
Yeah, easy for him. He's made his money.
(thanks for this poll, btw, NY Hoya; the tally so far is a credit to the CFC community)