In alt.games.diablo SHONNER <shonner@hotmail.com> wrote: > "Xocyll" <Xocyll@kingston.net> wrote in message > news:e67ltu0fm1cqhi7ocrgdq1iqlip03l424k@4ax.com... >> >> Carefully sidestepping the fact that in 1988 nothing was that big. >> The big games the pirates would be copying around would fit on 1 high >> density disk.
> Did you ever try downloading a 1.44MB file at 2400 baud?
2400, huh? Damn newbies...
> The more popular > BBS's typically allowed up to 3 -5 users at a time signed on. But they > didn't allow for sessions longer than 60 minutes a day most of the time. > And you were probably kicked off from line noise before then.
Reliability wasn't *that* bad, at least not on the BBS I was running in the early 80's. But then again, I didn't help people steal software then, either.
>> Dad used to run it on his XT that had no harddrive at all, just 2 5 1/4 >> floppies. >> 1 disk for the program, 1 for the spellchecker, 1 for the thesaurus.
> Good for him. He probably couldn't download WordPerfect from someone with > that machine if he wanted to. Without bandwidth back then, copied software > moved around much slower than pirating does now.
Were you actually around in the early 80's? Because it seems you remember a different decade than I do. Things have *not* changed, it has just become more convenient to steal from the software developers.
>> Hell all of ID's Castle Wolfenstien (registered) fit on 1 disk in the >> early 90's, and you can be damn sure it got pirated.
> You must be a liberal. You're justifying that it was ok to pirate software > because CW fit on one disk.
He's doing nothing of the sort, he's pointing out how your concept of difficulty of pirating is complete and utter crap. Then, you could get a bunch of (stuff) on (media). Today, you can get the same bunch of (stuff) on (media), because while the stuff is bigger, the media is correspondingly bigger.
>> Now game demos are 100+Meg. >> >> The game/App size has increased right alongside the storage media.
> No shit, Sherlock.
His point, which you keep missing (almost like it's intentional...) seems to be that things today are no different than they were - stealing software is about as convenient today as it was then. In any case, convenience isn't the issue, it's a moral thing. People who are going to steal software today would have stolen it 20 years ago if they were around, and would steal it 20 years from now, regardless of the technology involved.
>> Piracy hasn't increased at all.
> Ya, that's right -- not. It's only become more convinient and quicker to do > by more and more people like yourself online everyday.
First you accused me of stealing, now him? What's up with this?
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