- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@lemmy.bestiver.se
- technology@lemmy.world
- cross-posted to:
- hackernews@lemmy.bestiver.se
- technology@lemmy.world
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Why would you post the entirety of an article that is protected by copyright?
why would you contribute to making the Internet a worse place by enforcing copyright?
you basically posted a blank wall for people to stare at. meanwhile the user you are upset with contributed what you should have in the first place.
I just read the whole article in the Modlog. Oops!
you’re not supposed to learn for free! that’s WRONG!
Why do you think it’s okay to take someone else’s work and just copy and paste it wherever?
easy question, the answer is “because information should be free and readily available for all who seek it”.
Tell it to the author of the article. It’s his choice to make.
I doubt he cares because only his employers benefit from having the article paywalled.
Okay. It’s still a copyright owned by someone and it’s not freely licensed to just post wherever. I can’t control who assigned whatever copyright to others.
<- you
I’m really not.
Subscribing to the Atlantic won’t put any money in Simon Garfield’s pocket, but freely sharing his article will provide promotion for his book about the history of Comic Sans. Why do you think it’s okay to deny Simon Garfield some potential book sales?
I posted the article…
It’s not a blank wall: if you want to read it, you can do so legitimately. There’s no reason to rehost someone else’s work. How would you feel if you worked hard on something and someone just decided “I can copy it and paste it wherever I want”?
I’d feel fine, I don’t write for the purpose of making money, I write because it makes me happy. When I get paid for writing I get paid no matter the amount of clicks I get. All my art is released under Creative Commons or whatever the fuck it’s called. Why should I be anything other than happy that some internet hobbyists decided to share my work? You’re acting like this person is being robbed of something
I also release everything creative I’ve ever done to the public: that’s my choice. The author of the piece didn’t make that choice. Why is it wrong to respect that?
I’m an artist and I fucking love it when people spread my work around without paying me. It honestly makes me feel great. I want people to enjoy what I’ve done.
It’s really cool that that is what you choose to do. Neat.
Moderating must be such a pathological thing for you.
How so?
They’re not posting that article in full because they’re making money from it or taking credit for it. They’re posting it because I can’t read the article you submitted. I can’t comment on your post that you didn’t even bother summarising without buying a subscription to The Atlantic and Lemmy isn’t a website for Atlantic subscribers.
When I moderated subreddits and people posted full articles, nobody batted an eye on a corporate website full of neoliberals because even they understood it’s a basic public service. If that post is supposed to be anything more than a headline, people need to be able to read it to engage with it. And that’s reddit. This is specifically a project that rebels against that corporate control and you’re that devoted to someone else’s profits. Presumably not your own unless you work for The Atlantic, but for someone else’s business that had almost $100m in revenue last year.
Why else would you make your own post unreadable in your own subcommunity unless 𝔢𝔫𝔣𝔬𝔯𝔠𝔦𝔫𝔤 𝔱𝔥𝔢 𝔯𝔲𝔩𝔢𝔰 filled some hole inside of you? What else would this possibly achieve on a website where almost all other paywalled article posts have a comment helpfully allowing people to read it? The alternative to it being pathological for you is that you’re stupid.
Why can’t you read the article?
If we’re talking about a movie, should someone just pirate the movie and post it so that we can all talk about it without having to get a ticket to see it?
“The alternative to it being pathological for you is that you’re stupid.”
There’s no reason to be rude.
If we’re talking about a movie, should someone just pirate the movie and post it so that we can all talk about it without having to get a ticket to see it?
yes
There’s no reason to be rude.
i think you gave us a few good reasons in this thread lol
Then we agree to disagree.
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Lmao you removed my comment calling you a dork for caring about copyright
I did. I would remove any comment that’s just name-calling. How is that constructive? That won’t lead to any meaningful discussion. If you see someone else just calling you a name and doing nothing else, let me know and I’ll delete that, too.
Information wants to be free
Agreed it should be, but that’s the author’s choice to make, not everyone else’s.
?
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I doubt the author has any say in the paywalling
Probably not.
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Me seeing this comment removed
honestly i’m happy that nobody can see my copyrighted work
Please explain humor to me.
Nah, I’m good. You have a nice day.
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Gosh, nobody should put https://12ft.io/ in front of the link https://www.theatlantic.com/technology/archive/2024/10/comic-sans-debate/680319/
Something terrible could happen
Definitely don’t use the NoScript add-on for Firefox when viewing that page.
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i’ll be the starting bid at 5 cents please!
okay, 5 cents. does anyone have a higher offer?
too late! the police got to your comment, 5 cents it is! please DM me the entire article
Critics argued that Comic Sans was a font for children’s-party invitations, with a promise of fun and games.
I mean i do know few physicists and mathematicians, those that aren’t dead inside or a balls of frustration are usually like “this is fun and games”
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