That's intent, though. Willful, blatant.
Then again North Korea calls themselves the "Democratic People's Republic of Korea", but they sure as hell aren't democratic.
You really believe that? Kinda rails against the starving artist argument... And the "starving artist" argument is a huge red herring, that's not why people don't pay for music and you know it and it has damn little to do with why people pirate games.
That was just an example, but perhaps not the best. In reality there's three kinds of people, those who just buy it, those who pirate then if they like it enough, and those who would never buy it anyway for whatever reason. The reasoning behind pirating music is often the same. It is true that the "starving artist" is not why people pirate, but it does demonstrate that the record companies need radical reforms. There's only a select few super stars who profit from the current system, the rest don't have a chance.
Even with all of the "piracy is costing us billions" BS the publishing companies put out, my question is that even with all this torrenting and downloading why the hell were they making such huge profits?
acquire it legally,
Has the thought occured to you that at this point in time I can't without spending unacceptably large amounts of money? $60 a pop for a game is far too much for me at this point. If I had to choose between tuition and games, I'm choosing tuition.
Besides,
the industry has even admitted that piracy isn't hurting their sales by nearly as much as they (and you) claimEDIT: I'll throw some more in here. Do you believe that the introduction of the VCR in the home would destroy video cassette rentals and sales? After all, they can just copy the tapes (almost) for free.......
and here's a good article explaining what piracy has done for the music industry