No, pirating in this case is 'not buying, but not having the spine or moral fiber to actually forego the product, and therefore resorting to illegal means and justifying it.'
In the end it just seems like you want to be able to pirate things. You're just rationalizing cheating, and you don't give a crap about DRM - your list excludes most titles from the days before DRM ever became an issue.
If you gave someone a gun, and then they tried to shoot you with it, wouldn't you try to take it back? The superior morals arguement, not surprising. Of course if you actually knew me better you wouldn't make such bull**** accusations.
Not analogous at all.
What this situation is analogous to is - to continue the car theme - a company selling some really bad cars. This does not give you the legal right to vandalize or steal the cars.
If you think that, you have the sensitivity to nuance of Glenn Beck and the intellectual capacity of his footwear.
And you have the reasoning capability of a frog.
You know instead of making personal attacks and alledging your moral superiority, why don't you actually do something to resolve this? All I've seen you do is try to promote just another form of DRM instead of actually push for its abolition all together. If you can put together the kind of boycott I am talking about below, I'll give up piracy permenantly. Here's your chance, surprise me.
I agree that I'm a little too free with the snide ad homs. Consider it a personal weakness.
But sometimes I feel like you're a man of faith, Kosh. You have a religion and you stick to it. And like a certain recent president, if people aren't with you, you blindly assume they're against you.
What I do is, I don't buy games with DRM. I buy games that do not use DRM. In that way I support publishers - and specific products - that choose to forego this idiotic practice. I just consider it insane to call a disc check DRM.
I actually care about stopping DRM, and I have the spine to avoid giving the companies
more justification for using DRM.
There are two scenarios here:
The Battuta scenario, where everyone stops buying DRM games, and they sit on shelves, and companies realize something is wrong and (like EA) start doing something about it.
Or a world full of Koshes, where everyone stops buying DRM games and starts pirating them, and companies say 'Man, ****, we need better DRM.' And the next thing you know there's not a game out there that doesn't have something even more crippling and more ineffective.
Childish entitlement issues inevitably compromise action against this kind of problem.