Most people know what
stealing is. If you went into
a clothes
shop and came out
the door later with
a shirt
or a blouse
that you hadn't paid for, that might seem
like stealing. Trouble
is, in a recent survey, about half
the British
residents interviewed admitted to
taking something
at some time
from their place
of work. It might
have been
the odd
ballpoint pen,
or a handful
of paper-clips,
but it went up to
and included a laptop computer. What about
the worker in a car factory who took home a
small part every day. At
the end of the year he had been able to build his
own vehicle at home. Is that theft?
Or do we secretly admire his initiative?
What about taxes? In another survey half the respondents admitted to playing
down their income and beefing up their expenses when
they made their annual Tax Return. That's lying, but hey, you're only stealing from the taxman, right?
Well no, you're actually taking from
all of us, all those daft enough or honest enough to pay the taxes we
owe and thus cover all the healthcare costs and social work that we happen to think
is a useful part of our society. It's
not like finding a banknote
on the street, is it? If we saw some money sliding down the gutter, well,
that's just good luck, isn't it? It isn't like we filled in any forms falsely or lied to anyone,
if we just pick
it up and run off with it, right? No? What about
if you happened to
be walking past
my office and saw my wallet lying
open on my desk? Would you feel justified in
helping yourself to whatever you could
find in there? I mean, it would involve strolling into the room casually and
hoping that no one was
there. Or that anyone else passing by noticed you being in there and thought you
were acting suspiciously. And you would
have to open the wallet and riffle through the private contents. That's stealing, right? Or would you say it was all my fault for being so stupid
as to
leave my assets unattended in plain sight?
After all, people like 'finding' free things. A few nights ago,
someone climbed up onto the roof of the Youth Centre near where I live and 'found' some strips of lead. They helped
themselves and later that
night, when it
rained, water poured in through the open rafters and wrecked the computer room and boxing gym. It's all bad news for the local children,
losing facilities that they sorely need, but
it's not stealing is it? I'm sure the local thugs who did the deed will be excusing themselves right now and saying that
'It's insured' or some such nonsense, and not worrying about the fact that it's their
younger brothers and sisters who
are losing the facilities, however temporarily.
This 'insurance' issue raises the question: 'Who pays?' If it's the taxman we
don't worry, it seems. Or maybe if it's big corporations (especially if they are our employers), department stores, local government, the banks, insurance
companies, that's OK. But the
clear fact is that
someone does pay, somewhere, at some point. I've got a friend who was telling me proudly that
he's discovered a wonderful
new hair salon where they serve free drinks while you get
your hair cut. Tea, coffee, fruit juice, or mineral water, it's
your choice. I said: who pays? He laughed. 'It's free', he said. Then I found out how much he paid for his coiffure, and it was double the bill I usually pay. Who paid? He did.
Now we get to the internet. For some reason, an incredible number of people expect it to be free. Why? Every email you send, every web site you visit, has been set up, programmed and built by people. Their time costs
money. You expect them to work for nothing? The unusual thing about the web is that it
mostly isn't 'big business'. Apart from the obvious
software giants, it's mainly people in garages and bedrooms, home dens and studies. Some of them are geeks, some hobbyists. Some
happy to invent new stuff, work on new ideas, and give them out to the world (which is what Open
Source software is all about). But if someone has
spent time making something work, and you then take it for free, aren't you stealing? If it's their effort, then you've taken their energy, their resources, their inventiveness, their time. For nothing.
Ahh yes, someone pays, you agree, but it's advertising. Web sites are
flooded with small
ads and links to commercial programs, so that's what's funding the work, you say. But who pays for ads? When I buy my tin of baked beans in my local supermarket, I know that that company has spent millions on TV ads. It means that for the price I pay, some small fraction of it is
going towards the company's
advertising budget. If I buy books or toys or software on the internet, isn't some small part of the price helping to pay for advertising it? After all, who paid for my friend's 'free' cup of coffee? He did.
If you think anything is free from the internet, you're deluding
yourself, firstly. But
secondly, and far worse, is the attitude that says, 'Yeah, someone pays, but it isn't going to be me'. Because that's stealing, (just like taking from the taxman, or your employer, or my local Youth Centre). You want a program that will make you
money, but you aren't
willing to pay for it? You want someone to teach you internet marketing, as long as nothing has to
come out of your wallet? That's a hell of a bad basis for starting to set up any kind of successful
enterprise. That's like going into the
shop and seeing 'Aunty Betty's Cake Mix' and thinking, 'Okay, she invented the recipe and prepared the ingredients, but what do you mean she isn't going to cook it for me, for free?' Or, just to rub the point in, she isn't going to bake it in her oven and leave her
front door open, so you can sneak in and steal the cake out of her oven, in her own house.
She isn't? She isn't going to let you steal it from her and pay nothing? What kind of internet author is she?
Mike
Scantlebury is an Internet Author. He currently lives in Manchester, England, home to soccer and The Smiths, where he outputs books, stories and songs, some of which end up at YouTube even. He has several web sites following his many interests, but you can make a start at his download area. Try
http://www.mikescantlebury.biz