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1. travoc+(OP)[view] [source] 2023-12-27 01:24:02
When you read a free book at the public library instead of paying the publisher for it, are you stealing?
replies(1): >>wannac+x
2. wannac+x[view] [source] 2023-12-27 01:28:38
>>travoc+(OP)
Your taxes fund the library and the expenses necessary to loan you the book. You need a library card before they'll loan you the book which is given out only to people who pay taxes in that district. The card is your authorization just like a license for software or other copyrighted works.

If I, a stranger, took your car out of your driveway without permission, is it stealing if I promised to return it?

replies(2): >>yladiz+21 >>beej71+N3
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3. yladiz+21[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-12-27 01:34:53
>>wannac+x
I'm not really sure where you're going with the "is it stealing if I take your car without permission" line, I don't think it really works here (or maybe I'm missing what you're meaning here).

A good example of where the lines of "stealing" are blurry could be this: A friend of yours has a login to Amazon Prime, and gives you the login credentials, which let you watch a show you would have otherwise had to pay for or somehow acquire. Is this stealing? Similarly, if you go to a public library in a city you don't live in, with a card of a friend's, and check out a book, is it stealing?

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4. beej71+N3[view] [source] [discussion] 2023-12-27 02:02:05
>>wannac+x
If I, a stranger, made an exact copy of your car in your driveway without permission, is it stealing at all?
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