Hi I’m currently try to learn more about the history of piracy. I know that at some point I saved a very cool plain HTML website regarding that topic that was recommended here but I lost it :/ So now I hope you have cool sources. I’m only into the piracy since a couple of years so everything will be helpful.

    • slice@feddit.orgOP
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      1 day ago

      Thaanks a lot. I will watch the talk. And also I didn’t know about textfiles.com yet. It looks very interesting. I don’t think it was the webiste that I remember but it looks very interesting nonetheless. I also found a book about the history of music piracy: Democracy of Sound: Music Piracy and the Remaking of American Copyright in the Twentieth Century

  • HelloRoot@lemy.lol
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    2 days ago

    The earliest documented instances of piracy are the exploits of the Sea Peoples who threatened the ships sailing in the Aegean and Mediterranean waters in the 14th century BC. …

    /s

  • rozodru@pie.andmc.ca
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    warez and IRC is where I started. There used to be IRC channels you could go to and get links to warez sites for stuff or simply share directly via IRC downloading. The people who were in college/university with T1 lines were the kings of that stuff at the time as everyone else was lucky if they were even on a 56k dial-up connection. I pretty much pirated almost every Dreamcast game via IRC OR via forums where people would burn stuff to a disc for you and then physically mail the discs to your house. I had a buddy that was in college half way across the country that would do this. download a bunch of stuff via his T1 line, burn the stuff to a bunch of CD-Rs and then mail them to my house, I remember that’s how I got Windows 2000.

    • LastYearsIrritant@sopuli.xyz
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      It started way before that.

      People copying books and sheet music. If you’re talking electronic, then I have “pirated” reel to reel music copied from records from the 60’s.

      If you’re talking computers, I have floppy discs copied and passed around from the 80’s.

      BBS’s existed in the 70’s and were sharing stuff before IRC became popular.

      Heck, if humans can technically make a copy of it, no matter how difficult, we will and freely share it.

  • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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    2 days ago

    No idea what books to recommend, but the concept of piracy is very old. That translated to the realm of home computers, pretty much when home computers were invented and software licensing became a thing. People would share floppy disks and cassettes. And then stuff got easier with modems and the internet.

    • D_C@sh.itjust.works
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      I’m so old that I used to use what we would call ‘copied games’ on cassettes in the early 80s.

      It was so accepted that kids from rival schools would (temporarily) forget that shit just to trade copied games. It would be decades later that I would hear it called pirated software.

      • hendrik@palaver.p3x.de
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        Nice. I guess that’s about when I was born, so I only remember copying 3½-inch floppy disks for friends. And it was music on my cassettes. 😉 But I don’t remember it being called piracy either. We had a lot of games, though. Monkey Island 2 and a nice collection of DOS games. None of them were bought in a store. And I remember struggling with the English language, some games were off the table since I didn’t learn English until middle school.

        I guess copying things lost some of the social aspect after that. We shared a lot of stuff in digital form after CD writers became affordable in the mid- to late 90s. But these days you’d sit alone in front of the computer and just download whatever. And pretty much everything is available. Or just connect a phone to the car and have arbitrary things to listen to. Instead of a fixed set of 3 pre-made casettes for the entire summer vacation road trip.

      • Zagam@piefed.social
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        1 day ago

        Ha, yeah. And later when we figured out how to double the size of 5.25 floppies with a hole punch.

  • zzffyfajzkzhnsweqm@sh.itjust.works
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    This is the same concept as copying books… Even rewriting by hand without the approval of the author could be considered piracy.

    Books were always about the content and never about the paper. Same goes for digital media.

  • affenlehrer@feddit.org
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    There are still a few BBS around. Before that you could try sharing floppy discs on the schoolyard, that was how I started