galanter wrote:If someone steps forward and says "yes, I'm a thief.
You're assuming the software is pirated.
(And by the way, when you steal software someone *does* end up paying your way.
Once again, you're assuming the software is pirated.
Your arguments apply to anyone here who did not buy a licensed copy of OS X for their Hackintosh; they do not apply to those who did.
People like me, for example. I'm not setting myself above others...I'm not looking for a gold star...I'm just asking them to stop picking my pocket.)
Yes you are! You're making a completely groundless assumption that the people creating these Hackintosh's are using pirated software and then criticising the ethics of those people based on that *assumption*. If someone has *purchased* a copy of OS X and then hacked it to run on a PC then they have not stolen that software, they have merely broken the license agreement.
I guess in this instance, you could argue that Apple have been deprived a hardware sale, but by that logic you would have a problem with people buying second-hand macs and installing the latest versions of OS X on those too.
Point is, if you had argued about the ethics of breaking the EULA you would have been on slightly more solid ground. However, instead you've decided to turn an interesting technical discussion on hacking OS X into a boring, condescending rant on software piracy.
Well done.