Excuse me, but WTF are you saying here? Go to a house and take stuff?!? Oh, man...
1. When you download something, you aren't removing any objects. You don't even remove the digitalized information. It's all still there, you aren't taking away anything. No-one will wake up and say "hey, where is the TV?"
This old BS again. Behind the digital data there are many man hours of learning, many man hours of work by a real human being who is not getting paid for the product he has created and you are profiting from, either in terms of making money or personally enjoying. The physical medium costs next to nothing, just like it costs hundreds or billions of dollars in man hours to develop a single new model of car, but maybe a few thousand dollars in materials.
2. What may be lost is a sales opportunity, but only if you download it for free instead of buying it. OTOH, if you would never have bought it anyway, not even the sales opportunity is lost.
More BS. None of this entitles you to profit either monetarily or in terms of personal enjoyment from the time and effort another person has put in in the hope they earn a living.
There are many reasons to *why we don't buy* stuff, like for example that we don't really want it, or we simply can't afford it.
And the BS continues.
If you don't want it, why do you have it?
If you can't afford it then you can't have it. See my whitegoods analogy: you don't break into the store and steal your washing machine just because you couldn't afford it.
Have you looked at what Adobe is asking for their Master Collection CS5? I'll tell you: US$2,599!
There is *no way* I could possibly pay that kind of money for some software even if I wanted to. I know that, they know that, I'm simply not in their target market (which probably is various media producing corporations).
Thats right you're not. They'll sell to you for a tenth of the price the versions that are targeted at your market. Still can't afford it? Get a job.
Still I'm using Dreamweaver, Photoshop, Fireworks, Flash, Acrobat, etc (all from the Master Collection CS5) on an almost daily basis. And you know what? Adobe has lost exactly $0 on me. They haven't lost anything at all, since there is no chance in this world that I would have bought their product anyway. There never were any sales opportunity for them to lose!
What are you doing with these professional tools? Why do you need them? Whether you use them in a professional capacity and made money from using these tools, or they provide you personal enjoyment, you have profited from the hard work of others that you haven't paid them for. If you are using these tools in a professional capacity, then you shouldn't charge as well.
If I OTOH would go to Adobes office, smash a window, and grab a monitor from a nearby desk, then they would obviously have lost something.
Do you see the difference?
No, not in the slightest.