
bayushi2005 wrote: »If I participate in one of @JHartEllis contests.
I don't steal ideas, and if I know that I base my build on what somebody else has done (we are talking inspiration here, not copying) I always ask their permission. Still, I faced people accusing me of stealing somebody else's build, which I haven't even seen before, so I'm not really sure it's worth the bother. There will always be somebody, who thinks that you "copied" something, even if it comes from the darkest darkness of your soul.
Duh' I forgot to mention I watch awesome @StabbityDoom . But I don't really come there to watch the houses :P Eek *flush*
chuck-18_ESO wrote: »I reject the notion of "stealing" ideas entirely; this is an MMO, which is about a SHARED experience, made richer by the interactivity of the community.
I, for one, watch housing videos regularly for inspiration, and I'll "steal" someone's idea at the drop of a hat if I like it! I try to give it my own spin, of course, but there's zero shame in copying the brilliant ideas of someone else.
anitajoneb17_ESO wrote: »Not sure I understand the question.
It sounds like someone who's into painting would never go to a museum for fear of accidentally "copying" Leonardo da Vinci, a musician shouldn't go to a concert or listen to music for fear of copying / stealing an interpretation or a melody, an architect should never look at any building, etc...
In my opinion ESO-housing belongs to creative art (for some advanced decorators) and artists get inspired by each other all the time.
I doubt you steal directly.
I've seen your work - it's too consistent and too representative of a certain mode of thinking (in a good way) to be a product of plagiarism.
Some people do directly steal ideas and/or immitate other people's personal styles, though and they will even do it for a competition, where you are also an entrant.
So, in the case of housing, they will come to your home, take screenshots in front of you (if it's not your primary, so they have no choice) and the next thing you know, they will have done something virtually the same and entered it into the same competition.
That is really not OK.
By the way, I think there is a good chance that whoever accused you of that stole your work (not the other way around!), then attacked you; with the idea of attack being the best form of defence.
The idea is that, if they get the accusation in first, it's then harder for you to accuse them of the same thing.
It happens a lot, sadly.


I don't, because so many of them use add-ons. I think it's more of a challenge, and more fun, to furnish them with just ESO supplied items and functionality.
I think it's pretty hard to establish 'ownership' of an idea in most cases. Who was the first person to flip a Hay Bed and use its underside for example? Who came up with Orcish platforming? Who first added another level to their Snugpod?bayushi2005 wrote: »Still, I faced people accusing me of stealing somebody else's build, which I haven't even seen before, so I'm not really sure it's worth the bother. There will always be somebody, who thinks that you "copied" something, even if it comes from the darkest darkness of your soul.
bayushi2005 wrote: »
Honestly it is hard for me to comprehend... why would you copy a whole build and then enter it into a competition?
While I can understand imitating others' personal styles as an exercise in oder to broaden one's spectrum of available "techniques". That's a good thing imho, takes you outside your comfort zone. Though, why would anyone enter a competition with a copied build? If anything, it only reduces their chance in the contest - there is already a build like that.
I agree, that's not OK.
On emotional level, I know I would be pretty sad if I've entered somebody's house and seen a direct copy of my fav houses (or their parts), mostly because I've spent hundreds of hours in each of them: planning, testing, listening (yes), blending my ideas with the "house proper", and polishing the builds.
Inspiration is one thing, blunt copy is another.