rowyn: (thoughtful)
When Vladimir Nabokov passed away, he was working on the manuscript for a novel, The Original of Laura. His instructions for the incomplete work were that it should be destroyed on his death. It wasn't; some 30+ years later it has been published by his son. (In a rather intriguing fashion, which I won't go into here.)

Much has been made of the ethics of ignoring the wishes of the deceased. The thing that really struck me was that, while I could respect it if his heirs had destroyed the manuscript in accordance with his wishes, I can't imagine that I could have done it myself. If a dying author left me his last writings and said 'destroy these' ... no. I couldn't do it, not unless there were some stipulation like 'these are private and would embarrass me if they were viewed' attached. But apart from that, I don't think I could deliberately destroy someone else's work, even if that was their express wish.

It occurred to me that, in general, I'd have a much harder time respecting the will of the deceased if it involved destroying things. If a rich man wanted his possessions incinerated and his mansion bulldozed upon his death? Urrrgh. Even though I wouldn't dispute his right to dispose of his property as he chose while alive, I can't see myself carrying out that kind of request. It just seems wrong. Like the right of the living to enjoy those possessions supercedes the right of the dead to say "no, you can't". I'm not sure that's actually right. It's just how I feel. What do you think?
rowyn: (thoughtful)
So, Amazon's resolution for the "we gave you the wrong album" problem was to refund my money. Which is fine.

But this leaves me with an ethical question. If Amazon had told me "sorry for shiiping you the wrong CD, here's your money back" without asking me to ship the CD back, I would feel free to keep the CD shipped in error and use it as I wished: their error, their solution.

In this case, however, there was no physical product to return. Amazon didn't ask me to delete the MP3s, but they didn't say 'feel free to keep them', either. So my question is: should I delete the mp3s anyway, under the assumption that Amazon isn't paying their wholesaler for the sale? Or should I keep them, under the assumption that Amazon is eating the cost of the error? I'll probably end up doing the former -- I think Amazon would've sent a return lable if this had been a real media situation, so I suspect that's how they're treating it on their end -- but it's a curious artifact of the digital age.

May 2025

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