BAretired....This discussion is not about engineering ethics in my opinion, but about copyright material that is distributed over the internet, and whether it should be illegal, and whether someone downloading material is doing something wrong. Personally, this is not a topic of discussion I wanted to talk about. If you like to start a new thread on this topic, then please do so.
Ron...It's legal to download copyright material in some countries, so I don't understand why you consider it an infrigement at the same time. At this stage, you only hold a view or opinion that it's wrong. As a publisher, you decide if you want your material to be in electronic format. You clearly understand the risk of it being distributed over the internet when it's in this format; (and you also understand that material will be distributed over the internet, because everyone has access to the internet nowadays). From a business point of view, you make the decision to make it available in this format because you know that you make more money from businesses inspite of it's availability. Also, you make money through lawsuits of businesses and schools that clearly infriged the copyright laws for using this material for business/teaching purposes (this needs to be distinguished from private use). If someone downloads something legally, and uses it without distribution or re-sell, then it's classified as personal use, whether or not it has translated it's effect in their work or career.
Concretemasonry...thanks for your comments, as this is the only response I got related to my post. The provincial code does not have any guidance related to q and CpCg values, which means someone must get both the National Code (for q values), plus the User Guide (for CpCg values), just to calculate wind loads (I think I'm not the only person who encountered this problem). I'm missing the third installment (the User Guide), and hoping someone can share.