Trans-Pacific Partnership Enables Harsh Penalties For Filesharing 154
An anonymous reader writes: The Electronic Frontier Foundation went through a recent leak of the secretive Trans-Pacific Partnership agreement, an international treaty in development that (among other things) would impose new intellectual property laws on much of the developed world. The EFF highlights one section in particular, which focuses on the punishments for copyright infringement. The document doesn't set specific sentences, but it actively encourages high monetary penalties and jail terms. Its authors reason that these penalties will be a deterrent to future infringement. "The TPP's copyright provisions even require countries to enable judges to unilaterally order the seizure, destruction, or forfeiture of anything that can be 'traceable to infringing activity,' has been used in the 'creation of pirated copyright goods,' or is 'documentary evidence relevant to the alleged offense.' Under such obligations, law enforcement could become ever more empowered to seize laptops, servers, or even domain names."
NWO (Score:5, Insightful)
So the NWO (once a tin-foil hat conspiracy theory) is coming true, only 25 years after it was predicted.
It's well past time for https everywhere, constant VPNs and full encryption for everything
Re:NWO (Score:4, Interesting)
... https everywhere, constant VPNs and full encryption for everything...
Trivially blocked by your service provider. This continuing single point of failure is the obstacle to overcome. Not much can be accomplished before then.
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Trivially blocked by your service provider. This continuing single point of failure is the obstacle to overcome. Not much can be accomplished before then.
More importantly those VPN logs are subject to seizure by law enforcement with the appropriate warrant or other legal instrument deemed valid by the Government and the Courts of Law. Show me a VPN service provider that is not subject to lawful access by law enforcement.
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More importantly those VPN logs are subject to seizure by law enforcement with the appropriate warrant or other legal instrument deemed valid by the Government and the Courts of Law. Show me a VPN service provider that is not subject to lawful access by law enforcement.
I wish that were true. Given US government track record of obtaining everyone's call records without any legal showing the more likely scenario is warrantless seizure of "any tangible thing" justified by invoking 3rd party doctrine or batshit insane abuse of Article II.
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... https everywhere, constant VPNs and full encryption for everything...
Trivially blocked by your service provider. This continuing single point of failure is the obstacle to overcome. Not much can be accomplished before then.
I invite them to try. Commercial companies which exist to make money can't just block something everyone uses and expect to remain a viable company with paying customers.
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Centurylink is blocking most of my torrent traffic on DSL in Vancouver Wa.
I had a open wireless router that is accused of downloading copyright material. I hope they charge the router with the crime.
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Commercial companies which exist to make money can't just block something everyone uses and expect to remain a viable company with paying customers.
With their protected monopolies they certainly can do what they want, and the voters will grumble and then dutifully reelect for the fifth time the crooked politicians that made the deal.
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Commercial companies that continually receive money from the Governments sure can. In fact how do you think that commercial companies have stayed afloat after the NSA revelations last year? Government control of media, and government funding for data.
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I have a feeling he's talking about ISPs, which got "bailouts" (not really, but I'm sure it could be spun that way) years before the banks made it fashionable (again).
How is it that they got away with taking hundreds of billions of dollars (and not delivering) and the latest 3 towns to be 100% wired with fiber in New Zealand's UFB project came out with an averaged cost of under NZ$1,100 per premises passed (about half the average nationwide projection)?
And don't even try the population density argument, tha
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Re:NWO (Score:5, Insightful)
The better long term solution is:
* open source software
* Creative Commons License [creativecommons.org]
You can't pirate what you are legally allowed to share. :-)
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Yes you can, as piracy is copyright infringement.
Want to violate GPLv2? Easy - release binaries without source. It's happened (inadvertent or not) many times already, and it IS copyright infringement - you don't have to agree to the GPL, but if you don't, the code reverts to All Rights Reserved and whatever limits copyright law gives you. (Hence why we call it "copyleft
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p2p wireless mesh based on %100 open source software and hardware
Check this out
http://www.freedomboxfoundatio... [freedomboxfoundation.org]
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New World Order. The origins go back much further than 25 years. The first public use of the phrase (in context) to my knowledge was Reagan talking about aliens, but every US President after him has been quoted mentioning this "New World Order". Privately, you could read a book by Carol Quigley called "Tragedy and Hope" (I highly recommend this one). If that one is too long, try Gary Allen's "None Dare Call it Conspiracy" (free downloadable). Rockefeller's autobiography also talks about it, as does Hen
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Apologies for the double post, no Karma please.
I should have warned you that any time someone mentions Gary Allen's books the sock puppets come out of the wood work to bash it, in hopes that you won't bother to read it. Do read it, and check every reference he gives in the book (which is an enormous amount) and you will see he is spot on with facts. He also discusses a lot of material covered in Carol Quigley's book in much fewer words, so it's a fast read. Once you are done, you can make up your own mind
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So the NWO (once a tin-foil hat conspiracy theory) is coming true, only 25 years after it was predicted.
It's well past time for https everywhere, constant VPNs and full encryption for everything
No. It took 25 years for people to wake up and see what's happening around them.
Unfortunatelly, it is way too late now.
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No. It took 25 years for people to wake up and see what's happening around them.
Unfortunatelly, it is way too late now.
25 years ago it wasn't justified to take to arms to solve the problem. I'm not sure it is justified yet either.
But I don't see anyone in power trying to correct things so there is no way this will end other than with bloodshed.
Well to quote Thomas Jefferson
God forbid we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion. The people cannot be all, and always, well informed. The part which is wrong will be discontented, in proportion to the importance of the facts they misconceive. If they remain quiet under such misconceptions, it is lethargy, the forerunner of death to the public liberty. What country before ever existed a century and half without a rebellion? And what country can preserve its liberties if their rulers are not
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But I don't see anyone in power trying to correct things so there is no way this will end other than with bloodshed.
Of course not! There are no people in politics today that play for the other team. This has been a very long time coming, very well planned, and well played.
I heard a speech in the 80s where someone warned people about the harm allowing the monopolization of media would cause. I wish I could find who it was, but the quote that sticks in my head is "What happens when Rupert Murdoch's opinion no longer matches your own?". This speech was never played on US Television, and he was allowed to buy up more and
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It's been coming true for all of those 25 years. People just didn't pay attention when it was merely about other people losing their jobs.
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The Dangers of globalism (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The Dangers of globalism (Score:4)
yes you get to vote; no it won't make any difference
"Four boxes" (Score:5, Interesting)
As the saying goes: "There are four boxes to be used in the defense of liberty: soap, ballot, jury and ammo. Please use in that order."
But treaties circumvent three of those boxes.
Guess which one is left.
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So what are you going to do with your soap box?
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That's not the only problem here. In many places the exact details of the TPP have been deliberately kept secret. We know there are stricter copyright provisions proposed, but what ELSE is in there?
A right to trial by your peers (Score:5, Funny)
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Jail terms (Score:1)
Gotta keep that prison-industrial complex well-oiled somehow, right?
Re:Jail terms (Score:5, Insightful)
More like enshrining the outdated copyright cartels into law with their own legal enforcement powers so they can keep funneling money into political campaigns
.
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Why can't it be both?
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Very true. There's nothing saying they're mutually exclusive. I'm in the U.S. so we have the fully private for-profit prison system here. Dirtiest business since nuclear waste dumping.
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Mainly because nobody wants to be labeled as a terrorist... so, the person to do this would have to be white, 100% sane, not known to have any clinical conditions or vices, no being on any medications, no police history at all, good upbringing/happy childhood... ideally, a proper stand-up true-blue pillar-of-the-community type - otherwise unfortunately, that's how it would be spun and you'll have the same type of bullshit coverage you get over school shootings or had over Oklahoma and the rest of the public
Thanks Ross Perot! (Score:1)
You were right about the sucking sound!
It's just it is China now, not Mexico.
youtube video summary of trans pacific partnership (Score:5, Informative)
https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]
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Reich, Robert not the Third, has a handle on this trade agreement being slipped right on by us.
Always remember that government regulations are a feature of fascism (not a bug), and when corporations are allowed to write their own ticket (lobbying), they are interfering with the market in an unnatural way. Fascism is most accurately described as the preeminence of the needs of corporations and governments above the rights of the populace.
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But without regulations, corporations can be just as oppressive and destructive - driving smaller competitors out of business with underhanded tactics or using exclusive deals to prevent entry into the market, suppressing any activity that harms their profits, manipulating academia with selective funding or threats of legal action to distort science in their favor, damaging the environment and silencing anyone who speaks out with frivolous lawsuits that cost millions to defend against.
It isn't a simple matt
It's even worse than that .. (Score:5, Informative)
Re:It's even worse than that .. (Score:4, Informative)
WTO and similar arbitaration boards existed for many moons now. They deal with protectionist tariffs
No [organicconsumers.org], they [sweetliberty.org] don't [citizen.org].
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No. The WTO deals with anything that a foreign corporation views as a threat to their profits. It doesn't need to be the least bit "protective". Online gambling laws in the US and it's various sub-jurisdictions are a great example of this.
Next step destruction of public libraries (Score:5, Insightful)
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No need. Libraries are already in decline.
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"Then the publishing corporations should just sue all the libraries in the world for lost profits from books not being sold."
Well, they do.
Don't know in USA but in Europe there *is* a canon to be paid by libraries because of the "lost sales" which were created by the lobbying pressure of the publishing corporations and at least Spain had to pay a fine because not wanting to abide.
Cool (Score:5, Interesting)
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Personally I think it'll just cause a shift away from film/tv back to gaming. Games last longer, are replayable, and cost less than films.
Anybody can make a short film and post it to YouTube. The same used to be of short games back in the days of Newgrounds, but Flash Player has since been deprecated. So where can someone make a game and post it for the world to play? In other words, Netflix is to YouTube as Steam is to what?
Worked for drugs (Score:5, Insightful)
Harsh penalties have virtually eliminated illegal drugs, right? it's gotten to the point where I could purchase methamphetamine on the street far easier than purchasing legal Sudafed at the drug store.
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I'm not sure methamphetamine is a direct replacement for Sudafed. You might want to double check that.
Re:Worked for drugs (Score:5, Informative)
I'm not sure methamphetamine is a direct replacement for Sudafed. You might want to double check that.
The point isn't that Sudafed is the same as meth, but that it is restricted because it can be used to make meth, yet I can buy the meth directly easier than I can buy Sudafed.
http://www.forbes.com/sites/da... [forbes.com]
Also, this war on meth has resulted in the pharmaceutical industry selling what is essentially a placebo in the form of a "meth-resistant" Sudafed PE:
http://consumer.healthday.com/... [healthday.com]
Seven other studies, according to the authors, found that phenylephrine didn't work better than a placebo.
"It does nothing," Hendeles said. "Clearly the 10 milligram (dose) does not work."
So consumers are being guided into buying a product that doesn't work by a drug policy that also doesn't work.
Afrin (Score:2)
The government made pseudoephedrine hard to get, and phenylephrine isn't significantly better than a placebo. So I switched to oxymetazoline nasal spray (Afrin, Sudafed OM, etc.), in one nostril at a time so I don't become dependent.
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But my government keeps going on about how making drugs legal means the children will have an easier time acquiring them.
Same government keeps going on how these free trade agreements are going to make us rich.
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But my government keeps going on about how making drugs legal means the children will have an easier time acquiring them.
Same government keeps going on how these free trade agreements are going to make us rich.
The children already have an easy time acquiring drugs... act up a bit, Ritalin and a host of other drugs can be theirs totally legally.
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The children already have an easy time acquiring drugs... act up a bit, Ritalin and a host of other drugs can be theirs totally legally.
Not so much in my country but it is sure easy for kids to get the illegal ones compared to the regulated alcohol and tobacco.
jail terms = right to jury trail (Score:1)
So they have to prove beyond a reasonable doubt that you are doing copyright infringement. They may be able to lock you up pre trail but the jails are filled up and there are much more violet people to put in them pre trail.
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Yeah, that sure does stop the marijuana laws.
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that is legal in some places.
Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs (Score:2)
Recreational pot is technically illegal in all parties to the Single Convention on Narcotic Drugs. So "some places" must refer to the non-parties, namely Afghanistan, Chad, East Timor, Equatorial Guinea, Kiribati, Nauru, Samoa, South Sudan, Tuvalu, and Vanuatu. But these don't appear to be highly developed countries.
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Why the hell would they want violent people in prison? Cuts into profits as you need more guards, more secure prisons and can't rent out their labour as easy.
cut off the lifeline that generic drugs provide fo (Score:1)
cut off the lifeline that generic drugs provide for people living with HIV/AIDS and many other diseases.
So they can just that part to kill this.
Secret Agreements, bah. (Score:5, Insightful)
I personally don't care what the TPP terms are, the process is irredeemably corrupt. It is an attempt for corporations to obtain in secret negotiations what they could never obtain through actual democratic processes, and should be opposed by anyone who supports our system of government.
If they want to enact this, publish it, and submit it as a Treaty to the Senate for ratification. We have a Constitution for a reason, quit trying to do an end-run around it.
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If they want to enact this, publish it, and submit it as a Treaty to the Senate for ratification. We have a Constitution for a reason, quit trying to do an end-run around it.
But think of the corporations! With fast track there is only one person that will need bribing.
Can get less time and have less BS shop lifting (Score:1)
Can get less time and have less BS to deal with then you have with shoplifting.
Let's see 1-2 years for downing a movie vs a fine (Maybe some very soft time for shoplifting the blue ray from best buy) hell you can sneak into a movie and they likely will not call the police. I also most did that accidentally did that one (walled in did not see the place to buy tickets at first and I don't think any one would even tried to stop me from just not paying and going right into the show.
expropriation? (Score:5, Interesting)
"destruction, or forfeiture of anything that can be 'traceable to infringing activity,' has been used in the 'creation of pirated copyright goods," So we can get the mpaa's members' equipment, cameras, sound stages and whatnot destroyed or forfeited because all the pirated copyright goods trace back to where the material was created and distributed?
Sounds like a recipe for government confiscation of private property.
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Heard Randy Bachman bitching about politicians using his music for campaigning, seems they really like the song Taking Care of Business. In particular the American ones who create a shell company to run their campaign which goes bankrupt after the election so it's not even worth suing.
My government recently changed the copyright laws due to some media not allowing them to use their copyrighted stuff in their attack ads so they made an exemption for themselves as they're the tough on crime party and can't be
When will TPP finally drop? (Score:2)
Personally I'm looking forward to the shit storm of global, coordinated backlash against TPP when the politicians are done jerking off.
Corporations overruling countries (Score:1)
This is bullshit! Corporations are something that we allow. They shouldn't be writing government policy or law. And yet here we are. The TPP is a piece of crap. Canadian Prime Minister Steven Harper is all in. There are a million reasons why this guy has to go. But this reason alone means his entire political party should be gone yesterday.
Who will these copyright be used against ? (Score:2)
Individuals, not corporations. Think photographs as an example: if you copy a corporation's picture and put it on your web site - you will be hammered; if a corporation copies one of your pictures and uses it - nothing will happen; you can complain and will just be ignored.
So... (Score:2)
So if a media corporation were to steal someone else's art (like that YouTube rapper whose name escapes me), does that mean that under the TPP the board members of said media corporation would be doing hard time and paying millions in fines?
Or should I go ahead and create a craigslist ad for the Brooklyn Bridge?
When will they finally learn? (Score:3)
You can't stop the signal, Mal.
Those iconic words from Serenity have always embodied the obvious reality that corporations are apparently deeply in denial over: People will find a way, and they're not going to stop. The tighter corporations and governments squeeze, the more slips through their grasp. They're wasting time and money trying to stamp out a problem that really isn't a problem, making everything cost more for everyone, which just incentivizes filesharers even more. This 'agreement' isn't going to change anything, other than hurting individuals who really aren't harming anyone or anything, ruining their lives because they wanted to hear a song or see a TV show. The organized criminals and terrorist groups who are mass-producing pirated movies and other content to fund their activities won't be any more affected by this than they're prevented from having firearms in places where it's been made illegal for people to own firearms, they'll go right on with their operations without so much as blinking. Memo to media corporations: The more draconic you make things for everyone, the more everyone is going to hate you and not want to pay for your content. It's time for you to retire your 19th Century business model and get into the 21st Century with the rest of us: Stop screwing us over for your content, stop destroying people's lives with gigantic judgements against individuals, accept the fact that some filesharing is going to happen and move on already.
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:4, Insightful)
it still boils down to you taking something you should probably be paying for
No, it boils down to you making a copy of something that the government thinks you shouldn't be making a copy of.
You "take" only in the sense that you take a photograph, and you "should be paying" in the same way any group of thugs says "I'll hit you if you don't pay me for doing this".
Every creative work is highly derivative. The leeches are not the copyright infringers, but those who profit from copyright. "Fuck you!" they say, "I've taken advantage of everything up to the moment before this work, but from this point on, you pay me."
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:5, Insightful)
It's worse than this. You're denied the rights to even use WHAT YOU PAID FOR in the way you wish. Witness Kindle books as one example. Want to read them in the reader of your choice, on the device of your choice? Sorry, can't do that, and DCMA outlaws decryption tools.
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I mistyped. DMCA.
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Obviously, my Kindle has a decryption tool. Otherwise I wouldn't be able to read the books on it.
So obviously only SOME decryption tools are outlawed.
That's something we can chip away at.
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It's worse than this. You're denied the rights to even use WHAT YOU PAID FOR in the way you wish. Witness Kindle books as one example. Want to read them in the reader of your choice, on the device of your choice? Sorry, can't do that, and DCMA outlaws decryption tools.
And I reclaim the ability to read them on any device I choose via Calibre and any other appropriate tools.
Why? Because fuck you. That is why. (addressed at the planet's owners; not you, chipschap)
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I finally bought a couple kindle books to test the waters and what a pain in the ass. Decryption is possible, but the process is a nightmare, especially on Android. Why in the hell would I do that, you might ask? Well, in Japan there is no PC version of the kindle reader, just some cloud-based garbage. This is of course after using a fake street address and a VPN just to be able to purchase the damned books. Amazon will happily ship print books overseas, but ebooks are just too special for such a simpl
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Wait, you are trying to read Kindle books you hacked apart on an Android, and complaining about quality?
You can complain about the lack of language support and open standards issue, but you are not entitled to complain about the quality if you cobble something together as a hack. That is akin to complaining about the quality of the porn you downloaded from Warez.
Just so you know, if you can get an English Kindle in Japan (which should be perfectly legal) images are not poor quality, and neither is text. Z
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Perhaps you mean something other than what you are implying, but at your word I call BS. Kindle does not put "bad" quality images into books, sorry. They put in the best quality image possible. Sure, some books are going to have better images than others but that is because the "best" available is not good.. not a desire from Amazon/Kindle to be cheap or unconcerned with readers. Original publishers don't have to provide high quality images to Amazon and sometimes don't.
Your complaint about books is not
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:5, Funny)
You "take" only in the sense that you take a photograph, and you "should be paying" in the same way any group of thugs says "I'll hit you if you don't pay me for doing this".
What if your girlfriend made a 3D printed dildo replica of your penis, and every time she used it, she would say "no one loses anything if I just make a copy".
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She would be correct.
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thank you, thank you, ill be here all night, dont forget to tip the waitress
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:5, Interesting)
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What if your girlfriend made a 3D printed dildo replica of your penis, and every time she used it, she would say "no one loses anything if I just make a copy".
Sounds like a good plan for a long distance relationship.
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only in the since that you take a photograph, and you "should be paying" in the same way any group of thugs says "I'll hit you if you don't pay me for doing this".
Well the government also thinks they have a right to charge you for simply taking pictures on national park and forest service land too.
http://www.oregonlive.com/envi... [oregonlive.com]
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An inescapable fact is, there are WAY more people outside the sphere of law enforcement. That means the odds are, greatly, that the brightest people are not in law enforcement.Authorities will always lose the "War On (Stuff)."
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Influence and power are out of context in a world where a dumpster diver [rollingstone.com] is pwning those with influence and power.
What he learned, notes one friend, is that "if you try to work with the system, they fuck you over." And so, from then on, Hammond would dedicate himself to working outside it. Over the next few years, he threw himself into the day-to-day life of the radical community in Chicago, renting houses that quickly became crash pads for any homeless kid or traveler who happened through. Always the first to offer a toke or some food, he became famous for taking friends on epic dumpster-diving expeditions to hidden outposts like a local Odwalla plant, where, after plundering the refuse, he'd return with enough fresh juice to last a month. At night he'd settle in with "riot porn" – Internet clips of black-clad anarchists facing off with the police.
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:4, Interesting)
http://www.theguardian.com/med... [theguardian.com]
As content is worth less and less, they need to do something to prop up the profit structure.
Sad thing is, if the content being infringed is worth less and less, why are people getting stiffer and stiffer penalties for infringing?
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:5, Interesting)
If we continue to cultivate a society where even the most crafted and artisan digital items are throwaway flash sale detritus, how can we expect to continue enjoying the talented minds that create them?
interesting.
when profits drop to reasonable levels for music and movies, they'll get made / created by people with a love for the art, as opposed to a love for money. sounds fine.
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So everybody is going to sing? Instead of just listening to recordings of a few people singing?
Why does anything at all have to change for that to happen?
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So everybody is going to sing? Instead of just listening to recordings of a few people singing?
Why does anything at all have to change for that to happen?
Because people follow the path of least resistance. Recorded audio and video give people the impression that they're interacting with others without forcing them to actually do so. Same with Facebook. That said, if people spent more time in the shower, they'd probably have a richer musical experience, assuming *some* exposure to the music of others.
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Incorrect.
For thousands of years, the only way to listen to music was live performances. Recordings of any type are a recent phenomenon, as is the resulting concept of mass marketing.
The same goes for movies, which previously were only available as live performances of plays.
I, for one, do not think the concept of mass marketing a single performance to be fair or reasonable, and nor does a lot of society. That's where the fundamental disagreement comes from, not purely from the idea of a file that
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My apologies. I should have read the great grand parent post.
The poster was not incorrect.
Re:What were you expecting? (Score:5, Interesting)
Intellectual monopoly is a danger to real property rights. You cant own something if you aren't allowed to configure it how you want.
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Piracy is huge, and despite all the arguments for it, it still boils down to you taking something you should probably be paying for.
But I am going to pay for it. I've made certain my check will clear 70 years after the death of the author. Who could complain about that?
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AT least the doctor is free / very low cost in lockup
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They can already take your house [wikipedia.org], they don't need a new treaty for that.
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What is wrong with you? You are denying the gun industry an opportunity to advertise to children and secure them as customers later in life.
I'm not an American but that sounds like un-American behavior right there. Sound the Commie alarm!