MPAA training Dogs to Sniff Out DVDs 728
LandownEyes writes "The dogs, Lucky and Flo, faced their first test at the FedEx UK hub at Stansted Airport.
"FedEx was glad to assist in Lucky and Flo's first live test in a working situation. They were amazingly successful at identifying packages containing DVDs, which were opened and checked by HM Customs' representatives. While all were legitimate shipments on the day, our message to anyone thinking about shipping counterfeit DVDs through the FedEx network is simple: you're going to get caught."
Kinda makes me thing twice about shipping anything through FedEX. Seriously, this is like training drug dogs to find plastic bags."
This is a TheOnion article, right? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:This is a TheOnion article, right? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:This is a TheOnion article, right? (Score:5, Insightful)
I knew my giganews subscription was going to a good cause
honestly though... it's really because they are just whining about everyone else making money with Itunes and other digital delivery services. Working at a electronics store, I never have anyone come up to me and ask, "where do I find the cd-players?". to be honest, I can't remember a single sale where a cd-player was involved. BTW, I sell about 10 or more MP3 players each day.
I should send a box of loose blank DVD's with 'Screw you MPAA' written on them for their next photo-op on finding dvd's.
Damn! (Score:5, Funny)
Probable Cause? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Probable Cause? (Score:3, Interesting)
dirty little secret about pig dogs (Score:4, Insightful)
They do stuff like that all the time.
Anyway, I don't have a big problem with them finding legitimate counterfeit disks, indications of mass piracy for profit. There's an easier solution, a few nations specialise in that trade, the authorities know who they are. Stop trade with them, cut it off.
The US and UK have borked their manufacturing base so much now through "globalism and wonderful 'free' trade" that they can't do that very effectively.
The movie industry could cut "piracy" off overnight, they choose not to. Retail sell disks for a few dollars, which they could do. They would rather bitch, get new laws, and insist on a hugely jacked up artificial price that in no way reflects costs and a reasonable profit margin. They still want as much for a new release on disk as they charged for a new release on tape 10-15 years ago. I mean, c'mon now, it is MUCH cheaper to duplicate movies now, and the transportation/warehouse, etc costs are much lower, and cost of movie production has only gone up a little, nothing like what these prices represent compared to their past cost of actual physical production.
In short, they have brainwashed themselves into believing their own bullshit. They honestly believe that 20 or 25 bucks for a quarter disk is a deal to the drooling masses. At three bucks they would sell BILLIONS of freaking disks. 3$ is an impulse item charge, people would be grabbing handfuls of them, not even bothering with most file trading or looking up "CD Leroy" at the flea market.
People are just not that stupid or naieve about costs anymore, not when EVERYONE knows how cheap it is to make dupes. Cost of movie production today-not a lot different from ten years ago. It has gone up some, but not that much. They refuse to drop prices on their offerings though, flat out refuse. All they want is lock on advanced tech for themselves, they want you to keep paying like it's 1990 or something. THAT is what wrong with their current business model and why piracy and file sharing is so common now. People have little moral qualms over shafting the mafia if it looks like they can get away with it, and that's all the **AAs are, mafia goons masquerading as businessmen. The **AAs-the companies they represent-screw the talent, screw the customer, and screw each other, it is one of the most shameless corrupt and bogus industries out there.
It's a cartel,and if that NY prosecutor always in the news wants to investigate price fixing,collusion, etc, he could start there with the DVD movie selling industry.
Someone needs to smack the Hollywood dweebs with the reality cluestick and introduce them to the concept of "volume sales" and how "net" is more important than 'gross" and how "serve your customer" is a better idea than "gouge-shaft-screw and prosecute" your customer.
They are so used to being in a scumbag industry and dealing with fellow scumbags and being around scumbags all day long they just ass-ume everyone is like that. And they wonder why people have so little respect for them or could give a care about their profits now.
Re:dirty little secret about pig dogs (Score:5, Insightful)
Why not link to some credible sources, Mr. Anonymous? Sure, everybody has a friend who was fucked over because the cops bent or broke some law, but unless you can come up with some hard, documented evidence, your assertions here are baseless.
"Throw-down" guns (Score:5, Informative)
I don't have a lot of information on the rest of your claims, but I do know this one to be utter BS, at least where there is at least one honest forensic investigator.
A "throw-down" gun will generally only have prints on the grip and trigger. A gun owned by a human will have prints all over the place: internal parts (put there when cleaning), magazine/cylinder, even each individual round of ammunition. It would be extremely obvious to investigators if a "throw-down" gun was used.
well, the dog and the throwaway gun things (Score:4, Insightful)
With respect to DVD pricing and piracy... if you can find a double-sided DVD-R at a reasonable price, I'd like to know where, the pricing I've seen is in the >$5 range. It's either that or pick and choose tracks using DVD-shrink... while the disk may be 25 cents, my time is worth something.
While you may not like DVD pricing, DVD piracy is NOT a serious problem in the USA because DVD movies, unlike music CDs just aren't all that expensive if you don't insist on movies newly released on DVD.
The hysteria about piracy is mainly so the movie industry can plug all Internet distribution channels they don't control, in order to freeze independents out.
They know as well as we do that we're only a few years away from making movies technically equivalent to current Hollywood product (NO, I DON'T MEAN LOTR, that's another few years) on conventional desktop PCs.
It's about control. They want to be able to say to people who want to sell movies to the public "Do it our way or not at all."
Any resemblance between this and the record industry, of course, is purely coincidental.
Re:Probable Cause? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Probable Cause? (Score:5, Insightful)
The problem isn't that these companies are 'trampling' over anyone's privacy rights. The problem is that most people have no idea what their rights really are, and just assume that anything they don't like violates those rights.
In other news (Score:5, Funny)
Dogs sniffing data? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Dogs sniffing data? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Dogs sniffing data? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:or.... (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Dogs sniffing data? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Dogs sniffing data? (Score:5, Funny)
Another tactic would be putting "UNRELEASED COPYRIGHTED MATERIAL," or for a combination, put both.
If you have illegal material, then it is your problem. But if the material actually contains legitimate material then you could have some serious fun in the courts.
Re:Dogs sniffing data? (Score:3, Informative)
Otherwise, everyone who's ever had a contract or CD of data lost in the FedEx system would have sued the living shit out of them.
The law surrounding freight shippers is pretty well hammered out, the most you'd be able to do is insure it for a lot of money, hope they destroyed it, the
FUD? (Score:3, Interesting)
I wonder if FedEx will be so keen when this thing goes live and 80% of the packages have to be opened, inspected and sealed, and the number of phone calls from customers asking why.
Re:FUD? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:FUD? (Score:5, Interesting)
I think it would be more effective to write the name of a recently released movie on the DVD. Then they have to waste their time looking at it.
Re:FUD? (Score:3, Funny)
Dan is the MPAA CEO.
Re:FUD? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:FUD? (Score:3, Interesting)
(man Slashdot's software blows, can't type fast, or it deletes your message)
Privacy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Unless they decide to actually play every DVD, or open the packaging to see what inside a case, how are they going to know?
All a pirate would have to do is ship them in unmarked cases, or ones marked "Vacation video" and mail them to the US, where their partner opens them up and puts them in the final packing material.
Sounds like a giant waste of time to me. And for what? DVD's. We can't even be bothered to search all of the crates coming into our ports, but hell, the MPAA has enough time and money to look for fake fucking DVD's.
Morons.
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Interesting)
I have to agree with you though, of all the things you could train a dog to look for, pirated DVDs is really a waste of a dog. Hope my tax dollars don't go to that. Of course, my tax dollars are wasted enough that it probably doesn't matter.
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Funny)
Nerds Gone Wild...on shelves soon.
and DRM 'em while yer at it... (Score:5, Interesting)
labels aren't digital rights management (Score:3, Insightful)
A label isn't "digital rights management"...
Re:labels aren't digital rights management (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm glad I'm not British... (Score:3, Funny)
If I were paying Her Majesty's taxes I would be really pissed off if my public servants were wasting their time in the service of the MPAA...
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Privacy? (Score:5, Insightful)
seriously folks, get back to me when you find law enforcement spending millions of dollars to find and play every single DVD shipped through fedex, and get back to me when fedex accepts massive shipping delays and massive losses because of this. it ain't gonna happen.
but yeah, i enjoy a good paranoid fantasy as much as the next guy.
Re:It gets held up in customs (Score:5, Funny)
Insanity (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Insanity (Score:3, Funny)
Well, they could probably sniff out pr0n because of--
The rest of this comment has been removed at the request of the TMI police.
Re:Insanity (Score:5, Insightful)
-Buying a CD and finding the Security tag glued to the paper insert such that if I were to remove it it would ruin the picture
-Buying a DVD, popping it in and watching the mandatory "you wouldn't steal a car" anti-piracy add. You know the one that gets stripped out when they make pirate releases so the only person who sees it are the paying customers.
-Paying $30-$50 for a special edition DVD or box set and being forced to sit through 15minutes of advertisements before I can watch the film
-Paying $25 for an SACD because of it's "higher quality" and hearing a constant hum in the background caused intentionally by their anti-piracy measures (because people who rip MP3s really care about the higher bit-rate version of the disc, and doesn't intentionally ruining the quality defeat the purpose of a higher quality format? They wonder why more people aren' adopting it)
I can't wait to pay $600-$800 for an HD-DVD player, and $30 per disc only to have my resolution crippled because the HDTV I bought last year doesn't feature the latest Anti-Piracy tech... I can't wait for my Windows OS to do the same thing because I don't want to upgrade my expensive and recently bought hardware either.
When will they realize that pirates will get the content no matter what measures are in place. there are well documented ways to easily thwart everything I've mentioned above. In the end all it does is cripple the end user experience.
The MPAA and RIAA have plenty of numbers that show how much they think they're loosing to piracy but do they have any numbers that show these ridiculous measures actually helping?
Re:Insanity (Score:5, Insightful)
I've listened to SACD on my system, and I couldn't hear any audible artifacts. Admittedly, it's not a stellar system, high end consumer geat only, but I think i'd probably notice a constant hum.
It'd be worth your while to do a check of your setup, and if you've a friend with an SACD player, swap your source. The problem may be something electrical you can clear up.
Re:Insanity (Score:5, Funny)
Yes there is. If a dog finds a DVD (s)he watches it and checks the label to see if it's an original, before writing a report on the findings, and, if necessary, testifying in court.
sniffs pirate DVDs only (Score:5, Funny)
Unfortunately they haven't figured out how to train the dogs to avoid catching their noses on the hooks when they open the package...
Re:sniffs pirate DVDs only (Score:3, Funny)
This just means.... (Score:3, Interesting)
By what authority? (Score:5, Insightful)
Or is this just another example of the corporations saying "JUMP!" and the government saying "how high?"
Re:By what authority? (Score:3, Informative)
Everyone keeps mentioning burned DVD's, but they're going after piracy rings. That means a large shipment of manufactured DVD's, not some burned DVD's with the title written by a Sharpie.
The False Positive? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:The False Positive? (Score:4, Interesting)
Consider that dogs can follow ground trails left by humans that are several hours old. They can discover human corpses that are buried under tens of feet of earth, even if there are corpses of other animals buried in the same place. Some can smell the presence of cancer tumours within the bodies of patients. Some have been trained to alert epilepsy patients 30 minutes or more before they have a seizure.
Without a doubt, scent is the most dominant sense for dogs. Contrast this with humans, where sight tends to be dominant, followed by hearing.
So... (Score:5, Funny)
Seriously, if you do a cost analysis, you'll find that the 10-20 bucks wasted on the spindle buys you the option to ship a real backup copy in the future.
And speaking of backups, isn't it still fair use to make backups?
Re:So... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:So... (Score:3, Informative)
Nope. The "Private Copying Levy" isn't on DVDs. It's only on media used primarily for music such as cassettes and CDRs (that's the intention at least). Private copying also only applies to music.
Re: Blank? Why not 9.4GB of /dev/urandom? :) (Score:5, Funny)
Instead of sending a blank, why not just burn 9.4GB of
Re: Blank? Why not 9.4GB of /dev/urandom? :) (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: Blank? Why not 9.4GB of /dev/urandom? :) (Score:3)
Re:So... (Score:3, Insightful)
Spooky... er... Spot (Score:5, Insightful)
Now wait a second. This is a test and they are opening real people's packages. WTF? (FTW?) I didn't know that shipping plastic optical media was a crime anywhere. Sure it's "customs" that's actually opening the packages, but the fact that it's plastic optical media is not probable cause. How many false positives have they had? Is it worth pissing off that many FedEx customers for the occasional actually pirated media (of which they've found zero)?
Re:Spooky... er... Spot (Score:4, Informative)
They don't. If it goes through Customs, they can open & inspect it.
Re:Spooky... er... Spot (Score:5, Funny)
And, in a seldom-utilized provision of international law, they can then urinate on it.
Re:Spooky... er... Spot (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess you've never traveled internationally? You basically have no rights (and this isn't a "bush change," it's always been like this) while you're between countries, which is legally where the customs checkpoint is.
During the this exercise... (Score:5, Funny)
Home movies (Score:4, Insightful)
It's analogous to the P2P crackdowns where the assumption is that consumers are incapable of authoring content and only Big Media can.
And, yes, I'm a bit surprised and quite alarmed that the tampering laws that apply to U.S. mail do not apply to FedEx.
Sniffing region codes (Score:5, Funny)
Dogs sniffing bits and bytes (Score:3, Funny)
Still, the dogs have trouble in determining the legitimacy of 10% of the DVDs. For those where the dogs have doubt, the Customs agents have been instructed by the MPAA to classify them as pirated copies. It will then be up to the sender to show up in court to prove it was not pirated.
Who does fedex work for, customers or the MPAA? (Score:5, Interesting)
Even assuming they have 100% identification of illegal DVD copies vs false positives once they open them up, they're still providing nothing useful to customers, with serious potential for loss or damage of customers' materials, solely for the benefit of a third party. If the MPAA wants to pay for my Fedex shipping, then we can talk, but if I'm paying for it, you can bet your ass I'll be making life miserable for fedex employees when my shipment is delayed or damaged because of this crap.
Re:Who does fedex work for, customers or the MPAA? (Score:3, Informative)
Uh, yes, that's why I specifically had to note what my response would be if they implimented such a program IN THE USA.
I realize you want to rise to their defense, and that's fine, but please don't misrepresent my statements in order to make your own seem reasonable. If FedEx begins using RIAA-funded dogs to inspect packages in the USA, I will find that highly objectionable. Right now they are only doing it with UK customs in the UK.
And yes, this is solely for the benefit of a third party.
Re:Who does fedex work for, customers or the MPAA? (Score:3, Insightful)
Contact Information (Score:5, Informative)
For further information:
Eddy Leviten, FACT Head of Communications: 020 8568 6646/ 07768 057464
eddy.leviten@fact-uk.org.uk
LA: Kori Bernards or Elizabeth Kaltman: (818) 995-6600
DC: John Feehery or Gayle Osterberg: (202) 293-1966
Read the terms of service... (Score:3, Interesting)
New product oppurtunity ;) (Score:5, Interesting)
We (us hash smokers) had a contact in the MP detatchment that would alert us when they were going to bring the dogs in the barracks for *surprise* drug sniffing ops. Usually we would just consume all substances before they got there. One time my team mate got an idea....
We used Johnson's Paste Wax (tm) on our barracks floors (as required) to keep it nice and shiny, the barracks used steam radiators for heat, which we would set the can of wax on to soften it for easier application.
Well, overkill being one of my team's trademarks, it ended up we mixed 30 grams of some really good "bubblegum black" hash into the wax, used the whole can on the entryway floor, and buffed.
The MP's and two dogs showed up about half an hour later- the dogs went NUTS!
They both went running around in little circles howling and whining for about 30 seconds, then bolted for the door trying to exit the barracks, the MP's could not gain control and had to let them out of the building.
Several of the remaining MP's made a search, but could not find anything.
Later on our contact told us that whatever we did totally burnt out the two dogs- they were worthless as "sniffing" dogs after that and were put on patrol duty. We never did tell him what we had done. (I use the term contact because he was one of our suppliers- we got most of our hash from such MP's!)
Now, off to my lab to synth some "Pirated DVD Smell" to spray on ALL of my mail/packages! Muuhahhaahhaaahhaa
Re:New product oppurtunity ;) (Score:4, Interesting)
When the dogs came through, they went absolutely apeshit and had to be removed, with no actual drugs being found.
Re:New product oppurtunity ;) (Score:5, Funny)
Change of Media? (Score:3, Insightful)
Seriously, if they make possesion of a DVD tantamount to piracy, force people to show all of their DVDs including the naughty ones, they will simply force a transition to other less controllable physical media. Couple that with the nascent clusterfsck which HD-DVD and BluRay is becoming and you have a total loss of control over media and distribution which is the ony justification for the MPAA!
I honestly doubt this is legal in the US (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't recall signing any contract with FedEx that says they can search my goods, but even if I did the Constitution trumps that. I haven't got a problem with them opening it for technical reasons (repacking a mangled package, perhaps, which I'd accept gladly), but opening them for the purposes of determing if you've broken some law probably won't pass 4th Amendment [findlaw.com] muster.
As a positive example, while I'm not a fan of the drug war, a trained drug dog identifying a package as containing an illegal drug would probably be probable cause, because whatever small quantity of legal cocaine in the country (for research), if any, is unlikely to be sent through FedEx. But the mere existance of a DVD is nowhere near probable cause by any reasonable standard; I can't imagine that anything but the vast majority of optical media going through Fedex is perfectly legal.
However, my guess is the MPAA knows this, and this is a publicity stunt only.
(Finally, I'm not a dog, but I wouldn't be surprised they're not smelling DVDs so much as the packaging they usually come in, which has that New Plastic smell so strongly a human might be able to do this. If so, this is almost funny, because they'll never come up with the illegal DVDs that way. It'd depend on the training, and we don't have enough data to be sure either way.)
Re:I honestly doubt this is legal in the US (Score:3, Interesting)
The Constitution is, of course, a document limiting the power of the federal government. The Fourteenth Amendment applied those same
Re:I honestly doubt this is legal in the US (Score:5, Informative)
Sigh. By handing your goods over to them, you agreed to exactly such a contract. See http://www.fedex.com/us/services/intl/ground.html [fedex.com] and follow the link for FedEx Ground Tariff. Buried deep in the Customs area is this:
"Inspection of Shipments. FedEx Ground, or its agents or brokers, may open and inspect any or all packages in a shipment at any time. This action may be initiated by FedEx Ground or at the request of government authorities."
It's put there so people think it only applies to stuff going through customs, but the description doesn't restrict it like that so anything goes. You can be sure there are similar statements in all the other shipping services. The fact that people believe they have government mandated privacy rights when handing things over to a commerical 3rd party amuses me. FedEx can do whatever the hell they want with your package, and the worst you can do to them is try to get back your declared value by following their claim procedure. You have no guarantee of privacy whatsoever when sending things through them.
No way this is happening. (Score:5, Insightful)
I worked at a FedEx sort facility as a package handler for a few months, and I'll tell you right now, those packages sit still for a total of 5 seconds once those trailers are opened. They go from the trailer to the belt, to the package handler, to the drivers, in the truck and out the door. No drivers are going to stand there and let a dog sniff out every package for a potential DVDs, especially if they have an appointment delivery to keep.
I can remember mornings when trailers were late in getting to the terminal by five minutes and those drivers were whining so much it wasn't even funny. Now, I suppose they could be sniffed at some other point, but any delay will smear FedEx's "The World on Time" image. They're not going to be willing to do that, nor any other shipping company.
Besides, if they do cooperate, just ship it through the mail, or UPS, or DHL.
Not that I condone in any way the illegal distribution of copied movies.
Not that I condone the invasion of privacy either.
It's just a lose-lose situation all around.
Comment removed (Score:3, Funny)
Quick someone send a few hundred.... (Score:3, Funny)
Either they will claim it's piracy or better, use them to replace their windows systems.
This only proves that distribution doesn't cost so much after all.
In some countries... (Score:4, Interesting)
... you have to pay customs to watch your media.
In Chile it used to be so that if the customs people at the airport found a video tape or DVD in your luggage, it was retained for a couple of days so they could check it for illegal porn, or forbidden movies (like the last temptation of Christ [imdb.com]). To recover your material you had to go pick it up at the customs office (which was a major pain in the ass if you planned on leaving the city where you entered the country in your first few days here), and pay a "viewing fee". In other words, they passed the cost of someone viewing your stuff onto you.
I don't know what the situation is now,though. I haven't heard of this being applied in the last few years.
Ummm tempting as it is (Score:3, Interesting)
Let me get this straight... (Score:3, Insightful)
Doesn't the law require them to actually have a high probability of some offence before they're allowed to open packages to check its contents.
Smell Test (Score:3, Insightful)
Excellent analogy that punches through the clouds that the "Terror War" have cast on our sense of personal violation by the state.
Corporate globalism, with no basis in justice or recognition of any rights beyond corporate property, means everyone is guilty until proven not liable by a corporate lawyer. Accusation = proof, just like medieval faith governments.
Dogs sniff DVDs; MPAA ups the ante (Score:4, Interesting)
Seriously, who came up with this idea. This goes to show what a crackpot organization the MPAA is. What for profit company has the cash to train animals to sniff out "pirates"? MPAA does. I can think of one prime example: the De Beers [wikipedia.org] diamond cartel in Africa. Like MPAA, De Beers has also received prejudicial treatment from the current administration. It also holds nearly 80% of the global diamond market, and is the sole reason that diamonds are indeed so valuable. By stockpiling diamonds via its monopoly, De Beers inflates the price while simultaneously using its marketing (A Diamond is Forever) to drive up demand. Feel free to read how wonderful a citizen this company is and has been throughout its history. De Beers would kill and does kill to ensure its diamond monopoly is unhindered. De Beers diamond mines would rival the security at the prison Zacharias Mousaoui was sentenced to last week. To me there seems to be a clear parallel between De Beers and the MPAA (or RIAA). Inflate prices through monopoly, buy off the government, drown any possible competition in paperwork, and prevent legitimate competition from freely working (DRM for indie artists, anyone?). I'll choose to vote with my wallet. Of course, it is also quite easy to complain to the FTC about antitrust violations.
How can this even be legal? (Score:5, Insightful)
hmm, watching MY dvd's would be illegal (Score:5, Informative)
So an agent of our courier opening and viewing them would be illegal or at least a civil offense on their part. The person sending them doesn't have the power to sign a piece of paper giving our courier or their agent permission to watch the DVDs.
Finding a burned DVD inside a sealed envelope is not reasonable cause.
At least I know who not to recommend as a courier.
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Informative)
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
I'd stake my life on it.
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Insightful)
from the MPAA press release:
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Insightful)
Translation: physical piracy really doesn't happen much.
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Insightful)
Translation: physical piracy really doesn't happen much.
Mod parent up. He hit the nail right on. MPAA picked a random day at FedEX, picked a bunch of packages with DVD's and found nothing.
I'd have kept my mouth shut in their place until I found something. Would've made much better propaganda. This way it just sounds idiotic. "We have this new great way of detecting recordable DVD's in shipping. It turns out it's useless, but we have it."
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Funny)
Re:OMG! Poniez!!!!1 (Score:5, Interesting)
It might even be possible to improve the liklihood of a 'hit' if you include a fragment of a DVD. I'm sure we've all burned our share of 'coasters' - save 'em up, snap each one into 3 or 4 pieces and drop a piece into each package. If the dogs are sniffing the chemicals in recordable DVDs, a broken one should smell *really* good...
Re:Wrong idea! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Now I can sleep better at night (Score:3, Insightful)
Snort - FACT - yeah. Anyway, if you look up "Copyright Theft" on google (with quotes), it has very few hits (1500). I'm just remarking that it's an odd and ironic term, as no actual "copyrights" are being stolen.
Actual "copyright theft" is what you can argue the RIAA does against some unsuspecting artists (with their contracts in a way) or what faceless uns
Re:Now I can sleep better at night (Score:5, Funny)
Reminds me of a comment somebody made here a few years ago:
"I downloaded an MP3 once, and Metallica was no longer able to perform that song!"
Re:Any hope? (Score:3)
it also uses OCR to scan your bill at the checkout, to check for overpriced items, double charges and items you didnt purchase by comparing against those items you scanned in as a purchase(according to "A