Australian Federal Police Raid Major ISPs 357
pflodo writes "The Australian (newspaper) has an article about Telstra the major Australian ISP and other 'declined to name' ISPs that have been raided by Australian Federal Police to 'seek the identity of particular subscribers' in relation to their activity and files stored on the ISP's servers. I imagine they will eventually raid some domestic homes and make a scapegoat of some unfortunate teenagers."
"Valuable" Music (Score:5, Funny)
Then again, the music could be mostly Backstreet Boys, Brittney Spears, and N'Sync, in which case the value of the music is closer to $60.
Re:"Valuable" Music (Score:5, Funny)
Re:"Valuable" Music (Score:5, Funny)
Re:"Valuable" Music (Score:5, Insightful)
Am I concluding that prohibition is designed specifically to benefit government at the expense of the people? You bet I am.
Re:"Valuable" Music (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:"Valuable" Music (Score:3)
Aside from tax money, some laws allow the gov to seize cars, houses, cash, etc. "You have two ounces of pot in your trunk, so you're obviously a drug dealer. We'll just keep your $50k Lexus."
vinyl (Score:4, Insightful)
When I was a kid, you had a clear cut choice in the record store, and that's ALL we had really was records. There was some reel to reel tape action, but basically it was records and the am radio. You could get EITHER an album on 33 size OR a 45 that had two tunes on it. I can't tell you how much of the albums were wasted space, so a lot of 45 "singles" got sold, even though the song on the flipside sucked.
Downloading and swapping accomplishes what the customer HAS ALWAYS WANTED but these morons REFUSE to get it. People do NOT want to pay for crap, it's called BUNDLING. They don't want to pay for CRAP they don't want.
If I go to the car dealer and order a new car, I got the choice to decide on my accessories. If I go to get a new bicycle, I got a CHOICE whether or not I want blinking lights on it, electronic turn signals, baskets, whatever, I can GET what I want. No fenders? sure. With mainstream commercial music you got NO choice. You can't easily preview, you can't find anything that isn't on the approved list, and if you get suckered into buying some "disc" you got no idea how much of that disc has anything you want on it or even if it will even play in your player!
Oh, listen to the radio to decide, because the radio will provide you a way to preview? No it won't, they play the same 40 top songs and have since I was a kid in grade school. NOTHING HAS CHANGED IN FACT IT GOT WORSE.
Anyway, I started boycotting paying for music when I had gotten several cassettes and noticed I really only wanted one or two songs off the things. I started even boycotting live music when the price of a ticket got to what was for me ridiculous levels, switched to "local" music at local smaller venues. I was in the mega concert biz a bit, I saw what the waste and greed did to people, it was wasteful and greedy, that's why humans have those words. Those industries are chock full top to bottom of coker and booze addled people who all got this paranoid delusion of grandeur that they are all worth this totally absurd amount of money. top to bottom and sideways. Ridiculous levels of money. The producers, the middleman, the pressers, the pr firms, the "stars" you name it, out to lucn on believing they are really worth these sums. Paranoid Delusions of Grandeur, expectations that they got some "right" to profits at obscene levels. Screw them!
The big names ain't worth it, the big middleman companies that constitute this business ain't worth it. IF they can cut their expectations down on what THEY think they are worth, and ALSO make it dog squat easy and simple for people to be able to preview and buy indivdual songs CHEAPLY AND EASILY, they wouldn't have any problems and would actually make MORE money than what they are making now.
Frankly, those people are just plain STUPID if they can't see this. VCRs haven't "killed" the movie industry, even though this was claimed. Cassettes didn't "kill" the music industry. The xerox machine didn't "kill" the book industry. Web forums where articles are discussed hasn't killed the online news business. What all these things HAVE done is to point out COMPLETELY unreasonable expectations of "profit" that some people get, figures they pick right out of their asses, then they DEMAND to get that profit. People deserve SOME profit from their work, everyone and their cuzzin leroy who is an "artiste" and their middle man skimmers DON'T need to be millionaires from these "efforts". If people really thought this stuff was worth it, they would pay for it happily.
It's the same with writingbooks, software writing,painting pictures, whatever. If people got over this sheer greed, they could see this. The "music industry" as it's run at the top by the corps who use the riaa as their front mouth piece need to buy a MUCH cheaper clue. What they are seeing is a righteous BACKLASH to entire generations of people getting ripped off by being charged way more than what this stuff is really worth, and now that the tech exists to SHOW what it's worth, they just need to deal with it. How their dollar gets divvied up with 'the artistes" is for them to figure out, don't ask the customer to do it! If these 'artistes' think it's ok to sign away their rights for cheap,that's their business.
EVERYONE works hard at their jobs, I don't see it written in stone everywhere that because you are such and such you can just DEMAND to be a millionaire. And by the RIAA controlling the so called "public" airwaves through graft and payola, by conspiring to keep cds artifically inflated in price, by all their other monopolistic practics based on GREED, they finally got the people fighting back and SHOWING them what their products are worth. 10 songs on a cd AREN'T WORTH 15$. They are worth MAYBE 10 cents apiece, something like that. Because they never were content with making a living, and instead conspired to have inflated paychecks, people revolted, used technology, and this is what the market can bear now. It's the RIAA and MPAA and the "artistes" they represent who NEED TO BUY A CLUE, and knock it off with extravagant millionaire lifestyles and false expectations for their "work".
I so DETEST both those industries that I watch very few movies, I stopped going to the movies, I stopped going to expensive live concerts and stopped buying pre-packaged music a long time ago,with the exceptions of already produced and used discs or tapes, and that's it, because the dollar I pay for a used tape or cassette or disk is ALL that "entertainment" is really worth.
And ditto professional sports for that matter.
Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Interesting)
From the tone of this article it strikes me that the police suspect the ISPs of criminal complicity in regards to their subscriber's alleged actions.
Is this how it normally works down under?
Cheers,
-- RLJ
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:2, Informative)
no definitely not!!! (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:no definitely not!!! (Score:3, Insightful)
My father was accused of having child porn on his hard drive. The police took the hard drive. It took him 3 years to get it returned. They don't care.
Re:no definitely not!!! (Score:2)
What I think would have happened is (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Informative)
big corporates get the same treatment that your local drug dealer gets its called equality i know thats a hard concept for some to grasp
Give me a break. (Score:4, Insightful)
I do have a hard time grasping that, mostly because of its extreme variance from the truth.
I mean, I don't even know how to rebut that. Its so painfully, blatantly obvious that large corporations get preferential treatment in nearly all matters, vs. private citizens (and yes, drug dealers). Tell me, when's the last time you heard about a corporate office tower being raided at 4 a.m. with flashbangs and shotguns?
Sorry, not insightful.
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:3, Insightful)
I may be a little bit under read when it comes to the law, but here in australia I was under the impression that ignorance is no excuse. In fact I was under the impression that this was the attitude of courts world wide, can't image a court going "ahhh well you didn't know murder was a crime. Off you go then, and don't do it again.".
And drug dealers aren't criminals everywhere in the world :) hell they are legitimate business people in holland :)
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:2, Insightful)
Indeed, and the whole principle of "ignorance is not a defence" was just dreamt up so power-mad authorities could charge people with breaking laws they didn't know existed...
This is not to say it should be a defence accepted quickly and at face value, but in a modern society with multitudes of complex laws (and exceptions) and with no compulsory formal education in those laws, saying "everyone should know the law" is a bit unfair.
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Interesting)
Except there are differences(and not everything is murder). The postoffice is generally not considered to be guilty if someone sends a bomb (or anthrax) via the mail - so here Ignorance IS not only an excuse, but a just defense. Same with the ISP, depending on what has happened, they probably had know way of knowing what was going on. Of course it they had movies for download on their main page that'd be something else
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Insightful)
I've actually seen this first hand (under slightly diferent circumstances). They don't charge in with guns drawn, but they do appear without notice, in considerable numbers, bearing appropriate warrants and court orders, and secure anything that they might consider evidence. Which may be your mail server.
The idea is to preserve the evidence, but the way they go about it is misguided and unnecessary more often than not.
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:2)
The fools! That gives us the upper hand.
MWHAHAHAHAHA
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Can somebody explain Australian law for me? (Score:5, Informative)
Just got done reading this [underground-book.com]. When it comes to computer "crime" they do seem to have the approach of trying to swat an ant with a sledgehammer.
They're also a bunch of racist bastards if the book is to be believed.
left hand to right hand "huh?" (Score:2)
time out...we agree (Score:2)
wow (Score:4, Funny)
Re: wow (Score:4, Funny)
> Sounds so Orwellian for an American groupie country. Whats going on?
Orwellian is 'in' this year in the USA [tbo.com], so groupie countries can be expected to follow suit.
Anyone with specifics? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Anyone with specifics? (Score:2, Interesting)
The techos were quite proud of the fact that with a quick phone call to Telstra (and a warrant of some sort I imagine), they can mirror *ANY* broadband (read: xDSL or Cable) line to a residential home/apartment. At the back end, they have sniffers written by a major commercial company which are unavailable to consumers for purchase. I don't know the details or the level of the decode these sniffers can perform, but would imagine it is VERY good.
Apparently they have caught quite a few dealers and other small crims soley by using this.....
From all the news sources though, this sounds like a raid on ISP infrastructure rather than mirror of some users internet links.
big problem here... (Score:5, Insightful)
One of the strongest truths in anything that isn't necessarily legal, or could be interpretted as not legal, is that you don't leave any evidence that others can control. If you're really smart, you leave no evidence at all, period, but if you do leave something, make sure that it is in your control, and your control alone.
The other thing that I'm shuddering about is the possible downtime effects that this has on everyone else who uses the equipment for fully legitimate purposes. Suddenly, the possibility of server outages, network outages, and other miscellaneous service problems ensue, especially if a federal entity decides that equipment itself is to be confinscated as evidence, and they don't take care to properly handle what mess they leave behind.
Re:big problem here... (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:big problem here... (Score:5, Insightful)
The real criminals (IMHO) are the scum that try to sell pirated CD-Rs and DVD-Rs in the backalleys of New York, and I'm 100% in support of corporate and government efforts to crack down on these guys.
I don't, however, agree with the RIAA's apparent goal of making a multi-million dollar example out of some 16 year old kid. Just direct complaints to the ISP and have them shut down the account after it's been proven to host pirated files. No need to bust down doors and put people behind bars...
Re:big problem here... (Score:3, Interesting)
Last place they were selling DVDs for 5USD. why don't the RIAA go after the UN and NATO, that would be more fun to watch.
Re:big problem here... (Score:5, Insightful)
You assume too much. Some of the sleazier warez groups and many child porn groups share hacked servers. If someone at the ISP was involved in such activities, raiding the criminals first may have lead to destruction of evidence by the bad guy on site. By raiding the ISPs directly, the authorities get the servers, secure the hard disks, and then arrest the bad guys later.
Re:big problem here... (Score:5, Insightful)
This bothers me as well. There's a good chance that raids like this can do far greater financial damage than the piracy they are trying to combat. How many online businesses will be affected? What happens if valuable subscriber data is lost as a result of the raids?
It sickens me how the authorities and lawmakers bend over backwards for the recording/movie industry without so much as considering the negative consequences of what they are doing. I suppose this is just another glaring example of how you can buy "justice." It's only a matter of time before stuff like this happens in the US, and I wonder how many times I can look forward to lose 'net access because some tard using my ISP leaves his linkin park (or some other equally worthless band) mp3 collection on his webspace.
Re:big problem here... (Score:5, Interesting)
first off, that's NOT what he's talking about. If I read his post correctly, he's talking about collateral damage. It'd be more like if there was a criminal in the house next door to yours, and the government bulldozing your house to erect a barrier around the criminal. Damage was done to others in the name of the investigation by the government. This is a problem. We haven't even gotten into what the investigation itself cost...
" You disgust me. IT'S A CRIME. While you may look at it as a fairly innocent, no harm done crime, it is the law that distributing copyrighted material without the owners permission is illegal. We don't get to choose which laws we obey. Before getting a warrant, police don't think 'I wonder what the negative consequences of this warrant will be?" They think "Someone is breaking the law. I should stop them.'"
Have you looked at the music industry much? Popular musicians have albums go platinum and the industry, selling CDs for $17.95 each, says that the album isn't profitable and barely pays the musician anything. It's to the point that musicians like Moby [moby.com] are going on to talkshows on NPR [npr.org] and telling people that he'd rather them 'steal' his music and listen to it if they aren't going to pay the RIAA for it, rather than it go unheard. Others have come out and directly asked where the money is that the RIAA has asked Congress for regarding pirate-able media taxes, since the artists themselves haven't seen a dime from it, yet the RIAA said it was for the artists' benefit. The entire system is screwed to a pooch, and if the music industry in general isn't willing to adapt itself to meet new demands or new paradigms, it should die.
If you want to compenate a musician for their contribution to society, attend a concert of theirs, or send them a check for $20 or something as gratuity. Don't pay the RIAA any more for their stupid practices.
Re:big problem here... (Score:5, Funny)
Every system administrator I've known who has done anything to crack down on users hosting illegal content has first checked to see if the user has any good MP3s or movies they don't have yet, and saved them before taking action against the user.
Lately... (Score:5, Interesting)
Any
Re:Lately... (Score:5, Funny)
No way! All Australians are prepared to combat terrorism. I've got my Government Endorsed Anti-Terrorism Fridge Magnet and I'm completely safe now!
Explanation for non-Aussies (Score:3, Interesting)
The brochures contain absolutely nothing useful, it's just the standard natural-disaster guff. The general reaction has been that it's a gross waste of money and an exercise in scaring people into sticking with the incumbent government.In fact, many thousands of people, myself included, have written "return to sender" on the wrapper and dropped it back in the post... :)
Re:Lately... (Score:2, Informative)
I hope this clears things up.
Re:Lately... (Score:2, Insightful)
I've lived in Australia and the States... Australia is a country that teeters on a knife-edge between over-the-top socialism and an over-the-top police state. Pretty much the worst of both world, in my opinion. Australians have no constitutional rights in the sense that Americans do, and the only people willing to actively support civil rights are generally the same people who lean to the left. Libertarianism is not very popular in Australia, neither in name or in theory.
America, on the other hand, benefits from being a larger country, so more people can speak out when rights are being infringed... plus there are constitutional rights to infringe in the first place! That said, the lack of a decent social welfare network really drives a wedge between the rich and the poor - and i don't mean the Very Rich - i mean the people who can afford to go to university (which is probably most people reading Slashdot). And the impression i get is that the poor rarely bother registering to vote, so things are tipped strongly in favor of the rich. Not so in Australia where everyone is forced to vote (by law). But then that has lead to the horrible socialist police state i mentioned above.
In short, we're all fucked. Blame Canada ;-)
Crikey! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Crikey! (Score:5, Funny)
No, but good taste might.
Re:Crikey! (Score:2)
It's about Music Privacy, not Anti-Terrorism... (Score:3, Insightful)
Warrants were also executed at several other un-named internet service providers, with more warrants possible as the investigation continues.
It's understood the police were seeking information about the identities of particular subscribers, as well as music files that may have been stored by them on servers.
According to sources, the wholesale value of the allegedly pirated music may be as high as $60 million - making it one of Australia's largest copyright infringement investigations.
A police spokeswoman confirmed that officers, accompanied by computer forensics experts, visited a Telstra facility in Melbourne and Eftel's Perth offices, as part of ongoing investigations.
Search warrants were also executed at several other ISPs, which she declined to name.
She said the execution of these warrants was part of "related investigations".
The Australian understands that the investigations are at an early stage, and that more ISPs may yet be searched.
Simon Ehrenfeld, the chief executive of Eftel parent company Datafast Telecommunications, said the company had co-operated with police, and had provided information relating to a subscriber. The ISP had also closed the subscriber's website.
"We are a large ISP, and we get police in frequently with warrants asking for information relating to the activities of particular subscribers," he said.
A Telstra spokesman confirmed a police search had been undertaken, but said "these things happen all the time".Eftel has about 50,000 subscribers. Telstra has about 1.4 million.
The investigation comes as the music industry lines up against alleged pirates at some of Australia's top universities.
In an unrelated matter, music labels Sony, EMI and Universal have taken the University of Sydney, the University of Tasmania and the University of Melbourne to the Federal Court in an effort to secure information about alleged piracy.
The three universities have agreed to preserve possible evidence, but they're expected to fight any attempt to get them to hand this over when the case resumes later this month.
Overseas, the recording industry is suing Australian-run file-sharing network Kazaa, which allows users to swap music files stored on their personal computers."
steganographic "chat" (Score:4, Interesting)
In other words, each side has a copy of the Oxford English dictionary, where "aardvark"=1, "zylem"=N, and then write stuff like:
proletariat inches gullible xenophobia
to get a music file across. If N is really large, the efficiency may not be bad (?)
An eavesdropping program would have to understand at least joint probabilities of adjacent words to make a case. So we could force the RIAA to participate in natural language program development. Make them do something useful for once.
Re:steganographic "chat" (Score:2)
Hell, use random made-up words for that matter, just to confuse the issue. Mix in other languages too.
Hmm. Ya know those crapfloodings on Usenet, that are long strings of random gibberish?
Re:steganographic "chat" (Score:2)
Also, transforming each byte into a multi-byte code word would increase bandwidth usage several times over, as if it wasn't bad enough already.
Re:steganographic "chat" (Score:2)
For starters, I'm sure the Oxford English Dictionary is a copyrighted work and they'd need a license to use it legally.
Also, transforming each byte into a multi-byte code word would increase bandwidth usage several times over, as if it wasn't bad enough already.
Thus increasing the market for faster broadband connections. Some cable companies are already beginning to offer double-bandwidth packages.
Re:steganographic "chat" (Score:2)
Now, you have just circumvented MY content protection method (however poor it is), ad you are now in violation of the DMCA
Copyrighted Material? (Score:5, Interesting)
I have a bunch of SNES ROM's and anime (series, music and movies) that have no licencing in Australia. I also have some PlayStation ISO's, same deal. The anime/game wasn't released in Australia (or in any PAL territory, with some of them), so the only way that I could get it was online.
If it were possible for me to have acquired this stuff another way, I'd have done it...
Is that kind of thing considered illegal?
Re:Copyrighted Material? (Score:5, Interesting)
Additionally I really hate these stupid numbers that are thrown around... $60million? Yeah maybe... but if i copy a few gig of mp3 off a friend i am NOT ripping the ARIA off for $200000 bucks. Maybe I will not buy a couple of CD's. Sure the record company loses $60. But seriously... these guys with 200 gig of mp3 are hardly likely to have gone and bought it all if they couldntve downloaded it
What college student can afford a few million dollars in music?
Re:Copyrighted Material? (Score:5, Informative)
http://www.copyright.org.au/PDF/InfoSheets/G070
I was shocked to find out that ripping your "own" cds isn't permitted. Maybe there are some other wierd rules.
Re:Copyrighted Material? (Score:5, Informative)
You can't legally get it. Morally, it's up to you. You aren't likely to get sued in Australia if no one has a local license for it, so you might be safe.
2 things to remember about our sunburnt country - you have no privacy and there is no such thing as fair use here.
Here is some more info on Australian Copyright
Reciprocal agreements http://www.copyright.com.au/copying_overseas.htm [copyright.com.au]
Useful sites
http://www.copyright.org.au [copyright.org.au]
http://www.copyright.com.au [copyright.com.au]
http://www.ipaustralia.gov.au [ipaustralia.gov.au]
AGD Copyright Law Branch [law.gov.au]
AGD Copyright Law Review Committee [law.gov.au]
Re:Copyrighted Material? (Score:3, Interesting)
Correct. But as I understand it we do have 'fair trading' and it's essentially the same concept as US 'fair use'.
Re:Copyrighted Material? (Score:2, Informative)
Both are scraps of paper that any country can pretty much choose to ignore at any time. The U.S. both enforces and ignores these treaties as it sees fit, depending on the mood.
Something fishy there? (Score:3, Funny)
Chasing child pr0n-ography - yep.
Keeping Australia free from terror - yep
Those sort of raids are all about upholding current laws
But chasing up a bunch of mp3 downloaders?
Pull the other leg, it plays JingleBells.mp3
Re:Something fishy there? (Score:2)
It's called copyright infringement, and its a criminal act. Disliking that fact doesn't make it go away.
Derek
Cops aren't just sniffing for drugs anymore... (Score:3, Interesting)
Wow. Search warrents for allowing people to download music...hope it doesn't trickle down to everybody.
Preferred Name (Score:4, Funny)
ISP premium privacy services... (Score:4, Interesting)
Presumably, there could be some kind of ISP credit rating to add accountability and prevent consumers from rapidly switching ISPs to circumvent scrutiny. Privacy premium Internet access could be granted based on records of responsible online citizenship and satisfaction on the ISPs part that the subscriber wouldn't do anything illegal and get them into trouble.
Would it be possible to convince ISPs to implement such an 'Iron Curtain' feature or would it qualify as aiding terrorists, like purchasing narcotics does? *sigh*
Re:ISP premium privacy services... (Score:4, Insightful)
What we really need is a better anonymizing service, or perhaps a distributed proxy system. When I use our university's internet connection, I set up an IPSEC tunnel between my notebook and my home network, as I don't want the IT people logging my browsing and watching for subversive sites (2600.com, etc.). It would be great if a tool was available to do this on a mass scale. Something like Freenet, but for short-term web caching instead. Encrypted communication between hosts with requests spread over a large number of peers, squid-esque caching, 'bogus' packets to defeat traffic analysis...feel free to let me know if such a beast exists
Re:ISP premium privacy services... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:ISP premium privacy services... (Score:2)
$60 million---How do they know? (Score:5, Interesting)
My guess is that these dollar figure likely assume that every copy of a song downloaded results in a lost record sale so the record labels can cry "boo-hoo" all the way to the bank. However, just because I have the Rocky theme on my hard drive doesn't mean that I would have run out to the store and plunked down $13 bucks for the CD otherwise.
Re:$60 million---How do they know? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:$60 million---How do they know? (Score:2, Insightful)
My guess is that these dollar figure likely assume that every copy of a song downloaded results in a lost record sale so the record labels can cry "boo-hoo" all the way to the bank.
I download music too.. not from Kazaa but from the less know WinMX [winmx.com]. I download - usually the 128kbs or less copy if I can find it - anything that I'm either recomended or has picked up on the radio as sounding interesting. Then I listen, decide weither or not it's worth my money. If it is, I make a note and keep an eye out for the CD... if it isn't, I delete the file
So yes, every downloaded song that I delete cost them a recordsale - but I don't buy records which I havn't checked out yet.They don't know how much (Score:2)
1d10 * 10 million dollars.
They rolled a `6' so they tell the world: $60 million!
Why Raid the ISP (Score:2, Interesting)
Raid is a strong word and in this case a little excessive I think. The report says te police turned up with a search warrent and computer forensics experts. I suspect they got the cooperation of the ISP rather than close down Telstra (which has i dunno 50% of the internet market in Australia) by taking away servers.
I always thought small fry p2p users just opened their home machines to the network. But there have been stories in the Australian papers recently that suggest that ISPs are actually hosting p2p fodder on their own account in order to stimulate traffic. Unless these raids are looking for this type of material or anon ftp sites or stolen space I guess the police are in fact looking at traffic logs a la Verizon.
Hell, we raided the library! (Score:5, Informative)
Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:5, Interesting)
"Authorities in [your country name here] today raided several warehouses, looking for bolts of fabric in a widespread crackdown on home-made garments that several large consortiums claim is responsible for annual corporate loses in the millions."
"Authorities in [your country name here] today raided several warehouses, looking for metal forging tools and raw materials in a widespread crackdown on home-made bicycles that several large consortiums claim is responsible for annual corporate loses in the millions."
And keep in mind that your tax monies are paying for the police to take action to support these corporations as they reach further and further into your pockets - and your life. Think this is all a reach? Think again...
Re:Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:5, Insightful)
What it's not legal to do is hop onto someone else's bicycle parked on the sidewalk and ride away, stuff a pair of Levi's up your shirt on the way out of the department store, or walk out of the gas station with a few Colt 45s. And whether we like it or not, it's also generally not legal to share music.
Not what I said. (Score:2)
I said 'down the road', not 'approaching fast'.
When these corporations get used to having the police act every time they claim loses, especially when they are as subjective as the numbers the music industry is throwing around today, what's to stop them from pulling the trigger to get the cops to act on something like market control, in the future. What's to stop this kind of activity if Coke Cola decides I've managed to replicate their secret recipe at home? If it's good enough for the scum record industry, it's good enough for the rest of corporate America, etc.
Think about it...please don't knee jerk react with an obvious 'legal this and legal that' comment, thanks.
Re:Not what I said. (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't agree with IP laws the way they are written and enforced, but as it stands, pirating music is stealing. Don't like it? Write your congressman so you can make yourself feel righteous.
Or, a better idea, listen to and support bands that don't use the RIAA-affiliated recording/publishing houses. In a capitalist country, only changes in the bottom line can bring about change.
Some knees can jerk both ways, see? One direction you have "But its the law" and the other you have "Corporations are taking over all our rights." I'm more inclined to the latter as well, but just being morally outraged is tiresome, I've just stopped buying products or services from companies or organizations whose ethics I do not like. I put my money where my mouth is, unlike the majority of
In other words, come up with some better analogies. (Not so easy...nothing else is quite like our hydrocephalic IP laws)
cheese with your whine? (Score:3, Insightful)
I worked for the largest music retailer in America, and walked away on my morals. Mine, not yours or anyone else's. They are the real pirates.
The fact that the record industry told us CD's would mean lower prices than what we were once paying for LP's has proven to be untrue. Artists make less than 5% off each CD retail. The record companies steal from us and the artists and it's ok....we steal from them and it's actionable? Sounds like a double standard to me, and I see no reason to feel sorry for anyone that can't see it.
I've know for a long time that the music industry is stealing from me....funny, tho, I don't think the cops would be amused if I called and reported that kind of theft...perhaps if I told them you suggested I make the call, they might listen?
Sarcasm...about time (Score:2)
Re:Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:2)
Authorities in [your country name here] today raided several warehouses, looking for beer making components in a widespread crackdown on home-brew that several large consortiums claim is responsible for annual corporate loses in the millions.
your analogies are flawed. If we were talking about people listening to home made music instead of commercial music, or even people listening to indie bands that make their MP3's available on the internet insead of commercial music, then you'd have a point.
Here is where I would take your analogy and try to fix it to make it work for this case. The problem is, IP cases DONT HAVE real world analogies, as this is new ground. This is why this is such a big problem and dilema in the first place.
Re:Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:2)
I wonder if the Swiss banks convicted of holding stolen Nazi monies would work as a precedent....
Otherwise, the flaw is in your interpretation of my analogies, not the analogies themselves, since I left them open for just that.
Re:Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:2)
Try repeating that to a record company exec, and then slap a mo-ron sticker on him. It's flattering to me...since no one named Sheldon has ever paid me so much attention, thanks.
Re:Let's look down the road, shall we? (Score:2)
Note (Score:4, Informative)
Also ASIO is the Australian Equivelant of the CIA.
I always wanted to work for the AFP or ASIO. But its too hard to get in, and you don't get paid enough....
D.
Re:Note (Score:5, Funny)
By using the acronyms ASIO, CIA and FBI you have activated the Australian Echelon System. Unfortunately due to budget cutbacks we cannot record your call right now. Please ring again between the hours of 9am and 5pm weekdays and an Echelon Recording Specialist will eavesdrop on your conversation. We value your information and look forwards to eavesdropping on you in the near future.
Re:Note (Score:2, Informative)
The AFP may share some of the FBI's cross-state and international policing jurisdictional powers, but I think their scope is far smaller, partly because our police forces are state based rather than county/shire.
ASIO is our domestic spying organisation, unlike the CIA which is supposedly international only and hence is more closely related to the FBI in that regard. (modelled on MI5)
ASIS is our international spy organisation. (modelled on MI6)
The Defence Signals Directorate (DSD) is the closest thing we have to the NSA.
Making examples out of people.. (Score:3, Informative)
Anyway, there is some footage of the raids taking place here metallicops [campchaos.com]
Holy shit... (Score:5, Insightful)
Wow... $60 million!
Assuming the price of a CD is $20, it means that the pirate has an MP3 collection of equivalent to 3,000,000 CDs!
Assuming each CD has 10 songs on it, then the pirate has 30 million MP3s!
Assuming each MP3 is about 5 megs... then the amount of storage required is 150TB!
Did they raid Kazaa's ISP literally... or is this just one journalist's idea of sprucing up what should have been a normal IP-infringement case?
Re:Holy shit... (Score:2)
Flame, maybe (Score:2)
- Angry student ) :
$60 million? (Score:4, Interesting)
Lets think about it, assuming each song is worth $5 (a bit generous but let's be nice...), that makes around 12 million songs. With each song being around 3 MB, that'd be 36,000,000 MB... which is about 34 TB.
Now you can't tell me that any ISP lets customers have that much storage, and they would probably notice if someone, or a small group, was contributing to 34 TB of traffic.
Sounds like someone might be overestimating by a bit don't you think?
- proton
Oh so glad I live in a free country (Score:2, Funny)
I mean we dont have the RIP bill that means you can be chucked in prison for 5 years if you wont tell police your passwords, and they don't even need a warrent
Or that on the average day you are caught on 100 different CCTV cameras
Or that its a police state but most people haven't noticed yet
Rus
Decidely odd (Score:4, Interesting)
Copyright violation in Australia is a civil offence in Australia, unless you sell the stuff. Search for the word "civil" here [gigalaw.com].
I know this with a fair amount of certainty, as I was on the end of a similar search warrant during the "drink or die" bust. At the time I was totally mystified as to why, after telling me they were going to search my work place for "copyright violations" and having a search warrant that said they could look for anything illegal under Australia law, they took absolutely no interest in the various CD collections we have, nor did they search any of the workstations for illegal software.
It turned out the target was a guy who used to work here and who did (briefly) have an IRC chat with drink or die after it had been infiltrated. That was how they got our IP. The cops were interested in IRC logs mainly, but I had cleaned up the servers ages ago. His house was later searched and the fed's did find his collection of 200 odd pirated movies. But it was just a hobby - he did not sell anything. I am presuming that is why he has not been charged.
It is a weird hobby if you ask me. It costs more here in Australia to download & burn a movie then it does to hire it, a lot more in fact.
Anyway, there has to be more to this than was reported in the article. For the police to be involved someone must be suspected of selling, or somehow otherwise getting monetary gain out of illegally distributing copyrighted material. Australia's copyright laws may sound lame from what I have said, but if someone is found to of broken the criminal law it won't be a slap on the wrist. They will end up in jail.
Really music? (Score:5, Interesting)
There was that story on the news in Australia last night about concern for the whereabouts of a child depicted in a porn photo, those photos don't get out unless someone gets busted. These raids could be a result of that. Just a thought.
Interesting quote from afp.gov.au (Score:3, Insightful)
Pretty insane (Score:2)
They don't like it up 'em - Market forces that is (Score:2)
mp3 trading is a supreme example of market forces in action, cd's are overpriced in anyone's eyes. If they were $5 (us) then it wouldn't be worth copying them.
Keeping them at $15-20 is an insult, it's no wonder people don't want to pay up.
shame about the aussies, they arfe so laid back in many other ways. How did they get such a dumb govt. Probably to pissed @ the beach to care.
I know I am (I'm in Aus on holiday 8)
My experiences with Law & Carriers (Score:5, Interesting)
Not once do I recall a 'raid' of our subscriber info. The LELU process seemed to be a good mechanism for law agencies to work with the techs at the organisation.
i thought this was about something criminal (Score:2, Interesting)
like me, did anyone else think this was regarding child pornography, and not (as is the case) a trickle of users in the sea that is filesharing, arrested at the behest of record companies?
..priorities, priorities...
Why Shouldn't Police Investigate Potential Crime? (Score:3, Interesting)
Regardless of where you stand on this issue, it's silly and naive to expect the police to alter their behavior because of your political opinions.
What's Going on Down There? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:argh (Score:4, Informative)
really, little money?
please get a clue before you post
Mr Marshall expects a net profit of $3.698 billion for 2002/2003, rising to $3.802 billion for 2003/2004 after equity interests and before significant items.
thats NET profit kids NOT gross
story link [news.com.au]
Re:argh (Score:3, Interesting)