First BitTorrent Arrest in Hong Kong 454
prostoalex writes "Associated Press says a 38-year-old was arrested in Hong Kong for uploading Daredevil, Red Planet and Miss Congeniality via a BitTorrent client. Hong Kong laws provide for a maximum of 4 years in prison and $6,400 fine for every copy distributed without copyright owner's permission."
Not related to copyright (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Not related to copyright (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Not related to copyright (Score:2)
Although, given the movies he was downloading, that might actually work out better for him, especially after all that time in prison.
Why not encrypt these downloads? (Score:2)
Re:Why not encrypt these downloads? (Score:3, Informative)
Once you are associated with the tracker your IP address is visible to everyone in the swarm.
All the *IAA has to do is pretend to be a user, connect to your client, and decrypt data received from *YOUR* IP address and it's game over....
Re:Not related to copyright (Score:3, Funny)
Slap on the wrist (Score:2)
for every copy (Score:2)
pretty harsh. but then again you could get shot for something as mild as that...
(note: it's such a thing that the gov. can use to put away anyone they want for life.. but it's not like chinese gov would need to create excuses for that)
Re:for every copy (Score:2)
Re:for every copy (Score:2)
My guess would be, the more money you have towards that $64,000, the fewer years you have to do. The content industry's other licensing scheme.
Fortunately (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Fortunately (Score:2, Insightful)
Or anywhere else (Score:2)
Re:Fortunately (Score:2)
Yes, he will be just fine.
Grump
Re:Fortunately (Score:3, Funny)
He owned an ethernet cable. Ethernet cables can carry full digital copies of almost any move made, and even some that haven't been made yet.
Ethernet cables can carry up to an average of 10 GB/s.
He will live another 75 years or so.
One high-definition movie can be compressed to roughly 1 GB.
Each movie is copied an average of 100 times by other pirates.
Each movie costs the motion picture industry USD25.
Therefore, he is clearly capable of causing at least $59,130,000,0
P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'easy' (Score:5, Interesting)
FACT: At some point in any file distribution protocol on the Internet a 'client' has been directed to a 'server' (peers, whatever) for a piece of information. The 'client' asks for this info and the 'server' provides it.
If the info being transfered is copyrighted then it is not legal for the 'client' to ask for and accept this info nor it is it legal for the 'server' to respond to these requests. If both the 'client' and 'server' are coroporating then this transfer will happen just fine.
If however either the 'client' or the 'server' are undercover 'good guys' then they can easilly rat out the other party; who, in the Internet, can eventually be tracked down and served with a lawsuit.
If you are running software that either requests (a 'client') or distributes (a 'server') information subject to copyrights then the copyright holder or an agent acting on their behalf can bust you, provided that the magic peer-to-peer search leads them to you (or your search leads you to them).
The only legal questions are whether this constitutes entrapment. If it does the pirates win and copyright law is broken. If it doesn't then the RIAA/MPAA/whoever wins and copyright law is safe.
All the fancy peer-to-peer protocol magic in the world can't change these basic facts. You don't anonymously receive and send packets on the Internet, you have a designated IP address and that can be followed to you.
On the other hand a different argument based on 'first principles' makes 'Digital copyright management' schemes such as CSS, HDCP, and Windows media also can't work.
The end result is that reality is set up to make copyright infringement impossible to stop and also impossible to hide (unless you absolutely trust who you are sharing information with, an unreasonable assumption).
This is just like the rest of life, breaking the law (murder, terrorism, etc) is VERY easy but getting away with it is VERY hard thus we make the punishment too great to worth the risk. Of course terrorism fails to respond to this formula and thus results in an up-hill battle that no one likes (lack of freedoms, privacy and security), one that eventually is destined to fail terribly.
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
DISCLAIMER: What follows is based on U.S. law. If you are not in the U.S., your laws can and will vary.
Well, legally, it probably wouldn't be entrapment. Entrapment is actually an incredibly narrow issue -- basically, you have to enticed into doing something you would not normally do. So, if you are looking
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
"...basically, you have BE to enticed..."
"...and BUY from an undercover cop..."
"...to buy the pot ANYWAY..."
proofread next time...
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
Here is a definition of entrapment:
ENTRAPMENT - A person is 'entrapped' when he is induced or persuaded by law enforcement officers or their agents to commit a crime that he had no previous intent to commit; and the law as a matter of policy forbids conviction in such a case.
However, there is no entrapment where a person is ready and willing to break the law and the Government agents merely provide what appears to be a favorable opportuni
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
entrap v.
To lure into performing a previously or otherwise uncontemplated illegal act.
You raise an interesting point. Bittorrent does not give the end user the option to share or not to share. The software it self shares whatever you happen to be getting b
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:3, Interesting)
If someone can create a filesharing system where traffic is routed from one node to another, and when a node routes it hides the identities of the parties it communicates with, then filesharing becomes safe again.
Just as in RTC v. Netcom, where the Religious Technology Center (a.k.a. Scientology) attempted to sue Netcom (and was denied), automated acts of routing on a filesharing network will probably be found NOT t
Re:P2P won't make illegal sharing 'safe' only 'eas (Score:2)
Dammit! (Score:3, Funny)
How many pieces? (Score:2, Interesting)
Charges (Score:2)
Hong Kong /= Copyright Enforcement (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Hong Kong /= Copyright Enforcement (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Hong Kong /= Copyright Enforcement (Score:2)
Re:Hong Kong /= Copyright Enforcement (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Hong Kong /= Copyright Enforcement (Score:2, Insightful)
Is that... (Score:3, Interesting)
Before the argument starts: (Score:2)
This is a bad day for BitTorrent in general.
I don't think anyone can validly claim that BitTorrent needs to be banned, or that Miss Congeniality needs to go to the public domain.
I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
Would work if China was a Fine Socialist Network- but unfortuneatly nobody's figured out yet that to have a FSN one needs to figure out how to replace the free market feedback loops with computer programms detailing needs, wants, and resources, complete with AI algorithims assigning resources to needs and wants equally. Maoist China is almost as big of a failure at this as Stalin was.
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
And your an asshat.
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
Any communist or socialist country that still has peasants (or any visible class structure at all) has failed to implement "From Each According to His Abilities, To Each According to His Need" and therefore falls short of what the Apostles did 2000 years ago (Acts Chapters 4&5- should be required reading for any so-called humanist) that was the moral inspiration for Marx.
And your an asshat.
To some extent, yes. That still does not change the basic question though- if
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I thought China was in charge of Hong Kong Now (Score:2)
Miss Congeniality!?! (Score:2)
The only thing worse is explaining to friends and family what caused you to get arrested.
OK, enough cheap humor. This thread's gonaa go downhill fast anyway...I'll just stop now.
Re:Miss Congeniality!?! (Score:2)
I'm sure the **AA will LOVE this to become US law. (Score:2)
In Hong Kong, you can be arrested without being charged with anything?!?
Yo Grark
Re:I'm sure the **AA will LOVE this to become US l (Score:2)
Re:I'm sure the **AA will LOVE this to become US l (Score:2)
Re:I'm sure the **AA will LOVE this to become US l (Score:3, Informative)
What fascinates me most is not that a govenment flouts their own constitution so blatantly - What's much more interesting is the state of denial so many of that country's citizens are in.
The penalty wasn't severe enough... (Score:3, Funny)
Don't call it a "BitTorrent Arrest" (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't call it a "BitTorrent Arrest" (Score:5, Funny)
Don't call it a "Piracy Arrest" -- some of my best friends board aquatic vessels and kill everyone aboard to steal the posessions for perfectly legitimate reasons... It's really an arrest for violating one-sided copyright laws.
Re:Don't call it a "BitTorrent Arrest" (Score:5, Informative)
Long live BitTorrent (Score:2)
Another story... (Score:2)
Looks like its just 4 years then. (Score:3, Funny)
Luckily, there were no downloads of these fine films.
Daredevil (Score:3, Funny)
One of those things (Score:5, Funny)
Re:One of those things (Score:3, Interesting)
Oh, and by the way, if you ever go to Hong Kong and decid to buy counterfeit clothing, DVDs, or whatever, don't pay with a credit card, or else you'll become part of another classic Triad racket - counterfeit credit cards.
Comment (Score:2)
iWon news (Score:3, Funny)
I wonder.... (Score:3, Funny)
And, I take it that figure is in USD, correct? 'cause I could probably find that much in HKD in my COUCH.
Remember, kids (Score:5, Insightful)
My rights online? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:My rights online? (Score:2)
Lets face it, DeCSS was written for lawful uses but the potential for unlawful uses makes it a "piracy tool" in some peoples' minds. Every time BitTorrent is involved in a copyright infringement case, it is another blow to its image, and it makes it that much harder for us to preserve our online rights.
Re:My rights online? (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:My rights online? (Score:2)
Re:My rights online? (Score:5, Insightful)
This right is partially, temporarily, waived by society in order to further other societal interests, but the previous poster's point remains a good one: what are these interests that are so compelling as to justify an infringement on free speech?
We should never assume that copyright is inevitable. Rather, we should consider it critically and always reassess whether it is desirable at all, and if so, to what extent.
What they forgot to say is.. (Score:2)
$6,400 Hong Kong dollars which are, like, 2 American.
Token Arrest (Score:2)
I heard a rumor that their police sometimes advertise that they're going to crack down on pirated DVDs on a particular day, just so that all the DVD stores know to close their doors (and reopen them once the police hav
Thats Nothing. (Score:5, Interesting)
Yesterday, here in Malaysia a pirated VCD seller was shot in the chest with an automatic handgun by enforcement officers. Not only that, this took place in front of an coffeeshop and the slug that exited the VCD seller hit a guy having a meal.
The VCD seller was unarmed.
The MPAA ought to be proud of us.
Re:Thats Nothing. (Score:3, Informative)
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2005
Link as requested by sibling poster. I read this in the physical paper before the online edition was updated.
Re:Thats Nothing. (Score:3, Informative)
Here is the link:
http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2005/1
Re:Thats Nothing. (Score:2)
Re:Thats Nothing. (Score:4, Informative)
Article here : http://thestar.com.my/news/story.asp?file=/2005/1
As for the marijuana, we only hang traffickers. IIRC the distiction between posession and trafficking is weight though IANAL, so i'm not too sure.
I'm surprised (Score:2)
Generally police would ignore such activities, so what makes law enforcement so much attention to this particular case?
Re:I'm surprised (Score:2)
How did they catch him? (Score:2)
What's worse? (Score:2)
Cop: Let's make a deal, you plead guilty of first degree murder and you get free on parole after 20 years... or else we charge you for these 100 illegally distributed movies and you get 400 years.
Walking the Plank? (Score:2)
BitTorrent is irrellevant. (Score:3, Insightful)
Mentioning it only smacks of propoganda.
Uh (Score:3, Funny)
He should have been arrested for his taste in movies.
Re:Wow! (Score:4, Insightful)
My rights are not affected by the prosecution of some pirate. We don't have, nor should we expect, the right to pirate movies.
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
But I love Pirate movies! The Curse of the Black Pearl was awesome!
Re:Wow! (Score:5, Funny)
Hey, anyone want to go see a pirate movie?
Re:Wow! (Score:4, Insightful)
That's not the issue, not by a mile.
What rights are you willing to surrender so that the state and corporations may more effectively combat piracy?
Your rights most certainly are affected by the laws, many created just recently, that protect intellectual property holders. The Betamax decision, which made home taping legal, is being eroded at an ever increasing pace. The powers-that-be are actively seeking an end-around against Fair Use and the Doctrine Of First Sale.
You know this, right? You're supposed to know this, this is Slashdot. Idiots like me blather and foam about this stuff all day.
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
disingenuity at its best!
Look, it's illegal to photocopy books. Everybody understands why, and yet I'm only capturing photons with a photocopier. Right? Well, same with bytes that encode a movie.
You're free to encode and send anything that you yourself created and decided to distribute for free explicitely however...
Re:Wow! (Score:3, Interesting)
>disingenuity at its best!
>Look, it's illegal to photocopy books.
It's illegal to photocopy some books. I have several which can be legally photocopied. I have a great many more which cannot be legally photocopied, but I see no moral reason that should be so.
>Everybody understands why, ...
My understanding is that (ignoring the history, and focusing on the current state of the
Re:Wow! (Score:2)
Re:Choice of movies (Score:2)
Actually, I have a feeling that the choice of arrestee by HK's flavor of the **AA was not random.
Think about it: by sueing this man who uploads phenomenally shitty flicks, they achieve three goals:
We're-after-you-so-you-better-stop! deterrent message
They'll defend any piece of shit in their catalog just as well as blockbusters, so there's no need to think you're less visible if you download crap
It p
Re:Choice of movies (Score:2)
Re:Choice of movies (Score:3, Funny)
What do you mean? This guy is singlehandedly responsible for over ONE BILLION DOLLARS (pinky-to-mouth) of our losses for the year!
</RANT>
Re:Cane Him!!! (Score:2)
Re:great (Score:3, Insightful)
The man wasn't arrested for using BitTorrent, or for using the Internet, or for using his computer, or for having an opinion, or for speaking out. He was arrested for committing a crime which he knew to be a crime. This is as it should be.
Re:Is proof even necessary? (Score:4, Informative)
Under U.S. copyright law, you don't have to actually prove that distribution occured -- it is generally sufficient to make a copyrighted work available for distribution. You don't have to prove that anyone downloaded the file -- simply making it available on Kazaa or whatever is sufficient. There's a case on this, Playboy v. Chuckleberry or Playbou v. Harbough, or one of the Playboy v. someone cases that raised this point.
Re:Is proof even necessary? (Score:4, Funny)
However, I guess my thought was wrong. I am so sorry.
But hey, at least I learned that I am a douche bag, so it wasn't a complete waste of time...
Re:Is proof even necessary? (Score:2, Informative)
Therefore, distributing ANY small slice of the movie, no matter how small, is infringement.
Of course, this is somewhat silly, since the movie is in a digital format, and therefore distributing any number which appears in the digital stream is technically illegal.
Re:"Uploading" using BitTorrent? (Score:2)
You can be VERY selective:
Bittorrent/no bittorrent
Copyrighted file, public domain file.
It's your choice.
Re:I'm obviously NAL but... (Score:2, Troll)
You: Yes.
Judge: Then you are repsonsible.
You: But your honor, it wasn't me, it was my roommate! I was asleep the whole time!
Judge: Roommate, did you do this?
Roommate: Your honor, I cannot tell a lie. It wasn't me.
Judge, So, you, do you have any PROOF that it was your roommate? Since it was your computer, the presumption is that you are reponsible, and it is your burden to PROVE that is was your roommate and not you.
You: But your honor, I just told you...
Judge:
Re:I'm obviously NAL but... (Score:2)
Re:Something's not right (Score:2, Interesting)