FBI Arrests Eight On Copyright Charges 352
luigi6699 writes "The BBC reports that 'the US authorities have charged eight people in connection with the illegal trading of copyrighted films, music, games and software over the net.' According to Acting Assistant Attorney General John C Richter, 'cases like these are part of the Justice Department's coordinated strategy to protect copyright owners from the online thieves who steal and then sell the products they work so hard to produce.'"
Priorities! (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Priorities! (Score:5, Insightful)
Now you're just being cynical... (Score:2)
Not to mention people's identities and pedophiles (Score:3, Insightful)
Priorities? We're the FBI, we don't need no steeeeeeeenkin priorities!!!
Pedophiles and Satanists (Score:5, Insightful)
What would the point of "nailing" pedophiles be?
You don't "nail" Satanists. Nothing wrong with being a Satanist. The problem comes in if some guy starts cutting human hearts out on an altar somewhere -- then you're nailing a murderer who happens to be a Satanist.
Similarly, you could maybe nail someone guilty of sexual abuse of a child who happened to be a pedophile, but what would be the benefit of nailing pedophiles?
Identity thieves, on the other hand, have committed a crime.
Re:Priorities! (Score:5, Insightful)
I think there are two main issues. People who freely share copyrighted material, and people who SELL copyrighted material. Personally, I see the latter as being flagrant theft.
Re:Priorities! (Score:2)
Re:Priorities! (Score:2)
Re:Priorities! (Score:2)
If anything, digital piracy should be done at the State level. Maybe tried in both States the crime has been committed in.
Re:Priorities! (Score:2)
Two problems with this. First, 5th Amendment:
No person shall be held to answer for a capital, or otherwise infamous crime, unless on a presentment or indictment of a grand jury, except in cases arising in the land or naval forces, or in the militia, when in actual service in time of war or public danger; nor shall any person be subject for the same offense to be twice put in jeopard
Murderers... (Score:5, Insightful)
#1) Sometimes a highly visable arrest is enough to deter people from an activity, without allocating many law officers. All the FBI has to do is make an example of one person, charge him with everything, throw the kitchen sink at the guy and make sure he never gets outside of a jail, and that might stop other people from doing the same act.
#2) Follow the money. There would be no FBI without money, and they get their money from congress. Members of congress get elected, and that takes lots of money. I can't give/donate nearly as much money as organized groups like the RIAA, so members of congress won't listen to me. If the RIAA wants music file sharers chased, arrested and prosecuted, and members of congress want money for the next election, guess what the FBI will be doing?
#3) Perhaps terrorists are not a high priority because the politicians in power have been able to take advantage of the attacks. Whenever there is an attack, the people collectivly lose more rights. Police put up camera's in cities to videotape everyone (chicago and boston both have over 3,000 each). Libraries require fingerprints (Naperville). Gas prices soar. Companies like Halliburton get rich. I also noticed a direct relationship between acts of terror and rednecks getting very patriotic, which means they vote republican. For some reason, people in the south think democrats are pussies because we want to understand a problem before shooting at it.
I would also add the uber rich are not scared of terrorism because when was the last time a suicide bomber blew himself up in Beverly Hills? The terrorists target public trains and busses which the avarage joe takes to work. The rich live in gated communities, they have private security in addition to the police. And when the rich call the police, the police know to anwser quickly and with their best officers. The last thing the police departments want is a millionaire with lawyers pissed off at them.
Re:Murderers... (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't like the concept of requiring fingerprints unless someone is convicted of a crime. People not convicted of their first offense ever should have their fingerprint copy destroyed. What if someone has no fingerprints for whatever reason?
About cameras in cities, if the voters approved it, then that's okay. But it needs to be voter approved and temporary. Perhaps require it to be reapproved every 4 years during the mayoral election.
-
Personally I think they should never be lively monitored. Just review the tapes when necessary. Delete footage after 30 days. But still require voter approval every 4 years.
About the terrorist attacks, namely September 11th, let us think about that for a second. What was Osama bin Laden's reason for attacking, if he truly did that? And who had more to gain? Bush being able to sign into law stripping out rights? Or Osama bin Laden's reason?
By the way, not all Republicans are bad, and not all Democrats are good. Both do good things, and both do bad things. But more often than not in our federal Congress we see them voting for stupid things, Democrats and Republicans alike. I think one Senate vote ended up having it 100-0 for something bad.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2, Interesting)
Bah, that takes too much effort. It wouldn't happen often at all--maybe once every five years at the inside. The poor person in question would have to win the lottery or something similar (saving money and working doesn't cut it, and county/state/federal law enforcement officers don't generally harass college student
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
I don't care if they think it would be political suicide. They lost my vote. They really should have the courage to vote for what's right.
Someone can hold a grudge that long. And so what if it goes beyond the statute of limitations. I would think it would still be possible to sue the specific judicial system for corruption. Well, by sue, I don't mean for any monetary compensa
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Fuckin eh. All I have to say is thanks, and I'm with you.
Re:Murderers... (Score:5, Insightful)
It takes more than cash to be rich. You spend years making connections and earning favors. As a newly won lottery magnate, you wouldn't even have access to the best lawyers. The police have nothing to fear from a family that's been rich less than 40 years.
By the way, not all Republicans are bad, and not all Democrats are good. Both do good things, and both do bad things.
Wrong. Both do bad things, all the time, never good. They've not passed any necessary legislation in decades, their only real work at this point would be the budget... and they've screwed that up to. If you have any sense left at all, you'll promise not to vote for either, ever again.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
I think most Democrats and Republicans in Congress are essentially the same side, except for minor differences.
Re:Murderers... (Score:3, Insightful)
We need a Constitutional Ammendment barring people affiliated with either party from ever holding public office again...
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
I'll let someone else do the Godwinning this time.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
That would be insane.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Just make it so they can never hold public office again, at the local, state or federal level. Problem solved.
Re:Murderers... (Score:4, Insightful)
I think they are exactly the same party; two different flavours of Corporate Greed, each with its own brandname to create the illusion of choice. The biggest challenge of the election is finding enough highly emotive non-issues to distract the electorate.
It'd be pitiful, if it wasn't for the fact that it seems to work...
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Concerning abortion, a woman has dominion over her own body. No law can state otherwise. However, I will say that it's cruel to abort a pregnancy at a point where the baby could survive outside the womb, unless the abortion is in the name of the woman's health or a few other rare reasons.
Concerning same-sex marriage. Leave marriages to churches. Let churches decide whom to marry and not to marry. Let the government perform civil unions. Neither shall
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Full Disclosure: UK citizen speaking. I'm not claiming any moral superiority - we have exactly the same problem.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Re:Murderers... (Score:4, Insightful)
Some. Not terrorists, typically. For that, you have to just plain remove them, their backers/resources, and try to deal with the underlying culture clash that fuels them. People who are too cheap to pay for movies, on the other hand, already know all of the ground rules, and are just assuming that they won't get caught. It's not like they don't know they're no better than a standard shoplifter, they just figure that since there are millions of them they have a shot at continuing to enjoy the work of their favorite band without actually paying what the band asks. The people who facilitate that on a large scale are truly low hanging fruit for law enforcement, though - they can't really get the stuff they pirate into a lot of their buddies' hands without, by definition, exposing what they're doing. That little bit of deliberate, very public nose-thumbing is pretty much asking for it.
much money as organized groups like the RIAA, so members of congress won't listen to me
So why are you not forming the National Pirate's Association? Groups of teachers, gun owners, auto workers, environmentalists... they all form large groups and leverage that so that they can make a bunch of noise and fund campaigns. What do you think MoveOn.org is? It's rich people backing Democrats with millions and millions of dollars. Poor people can throw in a dollar, too, and say they think the same thing. Do you really think that the trial lawyer associations, the NEA, and other extremely well funded left-of-center groups don't have every bit of an audience in political circles as a particular trade association in the entertainment biz? Spend a little more time on K Street in DC - the noise from the well funded left is very, very loud. The problem is that it doesn't resonate with most voters because all it ever is is against things, and not constructive. That's getting pretty old.
Perhaps terrorists are not a high priority because the politicians in power have been able to take advantage of the attacks.
Not a high priority? How do you figure? We've got an unprecedented number of people working on the intel, interdiction, and counter-terrorism side of things. We're in the middle of re-building a seriously gutted intel capacity that suffered for years under enormous budget cuts. It takes time to hire, train, and embed the sort of people needed to head this stuff off at the source. Until then, we're treating the symptom, not the problem. But that doesn't mean that other crime should just be ignored.
Gas prices soar.
Because no one will tolerate the building of domestic refining capacity. We haven't added refineries since the 1970's, even as the population using the fuel has grown hugely. But that's only part of the picture - the main component is demand pressure because of hugely growing markets in China and India. There are simply more people trying to buy the same gallons of gas. So, if your personal favorite politicians were in office, how would you reduce the competition for oil? Would you drill for more? Build new refineries (in which state/city - have fun getting approval!)? Subsidize fuel with tax dollars? The point is, you toss gas prices into the conversation as if your distaste for the FBI busting flagrant copyright violators is all part of giant tinfoil hat conspiracy that also includes somehow fooling the Chinese into using more oil so that we have to bid up our purchases from suppliers.
I would also add the uber rich are not scared of terrorism because when was the last time a suicide bomber blew himself up in Beverly Hills?
Who do you think had their offices in the top floors of the World Trade Center, a bunch of living-on-Velveeta 20-year-olds starting up a lost cause web site? No, it was bankers, traders, law firms, accounting firms - "rich" people. Who do you think lost a fortune when those attacks clobbered the econom
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
So, exactly how many rich people wound up on the list of WTC dead? Have you heard of any?
The rich wouldn't be found in the WTC, they'd be found in their mansions out on the plantation watching the immigrants pick grapes for their wine. The middle class and investor-wannabes would be found in the WTC.
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
No, we have people for that
Re:Murderers... (Score:2)
Why not? The RIAA members contribute a very small amount of their earnings to lobbying, and their entire earnings come from people buying their products. Why don't you start a PAC. Every time you are thinking about buying an RIAA product, remember where the money would go and donate it to the PAC instead. Publicise this and get other people to do the same. If you did this between now
Great (Score:2)
Good job
Re:Priorities! (Score:3, Insightful)
"Theft? Err, no, we're still working through all the murders, try again in a few months"
Seriously here people, you may think the copyright holders are big evil faceless corps, but that doesn't make copying their material right. If you object to the companies, don't play their games, listen to their music, watch their vide
Greatest.Troll.EVAR. (Score:2)
This is the single best slashdot troll I have ever seen. Bravo, sir.
Witty Bullshit (Score:2)
Ah yes. It's too bad the FBI can handle only one investigation at a time and only has one field officer... Seriously, why is the parent "insightful" at all? What "insight" does it bring to the table? It's like saying "Gee, I hope the Seattle Fire Department can handle more than one call at a time..." Well, of course they can. Why doesn't the parent just say what he/she means: "I don't like coptright law, and the FBI should have better things to
Consumer (Score:4, Funny)
Arresting teens for committing the hideous crime of downloading music and stopping monopolies right in their tracks.
Ok, maybe not the second part, but 1/2 isn't that bad.
Why is this under "Your rights online"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Why is this under "Your rights online"? (Score:2, Insightful)
The whole concept of rights a bit nebulous. Having a "right" to something could mean
a) Being permitted to do something
or b) Being entitled to something
You are confusing the two meanings. The general guiding principal is that you should be permitted to do anything that does't impact on anyone else's "rights". If two set of rights come into conflict things get more c
Nobody owns anything anymore... (Score:5, Insightful)
Think what you will about it, but recieving a free copy of something someone else has invested time and money to produce is not a "right."
The problem with the system is I can't own a damn thing anymore. There was a time if I wanted to tape something off TV, I would have used a VCR. Now people are paying a monthly fee for TiVo. 20 years ago, people could buy a satelite dish and get all the channels for free on C-band. And back then cable was fairly inexpensive. Today, a "basic" subscription to cable can cost over $60 a month. AND back then there were not as many commericals on television as today. What has changed? Did these companies hire specialists to determine just how much bullshit people can take before they break?
And it is not good enough to have a phone in the house, now everyone needs a cell phone. I had one employer ask me to update my file with my second phone number, a cell phone number. I did not have one. My boss gave me one hell of a look.
And take operating systems for example. There was a time that when I purchased a operating system, I could put it on any computer I owned. Now Microsoft wants me to call in and ask for permission to install Windows.
Every buisness is figuring ways to not sell a product, but to sell a reoccuring service. One day, people won't be able to buy underwear, they will have to buy a license from fruit of the loom. Perhaps washing machines will need to call fruit of the loom before you can wash underwear.
And the music industry and movie industry is doing the same thing. It is not bad enough that they want $10 to see a movie, after half an hour of commericals (what is the point of paying $10 if they will force people to watch commercials anyways, isn't that just like TV?). In addition to the $10 ticket and forced viewing of commercials, the theater has a monopoly on snacks, and they use that monopoly to charge $5 for a soda that probably costs them a thin dime. One year later, the movie gets released on DVD for $29.99. The movie quality is so-so. Three years later a nicer version comes out for $29.99.
And If I want to back up my copy, in case it gets scratched so I have a working copy, the movie industry won't let me. They shut down DVD Decryptor.
And about the music industry. Remember, they kept prices inflated to over $15 a CD. They were sued and they lost. They were ordered to give free CD's to libraries and what did they do? 100 different CD's that would be interesting? NO. They gave 100 identical copies of Christmas songs.
So, no, sharing is not theft. What is theft is what the corporations are doing to people.
Re:Nobody owns anything anymore... (Score:2)
No one is keeping you from using a VCR still. You still have the right to choose with your dollar. Just because Tivo charges a monthly description and cable charges an inordinate amount of money for their service does not mean you have to buy it. If VCR's are a bit archaic for you, there are DVD recorders that can
Re:Nobody owns anything anymore... (Score:2)
Is it really still that expensive? In my country I only pay $20 for 3 hours of communication every month and they automatically give me one hour as a bonus if I have more than one hour left at the end of the month. My parents pay more than 3 times this price for their landline.
Are you sure it'
Re:Nobody owns anything anymore... (Score:2)
You can find the program. What you can not find are the small files that allow newer DVD's to be copied.
For example, when 50 First Dates was released on DVD, it could not be copied, DVD Decryprer didn't work because the DVD had some bad sectors on purpose. The guy who maintained DVD Decrypter changed it so it would work.
Since the last edition, there will be no new ones. So if the movie industry changes the
Re:Why is this under "Your rights online"? (Score:3, Insightful)
Doing what you want with your own private property, including making copies of it available for other people, _IS_ a right. That's why they call them "private property rights". "Intellectual property laws" put restrictions on everyone's normal private property rights, supposedly to encourage innovation in the society (although all the anecdotes I've seen lately seem to indicate that they're used prim
Re:Why is this under "Your rights online"? (Score:3, Interesting)
A carpenter makes a chair and sells it to A. A sells it to B. OK.
A musician makes a CD and sells it to A. A sells the CD to B. OK.
Contrast this with
A musician makes a CD and sells it to A. A makes a copy and sells it to B. Infringement.
A carpenter makes a chair and sells it to A. A makes a copy of the chair through some sort of future "copying machine". Infringement? It will be interesting to see what happens with intellectual property when we have machine
Neither is price fixing (Score:2)
You're right but that's only one side of the equation. You want consumers to follow the rules but corporate empires can continue to fix prices, gouge the consumer, whittle away at our fair use rights and we're just supposed to take it?
cases like these are part of the Justice Department's coordinated strategy to protect copyright owners from the online thieves who steal and then sell the products the
Re:Neither is price fixing (Score:2)
Re:Its rights online, just not YOUR rights (Score:2, Insightful)
Umm.. while you appear to have completely discredited yourself at the end there all on your own, I thought
Re:Its rights online, just not YOUR rights (Score:2, Insightful)
And what is to stop the musicians hiring people to do this, rather than these people hiring the musicians?
This cold still happen if they worked for the musicians, instead of the musicians working for them.
Re:Its rights online, just not YOUR rights (Score:2)
Untrue. There are always independant options. Use them.
I wonder (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
I'm sure he knows it's not theft, but all the sheeple reading the article wont know the difference between copyright infringement and theft, much less what copyright infringement is.
Re:I wonder (Score:4, Funny)
Now if we could only get Bush to misrepresent the truth in only the way he can under grand jury proceedings about say weapons of mass destruction in Iraq... we could arrest him for LYING UNDER OATH by the Figure of Speech conversion.
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
Re:I wonder (Score:2, Funny)
Re:I wonder (Score:2)
If the case goes to court with these people charged with theft, then you will have reason to complain, but that's unlikely (because they'd be aquited, at least on that charge)
Re:I wonder (Score:3, Interesting)
Yes theft is an often misused conce
Theft? Do the photo test. (Score:2)
In terms of law: no it's not theft. (It's not stealing either). No physical objects were removed from anyone's possession. It's not theft!
A simple test for theft: take a picture of the object before it is stolen, then take another picture after the crime. You can see that the object is gone! If you cannot do this, then it's not theft!
Re:Theft? Do the photo test. (Score:2)
Actually yes, theft does have to be physical because it refers to property, according to the legal definition. And no, 'intellectual property' (a misleading term) does not count as property.
Read:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Theft [wikipedia.org]
and:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Larceny [wikipedia.org]
which descibes the legal definitions rather the incorrect definition which seems to be getting more and more popular on Slashdot as more and more incorrect uses of it are made by leading figures in the RIAA
Does this really solve the problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Does this really solve the problem (Score:2)
Shoot to kill on first sight!
Re:Does this really solve the problem (Score:2)
So we'll pay to support someone who we payed to destroy.
Once again (Score:2)
Selling or Trading? (Score:2, Interesting)
Makes me sick (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
Re:Makes me sick (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Makes me sick (Score:3, Informative)
Not true. Ford, GM, and many other manufacturing corporation. What is true is that a large part of the U.S. economy is a service economy and also is based on revenues from Intellectual Property. So for the U.S. there is a real value in ensuring that each copy of a product is purchased.
"intellectual property" then becomes all the more important for maintaining control in a capitalistic economy still based on scarcity.
As before, "all" is
Re:Makes me sick (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
People should be paid for making NEW information patterns.
How would you propose this happen? It's a nice idea, but I don't see how it actually could be implemented. Who would pay for the new idea? Why would they pay for it
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
In 2004, U.S. agricultural exports to China totaled a record $6.5 billion, an increase of five percent over the previous year. China is now the fourth largest market for U.S. agricultural exports, surpassed only by Canada, Mexico and Japan. cite:http://www.ncfb.com/mediaC/accent/accent_0516 05.html [ncfb.com]
We are still the number 1 exporter of tobacco products around the world. American cigarettes are highly reguarded as the best quality one can
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
Theft, huh? PROVE YOUR LOSS. Oh wait, you didn't lose anything...so you can't! Copyright infringement is NOT theft.
Re:Makes me sick (Score:2)
Where is my local FBI office? (Score:3, Interesting)
Shoplifting VS Copyright Infringement (Score:4, Interesting)
I had an arguement about copying vs sharing, the guy was saying that copying software isn't the same as sharing, he said if you gave away your copy to the person then that would be sharing. I guess that he also thinks that someone writting down a copy of a recipe for a friend isn't sharing either.
There are many methods that could be used for allowing artists to make money and allowing people to share. One such way that I've thought could be good is for the artists to just with-hold new albums, and saying they need $X amount and once that is reached they will release it for everyone to share. I'm sure that they fans would quickly fund the artist, this way the artist would get money for their art (instead of the big labels soaking it up and dripping a little down to the artists) and more people would have access to the music. The only people that don't like this seem to be those that think 'why should I give money away and then people who haven't get to download the music/movie for free'.
Re:Shoplifting VS Copyright Infringement (Score:3, Interesting)
Stupid blind consumers will buy a product sight unseen. I read reviews, try to find legal samples on the Internet, maybe here it on the radio, ask friends or people w/ similar musical tastes about the band. I wou
Re:Shoplifting VS Copyright Infringement (Score:2)
Re:Have a reality check (Score:2)
Re:Have a reality check (Score:2)
If you're a poor person - well, let's just say that poor people in China are an object lesson about what you get when you let pure, undiluted capitalism run amuck.
Yes, China's economic system is a lot more capitalistic than any other First World country's economic system right now - the U.S.'s economic structure is positively socialistic compared to China's (although I'm sure the U.S. rightwing-nuts are trying hard to fi
The article says... (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Worked so hard? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Worked so hard? (Score:3, Informative)
Im not saying Tom Cruise works as hard as a coal miner, but is that true for everyone whose income depends on that industry?
the cameramen? lighting guys? set dressers? continuity staff? scriptwriters? set designers? the catering crew? the security guys at the studio? the artists? CG guys?
You think everyone who works in entertainment works less than 1% as hard as everyone outside entertainment?
Watch the DVD extras from Lord of The Rings, then tell
Re:Worked so hard? (Score:2)
why is this on here? (Score:2, Interesting)
If there arrests... (Score:3, Insightful)
They definately do need to be locked up, if I pay for software I at least expect it to be legit
Re:If there arrests... (Score:2)
GET A DICTIONARY! (Score:2)
Re:GET A DICTIONARY! (Score:2)
The **AA needs to be reasonable about copyrights (Score:2)
I just shared a bunch of CDs (Score:2)
Rejecting 'entertainment' (Score:4, Interesting)
Guess what? It doesn't significantly impact the self-perceived quality of my life to any extent.
That would suggest that *much* of the entertainment media (movies & sound-tracks) are "add-ons" -- i.e. they must create the demand and the consumers buy into it.
From my perspective the entire copyright debate tends to boil down to a question of whether or not you are producing something which people are willing to pay to see/hear. From my rather jaded viewpoint the answer is no.
If an individual has a perspective that all copyrighted information will eventually be available for free (which is true to the best of my knowledge) *and* that human lifespan is only limited by our current lack of knowledge with respect to the biology of aging and how to prevent it, then the media producers have a significant problem... I.e. "How do I produce material which people are willing to pay to see now... vs. material which they will (legally) be free to see/hear sometime in the future?"
Even though the material producers have pushed laws which extend copyright protections far beyond their original intent -- the progress in extending the human lifespan has not been locked in stasis either. Unless copyright protections are pushed beyond the maximum feasible human lifespan I will eventually have *legal* access to all of the material for free.
So it would appear the entire "copying" debate is wrapped up in the question of whether or not one has access to it "now" or at sometime in the future. One could obviously draw analogies between the entertainment realm and other forms of self-gratification.
Re:Article is kinda skimpy on details (Score:3, Insightful)
You didn't hear? Yeah, they run the government now.
Here is their real URL (Score:2)
Re:Osama who? (Score:2, Funny)
The question now is... who are THEY?!?!!!
Re:Operation FastLink (Score:2, Funny)
Terrorists, child pornographers, and warezers! (Score:2)
Re:Why don't they go after GPL violators? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:What were you arrested for, kid? (Score:2, Funny)