MPAA College Toolkit Raises Privacy, Security Concerns 188
An anonymous reader writes "The Motion Picture Association of America last month sent letters to the presidents of 25 major universities (pdf), urging them to download and install a 'university toolkit' to help identify students who were downloading/sharing movie files. The Washington Post's Security Fix blog reports that any university that installs the software could be placing a virtual wiretap on their networks for the MPAA (and the rest of the world) to listen in on all of the school's traffic. From the story: 'The MPAA also claims that using the tool on a university network presents "no privacy issues — the content of traffic is never examined or displayed.' That statement, however, is misleading. Here's why: The toolkit sets up an Apache Web server on the user's machine. It also automatically configures all of the data and graphs gathered about activity on the local network to be displayed on a Web page, complete with ntop-generated graphics showing not only bandwidth usage generated by each user on the network, but also the Internet address of every Web site each user has visited. Unless a school using the tool has firewalls on the borders of its network designed to block unsolicited Internet traffic — and a great many universities do not — that Web server is going to be visible and accessible by anyone with a Web browser."
Which 25 universities? (Score:5, Insightful)
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MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:4, Insightful)
"This makes no sense. What are they going to accomplish by going after college kids, who really don't have that much disposable income? It seems counter-productive to me."
they're trying to scare them into not pirating. The MPAA is scared to death that it will simply be ingrained in our culture (as it has in some other society's cultures) that piracy is perfectly OK.
We'll see how this plays out. Back in the 80's I pirated lots of software, and I heard stories of other teenagers being caught for it. Now that I'm an adult, I'm no longe a pirate. The prosecution of software pirates in the 1980s didn't push me into a life of hoisting the Jolly Roger; on the contrary, once I got a job and learned more about how the real world works, I prefer to respect the copyright of others.
I agree with you that many of the college kids who are pirates today will continue to be as they enter adulthood, but that percentage may not be as high as we might think.
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
The thing with piracy is once you get enough money (first job) it's less attractive to spend 2h filtering through torrents to download a season 30 min TV show then it is to spend $80 on the box set. So Piracy may set up the appetites the same way it does for software and convenience and economics convert them to customers.
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"Piracy did wonders for Microsoft and likely photo, Maya, Lightwave, and many other programs. The cost of these programs puts them out of reach of kids, and kids are the ones who will pick up these essential skills fastest."
Which I believe is EXACTLY why the BSA (the software industry's equivalent of the MPAA) hasn't made college kids their primary target. They tend to go after the businesses, which have the money and should know better.
"The thing with piracy is once you get enough money (first job)
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Notice I'm not saying "DONT PIRATE" or anything, as frankly I don't care. But at least stop deluding yourself with half-assed justifications.
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Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
They're not chasing the money. They're chasing the people who can be made examples of.
They're not trying to find people who can pay the settlements -- they're looking for people they can establish the legal precedent and scare the crap out of people. In their mind, if they can stop it in the places where it happens most, and instill in people a great fear, then people will dutifully line up and buy tickets. This is all about the low-hanging fruit and those that can't easily defend themselves.
The MPAA doesn't give a flying fuck about privacy and security, at least not yours -- they care about their products, their revenue stream, and their business model.
You'll notice that just a few days ago we say a story of how an *AA sponsored bill is working its way through Congress which would require all universities to buy subscriptions for every student to Napster or risk losing federal support. In other words, they want to get paid for every single university student on the rationale that since they're all pirating, then the *AA's should get paid. Of course, they'll eventually want to extend to high schools, and then eventually to the rest of us.
What they're looking for is laws to reinforce their monopoly, government agencies to police their copyrights, and federally assured revenue streams. They don't give a rats ass about customers or the risk of how they might be perceived. They're incapable/unwilling to look at the bigger picture. I can understand their point to an extent -- they simply cannot fathom how to 'monetize' all of these digital things, and they're fighting back the only way they know how.
In their collective minds, if you can't afford to pay to see/hear/hum their products, you should simply do without. And, since they haven't been able to stop it, they're perfectly willing to shit in everyones shoes to get it stopped. If they can get government to do the heavy work, all the better for them.
Cheers
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Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Properly, you're describing an oligopoly [wikipedia.org] (or maybe an oligarchy [wikipedia.org]).
The US hasn't gotten anywhere near fascism yet, and not even where the ideology would take them. Just because companies are tied closely to lawmakers, that doesn't make you fascists. People like to bandy that term about, but it's not applicable in this context.
Cheers
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You were going so well until...
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Illegal downloads take music/movies out of their control. They won't admit this, but this issue is more important to them than the money. They don't care if the film downloaded was one that was otherwise sitting in the vault, available only on a dozen VHS copies left over from a network broadcast ten years ago. It's their property and if they want it to sit in the vault gathering dust, we the public should kiss their feet thanking them for that decision.
As far as the money is concerned, they think that these actions will make pirating movies less attractive which will drive more people to buy/rent movies and/or watch movies in the theater. No, don't argue back that pirated copies versus legal copies that would have been bought isn't a 1:1 ratio. Stuff like "ratios" sounds ominously like math to these executives. The only math they care about is the rate at which money is flowing into their pockets.
And speaking of "rate at which money is flowing", they feel entitled to constantly increasing profits year after year. After all, they've given us such quality works as Boy Band #34 and Third Sequel Of Generic Action Movie - Now With More Explosions. Why aren't we, the public, rushing out to the stores and shoving money into their pockets for this stuff? After all, Boy Band #7 did really well and they were basically the same guys as #34. Also, Generic Action Movie did pretty well in the box office. Why shouldn't the third sequel pull in even more money? (After all, the studio executives made sure the director added more explosions since they [the execs] knew that is what the public wanted.) Any appeals to logic about how spending money is tighter, how people have more options (online entertainment, video games, etc), or how quality is declining fall on deaf ears. After all, they got profit in the past and that means they should get bigger profit now. The only explanation has to be those dirty, rotten Internet pirates.
Of course, all of this isn't meant to excuse downloading something without the copyright owner's permission. I still think that you shouldn't do that. At the same time, however, I don't think that the MPAA/RIAA are living in the real world with some of the actions they have taken (and some of the things they have tried to get done). At best, they've lost whatever moral high ground they would have had. At worst, they've become so criminal that people committing massive copyright infringement actually have a degree of moral high ground over them.
In addition,
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"You're not thinking like a MPAA/RIAA executive. MPAA/RIAA executives don't think logically with a long-term outlook."
Oh, no, quite the contrary. While we may not agree with the MPAA's reasoning, they are going after the universities because of the long-term implications. It's the very same reason that car companies and cigarette companies go after the young-adult market: to create customers for life. In this example, the MPAA is distributing this network monitoring tool because their concern is that on
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I think I've read just today enough executive-bashing for a lifetime. These people are human beings. They aren't some money making machine who's only concern is their bank account (that's what the corporation is for). They have concerns, pride, reputations, futures, fears, friends and families. They can't all just care about money flowing into their pocke
Harvard (Score:4, Funny)
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It makes hasbeens[1] like Gene Simmons happy?
Seriously, it has one positive effect -- it increases the loathing the public feels for the MAFIAA, and helps hasten to change to different and better creative arts distribution models.
[1]: In my opinion, artists are entitled to pay, like the rest of us, as long as they create. Once the creating stops, the money should stop too.
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Funny)
You must DEFINITELY be new here!
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Scarcity is a necessary economic principle even for intellectual items, and without it, you won't see anyone interested in producing intellectual works.
This of course is where we all disagree. I happen to believe - strongly - that you're wrong about this. Already we're seeing smart people (e.g. Madonna) distancing themselves from the labels and signing contracts with concert bookers instead. There will always be people interested in producing intellectual works, and there will always be people who will find a way to profit from it. With or without IP.
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
So I agree with you, but the GP is absolutely correct about scarcity. The "industry" crews want to enforce artifical scarcity to drive prices up, the real world wants normal scarcity that deals with the fact that not everyone likes all types of music, nor will everyone become a musician. The this market WILL sort itself out when unburdened from so much silly regulation. The problem is, after the market balances, it will be closer to perfect competition rather than the monopolistic competition we have today, and the fat bastards in big offices and their greasy lawyers don't like that.
Remember kids...the RIAA has struck a deal so they get paid royalties for music they don't own the copyright to. They have been beating the drums of war and lobbying like crazy to make sure THEY are the only method of distribution. If you think this has much to do with the consumer you are deluded...this has everything to do with making sure no one can compete with them.
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Open letter to the MAFIAA (Score:5, Insightful)
You've noticed that the number of students who think downloading movies and music via the internet is OK. Well, here's some news for you:
Vox populi, vox Dei.
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Nec audiendi qui solent dicere, Vox populi, vox Dei, quum tumultuositas vulgi semper insaniae proxima sit.
Re:Open letter to the MAFIAA (Score:4, Funny)
Utinam coniurati te in foro interficiant.
Re:Open letter to the MAFIAA (Score:4, Insightful)
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Good point. Perhaps i should clarify. MAFIAA prices are insanely high. You don't expect consumers to just sit there and buy obediently, right?
and worse than that, think it's OK (Score:2)
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Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
There is also a bit of thorn here. People who consume more will often consider it more important. There is a very strong correlation with "Frequent Copyright infringer" and "good customer". So the MPAA wants to reduce one without reducing the other. The RIAA completely botched it and didn't see the correlation. Their sales may hurt as people try to find alternatives. MPAA is slightly more fortunate that since movies are larger infringement is less casual and high quality products mroe difficult to produce (for music the difference between a $1500 recording and a $5 million recording isn't always obvious. But the difference between a $1500 movies and a $5 movie sis blatant).
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Since Copyright is relatively new, you are actually saying that no intellectual works were produced before somone invented the Copyright law?
The scarcity is produced by the state, with help of Copyright law, to help producers of intellectual works recieving monoy for their work. What is actually happening is that the Copyright law has been kidnapped
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The technology to record and duplicate those recordings easily changes things fundamentally. Some form of copyright is a good thing. But what we have now is not it.
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And even if the one you buy for $5 is legit there's a huge chance that it's stolen.
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It's the only way to stop this disturbing trend where a whole generation is growing up believing that the only things with value are physical items.
Leaving aside all other arguments, I don't think this can be prevented. Increases in bandwidth and storage space make it easier to share information, and consequently, more difficult to limit the spread of information. This trend shows no signs of slowing, and so I can't see copyright infringement becoming any less prolific.
Scarcity is a necessary economic principle even for intellectual items, and without it, you won't see anyone interested in producing intellectual works.
The open source movement produces plenty of intellectual work without having to resort to artificial scarcity, and I doubt that everyone interested in music or writing is motivated by
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Up until now I thought that 'intellectual work' most — if not all (which is an issue of definition) — time is happening in a space rather detached from (normative) 'economic principles'. Of course *AA trolls might think otherwise.
CC.
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Insightful)
Couldn't agree more. The problem is that you seem confused about who is right. Your comment indicates a certain lack of awareness of the real societal issues (check out some of Ray Beckerman's [blogspot.com] writings if you want to get a handle on them.) Perhaps you work for a media company. Regardless, there's a lot more going on here that meets the eye.
I would also recommend reading the relevant portions of the Constitution, the history of copyright and its true purpose, current copyright law (what I was able to understand of it as a non-lawyer is depressingly unbalanced), and most important of all discover what the Founders (Jefferson in particular) believed is the proper role of copyright in our society. Once you understand that, you will see just how damaged we have been by the recent divergence in purpose, from promoting "the progress of science and useful arts, by securing for limited times to authors and inventors the exclusive right to their respective writings and discoveries" to "securing endless revenue streams for companies that have effectively stolen rights to the works whose authors they claim to represent." The power of Copyright has been conscripted by some particularly evil individuals, with the willing complicity of certain members of Congress. I presume you're an American: given our traditions of freedom and respect for individual rights I am amazed that you could take the position you have. Bankrupting college kids is not a solution: if you think it is you are in error, and are part of the problem.
The problem here is not copyright infringement: it's media companies setting themselves up as private police forces, with unchecked surveillance and enforcement capabilities, and no due process. That goes very much against the grain of, well, pretty much every civilized nation on the planet. These are powers that should be reserved for legitimate government, not the private sector. And don't even start with "they'll have their day in court" or "if they're innocent they have nothing to worry about." Would that were true, but of the thousands of people sued by the RIAA, how many people have actually fought back? How many had the resources to even try to fight back? A tiny fraction: the rest settled out-of-court regardless of actual guilt, the RIAA having served as judge, jury and executioner, using "evidence" (and I use the term loosely) that is largely manufactured out of thin air. Furthermore, the RIAA (and the MPAA) is much like the Internal Revenue Service
Furthermore, you seem to have forgotten that this is supposed to be a nation by, of and for The People. If we, as a nation, have decided that extended copyright and strict enforcement is not something we need or want then nobody, certainly not a bunch of mere copyright holders who themselves have created nothing have any moral high ground here whatsoever. It's a blind, unfounded assumption on your part that we need to get tough on copyright infringement, indeed that we need such extreme laws in the first place. I would argue that we never have, and do not now.
What we have here is a classic example of unenlightened capitalism, the kind of no-holds-barred screw-everyone-but-ourselves school of business management that does nothing but enrich a few at the expense of everyone else, causing a fair amount of collateral damage in the process. Worse yet, our entertainment industry (which at the present time is composed largely of foreign-owned corpor
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I would like to summarize you're well thought out, but long-winded post.
See: Lawful Neutral [wikipedia.org]
Compare. Discuss.See: Neutral Good [wikipedia.org]
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Don't worry, the *AA are trying to fix that, via making copyright infringement a criminal offense, or passing laws to allow t [slashdot.org]
Re:MPAA Chasing the Money? (Score:5, Interesting)
2. If the only reason to limit access to a resource of plenty is creating the ability for a few to profiteer from it, then I would call this theft. That's like putting soldiers around a well to allow a person to sell more bottled water.
3. The intrinsic value of information lies in the fact that it is connected to other pieces of information, and the value of information increases if it can be connected to more information. Limiting the ability to interconnect information is thus degrading the value of said information.
4. There is always the famous quote (sometimes attributed to Isaac Newton or Robert Hooke, but both were also just quoting, thus pirating valuable intellectual property!): "If I have seen a little further it is by standing on the shoulders of Giants." There is no work of Art or invention or other intellectual work that stands all for itself. It is always the result of a huge body of knowledge and art it builds on. Limiting access to this body of knowledge is limiting the ability to create new intellectual works.
5. Thus, while the argument that a creator should be able to somehow get rewarded for his creation, has something for itself, it's not the sole reason for the creation itself. There are many others, and limiting access to creative works is in fact reducing the ability or the joy of new creation. Encouraging creative works thus has to take other things in consideration, and access to already created works is one of the most basic things.
6. Most economies were growing fastest at the moment, when limits of access to the body of knowledge were lifted, when duplication of works was getting cheaper, when monastry libraries were opened to the public, when access to universities was facilitated, when the number of people learning a music instrument by playing music works was increasing, in fact when creative works were turned from a scarce resource to a nearly unlimited source.
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Oh, and before we start moaning about poor old RIAA and the MPAA, let's remember that it's RIAA's membe
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It's not illegal to download the file. It's illegal to upload it.
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"You downloaded 10 songs, equalling 10 violations" vs. "You distributed 10 songs to 100 people, equalling 1000 violations"
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These are kids who should know better, and are committing lots of infringement (and worse than that, think it's OK).
Is copyright infringement wrong? Along the same lines: is drinking alcohol on the day before your 21st birthday wrong? Assuming you say yes, why are these wrong? Is the act of breaking a law wrong? What happens when there are two contradicting laws?
Legal/illegal and right/wrong are two very different beasts that have little to do with each other. If copyright infringement is wrong, then sharing with your neighbor must be wrong too.
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It's the only way to stop this disturbing trend where a whole generation is growing up believing that the only things with value are physical items. Scarcity is a necessary economic principle even for intellectual items, and without it, you won't see anyone interested in producing intellectual works.
Indeed. It is for this reason that Linux does not exist, that Rembrandt died a rich man, that artists are not generally starving, that musicians make money from CDs, that the novels displaying virtuosity are best sellers and pulp drivel is not, that art house cinema attracts the massive profits and attention that it does and that poets continue to write.
Without money, there is no inspiration. Of this, above all else, there can be absolutely no doubt.
Any university that installs that has a problem. (Score:5, Insightful)
Xubuntu (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Xubuntu (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Xubuntu (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Xubuntu (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Xubuntu (Score:5, Insightful)
They don't appear to have a link to the source. Quick! Someone send them a DMCA takedown!
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The MPAA running open source tools to spy on university networks pegs my irony meter.
What a fun time hackers would have borking this tool kit. It's a treasure trove of information.
I wonder if the buggy whip manufacturers were this retarded trying to undermine the horseless carriage?
Never examined? (Score:5, Insightful)
Given that the aim of the toolkit is supposedly to
then how do they manage it without examining traffic? If the toolkit monitors BitTorrent (and other) ports then that would tell you who is using P2P, but not who is sharing movies. Maybe all that traffic is from students internally torrenting various Linux distros or their garage bands' MP3s.
Thank goodness I never lived in University halls.
Re:Never examined? (Score:4, Insightful)
Easy, they do what they do best. Lie.
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> >
> then how do they manage it without examining traffic?
We're talking about the wonderful corporations who brought us fine tech documentaries such as "War Games", "Hackers", "The Net" and "Jurassic Park". I'm sure their expert technical advisors are simply unable to effectively communicate the details to mere normals such as ourselves.
c.
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The secret is in this function patented by the MPAA:
private bool isInfringing(IP IPAddress)
{
return true;
}
Media failure (Score:2)
Naive much? (Score:3, Insightful)
You wonder why no large media companies (fixed it for you) have a report devoted to this, or even report on it much or do anything but rehash the RIAA/MPAA press statements and never ever examine it.
Follow the money. You might as well ask, why do popular entertainment shows like Futurama show a dislike for things like napster and filesharing in general? Because they are the ones whose files are being shared!
Geez, name a news company that isn't part of some huge media giant. You might start to realize that
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Certainly possible. However, as a guy who spent over two decades producing content for media companies (although back in my day we used to call it writing for the newspaper) I never, ever had anybody stop me from writing something. Heck, I rarely had anybody telling me what to cover, since as the designated expert, I was the guy telling my bosses what was important. But do go on...
The problem isn't so much blatant censorship int hat fashion it's more like this: Neo-con journalists tend to write Neo-con articles. Neo-Con editors tend to hire Neo-con journalists. Neo-con paper owners tend to hire Neo-Con editors. Thus The guy at the top influences the content being output through editorial/selective means. A story of "Man dies after police taser him" can be spun as "Belligerent suspect dies after struggle with police" or "Unarmed immigrant murdered by police."
This tyep of spin is true
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Media coverage (outside the local level, where it's mired in "if if bleeds it leads") generally fits into the following cubbyholes: National (political) news, local (political) news, sports, and business. "Features" is everything from restaurant reviews
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I think your analysis certainly identifies a factor, but I would suggest that the larger problem is this: media organizations are run by middle aged (or even old) white guys. They use a computer for email and Google; that's it. Online banking? Are you crazy?
Media coverage (outside the local level, where it's mired in "if if bleeds it leads") generally fits into the following cubbyholes: National (political) news, local (political) news, sports, and business. "Features" is everything from restaurant reviews to comics. Where exactly does coverage of computer security fit?
I certainly agree that the "journalist" demographic doesn't frequently overlap the "tech guru" demographic and the lack of overlap likely leads to poor or infrequent reporting on that topic.
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Washington Post? No
New York Times? No
Los Angeles Times? No
Wall Street Journal? Not until it was just bought by Murdoch..
CBS? No
NBC? No
ABC? Disney
CNN? No
Which ones are you thinking of? The shareholder thing, well, maybe, but what evidence is there that this is true?
In fairness, I spent much of life as a journalist, and I did once encounter, late in my career, internal corporate objectio
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Give kids a break (Score:4, Funny)
Thanks,
The NWO
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While my mind was "corrupt" regarding corporate control, copyrights and IP infringement long before entering college, the vast majority of those in college learn about it as soon as they step foot into their dorm room and their geek roommate/hallmate/
we want to identify what? (Score:2)
But students would find ways around the filter?
vs.
Their toolkit wrongly identifies students as illegal down loaders who actually aren't.
In other words, how is the toolkit going to verify an illegal download or is it just passing all traffic to the Motion Picture spys?
Somehow this sounds more Hitleronian tell on you fa
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"Their toolkit wrongly identifies students as illegal down loaders who actually aren't. In other words, how is the toolkit going to verify an illegal download or is it just passing all traffic to the Motion Picture spys? Somehow this sounds more Hitleronian tell on you family, then its supports education. Just because the entertainment industry has found interest in attacking its customers, should the universities follow suit?"
It's a tool, not a judge. Its intended user is the university IT guy; it shows
Sure, this will work.... (Score:2)
It's elementary, dear Watson... (Score:3, Insightful)
Anyone want to make a bet.... (Score:2)
Here's an idea... (Score:2)
1) Install a firewall that sniffs traffic
2) See if it's not bittorrent or bittorrent sites
3) if it is, BLOCK IT
4) Put the MPAA toolkit in a machine behind the firewall! Ta-da!
I want to thank... (Score:2)
Everyone please remember to distribute those IP addresses of the kit downloaders so we can hit these colleges HARD!
It sounds like... (Score:2)
mpaa urges students to install mpaaBuddy, too (Score:5, Funny)
Other features include, an integrated download tracker, movie-related themes, desktops, screen savers, and cute, animated emoticons, bearing a resemblance to top-selling actors. Also included is a desktop search utility that indexes a hard drive's contents in order to allow the user to easily perform searches.
While initial response to the program has been positive, a few early users complain that the program is buggy. "The program keeps changing my home page to a crappy MPAA home page," said one teenager who wished to remain anonymous out of fear of a MPAA-sponsored lawsuit. There have also been complaints of an increase in pop-up advertising.
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One problem is that Tom only recommends his own movies.
Another is he keeps yakking about how getting Audited will solve all your problems, and get you a Real Doll Katie Holmes Bot of your very own.
Will they abide by GPL? (Score:2, Interesting)
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LOL...I can see it now. The next court case will be Stallman, FSF, EFF, and a million GPL-code authors suing the MAFIAA for copyright violations because they haven't released the source code. And, all the arguments that the MAFIAA have made in court previously will be dropping on them like a ton of AOL cd mailers. BWAH-HA-HA-HA-HA!!!!!
To the language nazis out there: if the MAFIAA gets hoisted on their own copyright petard, is that irony?
Here's some information about the software. (Score:3, Interesting)
Also, the software developer is breaking the law. They haven't shipped the modified code they've made (eg ntop).
Question... (Score:2)
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Of course, it's alright for them to rip off "some damn pinko commie's" code to save themselves from the spectre of "new media," free thinkers and falling revenue, isn't it? After all, given the content they produce is such good
Does this tool put a lot of load on the network? (Score:2)
Does it try to suck up network bandwidth?
Let's sue 'em! (Score:2)
Trademark and GPL issues? (Score:3, Interesting)
1. Since the kit is a derivative of the default Xbuntu install, is the MPAA still allowed to ship the kit with Canonical's trademark (Xbuntu) prominently displayed as boot splash?
2. Since the MPAA is distributing GPL'd software aren't they obligated to provide source code for the kit upon request?
3. Is there any MPAA written programs included in the kit? Is it based on GPL software and thus required under the licensing terms to have its source code available upon request?
4. IIRC, Canonical products ship with some proprietary drivers. Since the MPAA kit is a derivative of Xbuntu, does it have permission to distribute the same drivers, or did Canonical get special permission which the MPAA does not have?
5. If the MPAA does not supply any source code that the may be legally obligated to do under GPLv2 license, then can individual copyright holders of the multitude of programs included with Xbuntu, give notice that they are revoking the MPAA's right to distribute their software under the provision of Section 4? Section 4 states:
Note that Fyodor terminated SCO's right to distribute Nmap in any of their products under that section, which SCO complied with.
Even If (Score:3, Insightful)
Even if there is a firewall at the perimeter of the school network, all of the students are inside of it!
Hitting the Wrong Targets - as Usual (Score:2)
This looks certain to hit the wrong targets, as is wont for the RIAA. All this would identify (if the truth is being told here) are heavy Internet users. That's even worse than their current method of sending questionable IP addresses and times. College should be teaching how the Internet will be a valuable part of your whole life because you can speak to to the entire World through it, but now it would seem you'll be in danger if you ever use it muc
Hidden Content (Score:2, Interesting)
This version is slightly longer, with what looks like a section detailing development goals. Can anyone see anything incriminating there?
Nice Tool (Score:2)
Want us to stop copying? (Score:2)
Surfs up hit torrent sites at least a month ago, just about to appear in Danish cinemas, that means at least another 4-5 months before we can buy it on DVD.
Yeah they want to get as much money from us as they can by forcing us to go to the cinemas, I did just that tonight to watch beowulf - my first trip to a cinema for 3-4 months and I got reminded why I hate it there - the stink of popcorn, the constant yabbering and 25 minuttes
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Most of academia (at least MIT and CMU, where I've been as an intern and a student, respectively) seems to hand out public IP's with almost everything open to the world. The only thing that's not open is usually Windows networking ports, because of the major problems it would cause if anyone had open shares. But port 80 is definitely accessible from anywhere.
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Most of academia [...] seems to hand out public IP's with almost everything open to the world
The same goes for the schools (one Ivy, one big Tech) I've attended. And I wouldn't have it any other way! The Ivy was especially nice; I loved the fact that, anywhere in the world, I could ping "machine.residentialnetwork.schoolname.edu." Knowing I could ssh into my box from anywhere was really great, as was knowing that I could run an ftp server whenever I wanted to share some large files. Really, it's how the Internet (e.g., pre-NAT) was supposed to work.
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Don't whitewash allofmp3... (Score:2)