FBI, DoJ Add 35 Positions For Intellectual Property Battle 140
coondoggie writes "The FBI and Department of Justice said they were going to go hard after intellectual property crimes this year and so far they seem to be keeping their word, as today the agencies appointed 15 new Assistant US Attorney (AUSA) positions and 20 FBI Special Agents dedicated to fighting domestic and international IP crimes. The 15 new AUSAs will work closely with the Criminal Division's Computer Crime and Intellectual Property Section to aggressively pursue high tech crime, including computer crime and intellectual property offenses. The new positions will be located in California, the District of Columbia, Maryland, Massachusetts, Michigan, New Jersey, New York, Pennsylvania, Texas, Virginia, and Washington. The 20 FBI Special Agents will be deployed to specifically boost four geographic areas with intellectual property squads, and increase investigative capacity in other locations around the country where intellectual property crimes are of particular concern. The four squads will be located in New York, San Francisco, Los Angeles, and the District of Columbia."
The Downfall Caption Idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Unfortunately that's no longer possible [slashdot.org] as Youtube/Google seems to have outlawed parodies and freedom of expression/dissent in favor of draconian law.
How appropriate.
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
There's always fair use [boingboing.net].
Re: (Score:2)
Mr Smith...what good is a phone call...if you are unable to speak...
Unfortunately, YouTube etc have decided to simply comply without listening to counterclaims against the misused DMCA takedowns. Until there is a penalty for filing a false DMCA takedown notice, the right to fair use is more or less worth nothing.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
No, I just can't resist a Matrix reference.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Youtube is not a public service (Score:3, Insightful)
Google is a private entity, unless you think that they are somehow owned/run by the government... and thus do not have to allow *anything* on their site. It may not follow their "do not evil" mantra, but it's w
Re: (Score:2)
Google is owned by a political refugee from a police state that should have more enlightened sensibilities due to his own personal experience.
Re: (Score:2)
for somebody with such a low user number, I'd have expected at least some concept of what a "corporation" is. Hint: corporations aren't owned by "a [person]"
No ... but if Brin said, "This is the way I want it", believe me, that's the way it would be.
Re: (Score:1, Funny)
My favorite of thise is when he finds out the price of the Bushmaster ACR.
Of course you can still make the parody video you describe but you'll need to host it on your own web site. This is a much better option for you because you'll find out quickly what it is like to deal with DMCA takedown notices, and C&D letters, and the real costs of the bandwidth needed to dissimenate popular videos over the internet, and wrench the servers to do that, and so on and so forth.
That way in the future you'll pause be
Re: (Score:2)
My favorite of thise is when he finds out the price of the Bushmaster ACR.
Of course you can still make the parody video you describe but you'll need to host it on your own web site. This is a much better option for you because you'll find out quickly what it is like to deal with DMCA takedown notices, and C&D letters, and the real costs of the bandwidth needed to dissimenate popular videos over the internet, and wrench the servers to do that, and so on and so forth.
That way in the future you'll pause before whining about some free service someone else provides that doesn't quite to every single thing you think it should do.
If they weren't making lots of money from it, or at least planning to, they wouldn't be offering those services. They don't do it out of the kindness of their hearts. We certainly have every right to request improvements to the site. If they want our eyeballs on their ads, then they should try to make the site the kind of place where we want to spend a fair amount of time. As for the cost of bandwidth, you can't really compare hosting something yourself to what Google does. They're in a whole different
Re: (Score:2)
Related: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kBO5dh9qrIQ [youtube.com].
Re: (Score:1, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
"seems to have outlawed parodies" is a little harsh. decided to err on the side of taking down parodies not likely to stand up to suit under a fair use defense, sure. the downfall vids would likely not be able to muster a strong fair use defense, as their commentary was not about The Downfall, but usually either in comparing some other social figure or movement to hitler, or making fun of hitler. legally a parody must be in some way a parody of the original, not just the ideas. Artistically, i think this is really stupid, but its how the courts have been interpreting the law.
Well, yeah, but its way funner to rant about how google is evil and ignoring fair use without understanding what is and is not fair use.
Re: (Score:2)
Ah, but then they get arrested in Australia under child pornography laws.
I have to admit (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
In most cases what they deem to be "Intellectual Property" certainly is a crime. I think tax money could be better spent fixing the system.
When it comes to kids sharing songs, that's civil, not criminal.
Re:I have to admit (Score:5, Interesting)
I believe Nerdfest was arguing that the continuation of copyright in perpetuity ought to be considered a criminal infringement of the rights of society at large, and that intellectual property laws should be rewritten to prevent the present situation from being possible, wherein art is institutionalized and can never become part of the public domain.
At least, that's an estimated translation in layman's term. His thick legalese can certainly be hard to digest.
Re: (Score:2)
a criminal infringement of the rights of society at large
Trouble is that "society at large" doesn't ever get really pissed off and express itself in any way in a large loud unison voice.
The agenda to kill copyrights and patents (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Apparently the government believes otherwise, with guns to back it up, and a willing populace to keep them in power.
Re: (Score:1)
I don't play the victim game. We can put anything or anybody on the ballot we want. All verified by some of the goofy shit I see on some ballots. You produce enough signatures and make enough noise, and you'll get whatever you want on your ballot.
Re: (Score:2)
I don't play the victim game. We can put anything or anybody on the ballot we want. All verified by some of the goofy shit I see on some ballots. You produce enough signatures and make enough noise, and you'll get whatever you want on your ballot.
And misinformed and/or uninformed idiots will vote against your idea.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I think tax money could be better spent fixing the system.
I think that campaign contribution money has "fixed the system" quite well up to this point. I'm not sure I could stand any more "fixing".
But it could be... (Score:2)
> When it comes to kids sharing songs, that's civil, not criminal.
In theory, if you infringe upon the copyright of works with a retail value larger than a certain amount (I think it's $1000) in a certain period of time and you have a financial incentive (such as getting infringing copies of other copyrighted works in return), you can be prosecuted under criminal law. I believe the law that created those offenses is the NET Act (but get a lawyer if it ever applies to you).
Thing is, in practice, they don'
Re: (Score:2)
Perhaps if you'd look in the mirror, you'd see an even bigger gaping cunt staring back at you.
Get your facts right, maggot, before you infest us with your drivel.
Agricultural goods, aircraft, semiconductors, and cars (among other goods!) have higher dollar values exported than IP-related exports. Yes, IP is involved, since patents, etc, are a m
Clarify (Score:4, Funny)
20 FBI Special Agents dedicated to fighting domestic and international IP crimes.
So does that mean the FBI is going to be investigating US Citizens for IP of international origin, or somehow extending their Jurisdiction beyond the states?
Everyone knows the biggest file sharers in the world are Canadian.
Re: (Score:1)
Typical American with your "Blame Canada" songs and such!
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1, Flamebait)
Everyone knows the biggest file sharers in the world are Canadian.
Damn straight!
Re: (Score:2)
Dangerous pirates, the lot of us! Yarrrr, eh!
The question is who they're going after. (Score:5, Insightful)
One out of two ain't bad? (Score:2)
Going after the big-time bootleggers churning out counterfeits and selling fake Photoshop and DVDs online = fine and good.
Going after j. random filesharing = gaaak.
Well, at least you're half right.
Playing devil's advocate for a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
I wish that movies/music/software "sharing" was separated from movie/music/software counterfeiting and fake medicine and goods of course, but either way the American public needs to be protected from those threats.
Re:Playing devil's advocate for a second... (Score:5, Interesting)
While what you say is true, there's a tremendous difference between making counterfeit medicine (which could easily injure or kill someone), making a counterfeit watch (which is defrauding the customer by making them think it's something it's not), and sharing an MP3. Ultimately, the law is going to need to realize these distinctions. I think our tax money would be much better spent on bringing copyright and patent laws in line with the digital age, rather than trying to bring the digital age in line with copyright and patent law that was never designed with it in mind.
Hey, I can dream, can't I? But look at the fights the lawsuits caused. If Joe/Jane Average actually starts getting arrested for MP3 sharing, I think we'll see hell raised on a scale that'll make that look tame. It's just a shame that it would probably take that to get people to care.
Re: (Score:2)
Well the issue here is that digital copies are flawless. So what happens is, in the old days if someone copied your real goods that actually existed, no matter how good the copy was you could make a good argument it wasn't perfect and was therefore counterfeit.
However, for imaginary property, a flawless digital copy is identical to the legal item.
The copyright extortion industry wants to apply the harsh anti-counterfeiting rules to these intangible items by claiming the copies are not "genuine", but this ar
Re: (Score:2)
Since most software contains anti-piracy measures however, it often requires modification to work illegally. Thus, the counterfeit argument makes a lot more sense for software. If you get a pirated copy of Windoze and it crashes due to modifications made to disable the DRM (something real windows never does), it would besmirch Microsoft's flawless reputation for making stable, secure products, so counterfeit makes a lot more sense as a label.
All true, but just as with physical counterfeits, it's only fraud if there is deception, i.e. if the buyer is not informed. It shouldn't be illegal to sell (or otherwise distribute) fake brand-name merchandise provided the recipient knows they're not getting the real thing.
Re: (Score:2)
It shouldn't be illegal to sell (or otherwise distribute) fake brand-name merchandise provided the recipient knows they're not getting the real thing.
What a bizarre argument. What would be the point of using a band name on a fake if you were going to announce that it's fake? Why wouldn't you just sell it unbranded? There's no reason to stamp "Rolex" on a watch unless you want people to think it's a Rolex watch.
More to the point, though, Windows is a licensed product, not a durable good. If you want to sell an OS, feel free, but you can't take Windows and sell it with no brand on it, because it's Windows and you don't own the rights to sell Windows
Re: (Score:2)
What would be the point of using a band name on a fake if you were going to announce that it's fake? Why wouldn't you just sell it unbranded?
You might find this surprising, but people actually do buy brand-name goods knowing that they're fake, just to be able to show them off. There is a legitimate market for this sort of thing.
More to the point, though, Windows is a licensed product, not a durable good. If you want to sell an OS, feel free, but you can't take Windows and sell it with no brand on it, because it's Windows and you don't own the rights to sell Windows.
Were you following the thread at all? Yes, Windows is currently covered by copyright. We were discussing counterfeiting, not copyright. Counterfeiting Windows—selling a modified version with the Microsoft Windows brand name—would only be fraud if the buyer was not informed. If the sale is not fraudulent then t
Re: (Score:2)
Ultimately, the law is going to need to realize these distinctions.
It already does. It's the recording industry that doesn't.
Re:Playing devil's advocate for a second... (Score:5, Interesting)
I wish that movies/music/software "sharing" was separated from movie/music/software counterfeiting and fake medicine and goods of course, but either way the American public needs to be protected from those threats.
They used to be. It used to be that the entire point of a trademark is to make sure customers got what they ordered. And such things make sense and are -beneficial- to customers. Imagine the confusion if we had 5 different products known as the "Nintendo Wii" and a parent heard their kid wanting a Nintendo Wii so they go in and ask for a Nintendo Wii and they get http://technabob.com/blog/wp-content/uploads/2008/05/miwi_wii_knock_off.jpg [technabob.com] instead. With trademarks if it says Nintendo Wii it (should) be a Nintendo Wii.
Patents also used to be beneficial to the public. It used to be that guilds would control trade and monopolize the market effectively with "trade secrets" that would stay in the guild. Patents helped change this because the guild would disclose information while granted a temporary monopoly to use it (after all, someone who left one shop could have taken the trade secret to another and it would have been legal) and the public would get valuable information. Unfortunately, we've gone beyond that to theoretical, common-knowledge patents that prevent work-arounds. It used to be that if Joe Inc. had a patent on, say, a black and white CRT monitor, you could create a color CRT monitor and compete with Joe Inc. However, now, Joe Inc. would hold a patent on the ability to make CRT displays work, thus cutting out access to any work-arounds.
Copyright was also seen as a compromise, especially when it was sane. The author would be compensated for his work, the public wasn't offended (after all, no one was stopping hand-written copies, it was only if you owned a printing press that it mattered) and it gave the work to the public in a timely manner. However, ironically the company who depends the most on the public domain (Disney) has lobbied for effectively infinite copyright that harms the artist and the public.
Counterfeit goods should not be judged on IP issues (after all, if there was an iPhone clone that -really was- just like an iPhone no one is being harmed it simply increases competition for Apple) but rather for fraud. Quite honestly, I'd like to see a few of the Chinese knockoff phones and MP3 players appear in stores for disposable, feature-filled items.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Patents also used to be beneficial to the public. It used to be that guilds would control trade and monopolize the market effectively with "trade secrets" that would stay in the guild. Patents helped change this because the guild would disclose information while granted a temporary monopoly to use it [...]
The technology for reverse engineering stuff has also moved on greatly since the Middle Ages. It's very hard to keep something a trade secret if you don't physically control it. Which means that as so
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Yes, this the kind of IP enforcement I can actually agree with.
The other kind, I can't. Filesharing is not fraud.
I also wish there were different names for the two things. This doesn't deserve the label 'piracy'. It does not deserve to be lobbied for by the pirate party.
Re:Playing devil's advocate for a second... (Score:5, Insightful)
If you can't tell the difference then you are well beyond hope. It's the difference between protecting people from themselves and protecting people from FRAUD, even potentially lethal fraud. Even if you're getting down to bootlegged CDs or Photoshop...did those bootleggers do ANYTHING to earn that money aside from running off phony copies? No, they didn't, so why are they entitled to make money from outright fraud? File sharing is generally a non-profit enterprise. Bootlegging is not. Nobody is making money by seeding that album. There's a big difference. Stop your kneejerking for two seconds and actually take a look at the issue.
Mod parent up (Score:2, Informative)
Great response.
Re: (Score:2)
87 people shipping a warehouse of sugar pills branded as Lipitor? GO TO JAIL. 1 kid sharing a song with a friend? GO TO JAIL.
So stuff your justification, because we know that the amount of random filesharer abuse will FAR EXCEED the number of counterfeiting operations shut down.
Re:You're confused (Score:2)
Makes no distinction? This is a US-centric thread, so I'm using USC here. Counterfeiting, Trademark, Patents, and Copyright are all treated differently. In addition, there are separate rules for counterfeit Trademarks, counterfeit Coins (18 U.S.C. 485), counterfeit Dollars (18 U.S.C. 471), and counterfeit coins and dollars that are not exact copies but appear to be legit such as a $3 or $1000000000000 bill (18 U.S.C. 475 and 489). That's pretty specific, and the law does make very fine-grained distinct
Re: (Score:2)
Get sued, I trust you really meant? Since it doesn't rise to the level of a criminal offense....
Re: (Score:2)
Get sued, I trust you really meant? Since it doesn't rise to the level of a criminal offense....
He sounds like an RIAA shill, frankly.
Re: (Score:2)
But even if I agree with all your points that counterfeiting is bad and sharing is not, the LAW MAKES NO DISTINCTION.
Yes it does.
87 people shipping a warehouse of sugar pills branded as Lipitor? GO TO JAIL. 1 kid sharing a song with a friend? GO TO JAIL.
No-one has been jailed for file-sharing. It's not (yet) a criminal offense. The RIAA's lawsuits were all filed in civil court.
So stuff your justification, because we know that the amount of random filesharer abuse will FAR EXCEED the number of counterfeiting operations shut down.
Do you have any idea what you're talking about?
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
The history you speak of is full of situations like this. What has happened time and time again is that the real criminals are very hard to catch and the enforcers will be under pressure to show results. That means the easy targets are the ones they go after - that means Joe Schmoe who downloaded a couple of MP3 files. This will be especially true in this unholy alliance between the media cartels and Federal law enforcement. Where do you think the Federal officers will get their tips and evidence from?
It's
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Re: (Score:1)
Yes but the fucking asshole from Minnesota is so damn funny.
Re: (Score:2)
I think the prosecution would have to prove that he actually doesn't know the difference between fraud and smoking.
Wow, this scene is a prediction (Score:3, Interesting)
Relevantly, the assasin at the end is an FBI agent. FBI as copyright police [youtube.com]
I point of thought, he is on foreign soil enforcing US DMCA. As a side note the makers of this series have strong opinions in this area.
Publishing interests have wanted this for a while. (Score:5, Insightful)
Back once upon a time, copyright infringement was a civil matter, not a criminal matter. Problem was (from the corporations' viewpoint), that meant they had to pay for lots of lawyers and lawsuits against individual file sharers. So they lobbied to make copyright infringement, at least in certain forms, into a criminal matter. That meant that the corporations were off the hook as far as paying for enforcement, now that burden would fall on the taxpayers. The Feds liked it too, as they now had another reason to legally spy on the populous, plus they could ask for bigger budgets to support all this spying and prosecution. As far as the corporations and government are concerned, criminalizing file sharing is a win/win. The only looser is the citizen.
Re: (Score:2)
Once upon a time, we were Citizen. Citizens had rights. Now, we're mere consumers. Consumers think they have rights (but don't).
Re: (Score:2)
Are you channeling Ayn Rand?
http://atlasshrugged.com/ [atlasshrugged.com]
Read the article but we know what it is about (Score:3, Insightful)
They went into great detail in the article discussing counterfeit goods of all sorts that threaten health and safety and then merged and drifted over to counterfeit computer software that threatens stability and privacy. (That's malware, not infringed copyrighted software... malware like Sony's rootkit) And of course it's really all about **AA interests in digital media mentioned in the article as "digital products." Accurately, they state that there is no government agency that is tracking copyright infringement or the extent of it.
The article goes to great lengths to fill the details with things other than "digital product" infringement... things that have been historically handled by these same people who tracked down and nailed groups who created and sold counterfeit Cisco network equipment. This stuff has been dealt with and managed without adding 35 new positions. So clearly these new positions are intended to deal with a newer agenda rather than an older one.
I would like for the article to be true in the sense that I would love to see a crack down on sales of counterfeit medicines and other physical goods. Sadly, I don't think this is going to be the case. The spam and scam will continue as it always has while the real crackdown will be felt by individuals at home engaged in file sharing.
Re: (Score:2)
TThis stuff has been dealt with and managed without adding 35 new positions. So clearly these new positions are intended to deal with a newer agenda rather than an older one.
Or it could be that instances of counterfeit have shot up recently and the existing staff is not able to stay on top of it. I don't know how you can "clearly" draw that conclusion from the evidence.
Why don't they add 35 job where they're needed? (Score:2)
Such as in the SEC so they can have some people that actually police industry, instead of watching porn all day???
Your government in action!
One more war... (Score:5, Insightful)
The War on File Sharing is the new War on Drugs.
The approach being taken is quite similar: manipulated and fabricated studies and evidence, draconian international treaties to make sure no country is allowed to implement sane policies, suspension of basic civil liberties in the name of the war, etc.
Because jails are not full enough with non-violent 'criminals' already, maybe the US is trying to raise the incarceration rate to over 90%?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
The War on File Sharing is the new War on Drugs.
If we can get rid of the old War on [some] Drugs, it's a fantastic trade. All I have to do is give up big media? Sold!
Re: (Score:2)
> If we can get rid of the old War on [some] Drugs, it's a fantastic trade. All I have to do is give up big media? Sold!
Nah, no way they will get rid of any ongoing Wars, that could mean that 1) they were wrong in fighting it 2) all the special interests (including the criminal gangs that get a monopoly in the drug trade) wouldn't like it.
So instead we just add new Wars on top of the old ones, just look at Afghanistan and Iraq!
Re: (Score:2)
For every generation, the government has created a criminal class by making illegal something nearly universally done (e.g. smoking marijuana, downloading files, drinking alcohol, and so on). This makes it much easier to round up and jail the commoners should they get a bit too uppity and start questioning why a bunch of seeming twits are making millions or billions whilst other rather well educated and more deserving folks are running out of their unemployment and applying for jobs at Wal-Mart.
Let the governmant pay the bill for enforcement. (Score:3, Informative)
Nice job buy the media lobbyists. Get you and I to pay for the enforcement of their civil cases. IP issues are still a civil matter correct? Who is getting the fine money?
When my actual physical property is stolen, I am stuck with the very limited resources of the local overworked police force that pretty much does nothing but file a report for me to give to my insurance company. Even if they catch the perp, it is still a civil matter for me to get the value of my lost goods back. The media companies gets entire teams of federal officials at my expense to track down when their property is "stolen".
Even SparkFun was hit by scammers (Score:2)
Some company in China sold ATmega328 slugs to SparkFun.
Re: (Score:2)
Slashdot ate the link for some reason. Maybe it's hungry.
http://www.sparkfun.com/commerce/news.php?id=350 [sparkfun.com]
A thoughtcrime (Score:2)
"Intellectual property crime", "IP offence"... George Orwell should rise from the grave and sue for "IP theft".
So much for 'net neutrality' (Score:1, Troll)
You probably bought into the propaganda for this guy...sorry! You probably thought this government was to be, as his campaign touted "Open and Honest", but clearly neither is true. I can't find a single promise kept.
What he/they WANT is to have the tiniest hint of legitimacy in dealing with the net, so they can tax and censor it. Scaling up on IP means being on the net to show a "Demon" to fight, just like AIG, just like Goldman, so they can do whatever it takes to control that part of our lives, too.
You g
Re: (Score:2)
You probably bought into the propaganda for this guy...sorry! You probably thought this government was to be, as his campaign touted "Open and Honest", but clearly neither is true. I can't find a single promise kept.
Try Here:
http://www.politifact.com/truth-o-meter/promises/ [politifact.com]
It's not a very good record, but it could be much worse. The problem is that he didn't keep lots of very important promisses. (A simple count doesn't tell you the whole story.) And lots of the ones he did keep are saved by keeping exac
Re: (Score:2)
It just might be that we're not permitted on the net, come November. He'll need every vote he can beg, borrow, steal, or fraud to stay in power.
You've got to be kidding, this is the same kind of stuff I had to listen to about Bush before the last election, that he was going to cancel the election and call martial law and make himself a dictator. Can we get over the sensationalist stuff already? No one is going to keep you off the internet because they don't like what you say.
Police State (Score:2)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
But unlike hacking, file sharing is mainstream; this is why it persists
Sure, there are lots of differences. The question is which differences matter, which will make a difference. I don't think being mainstream is actually enough (and let's be honest, by 'mainstream' you mean lots of people do it, not that the majority of people do it).
Does being mainstream actually make a difference? Are there examples in history of cases where a behavior was mainstream, but then changed by legal/government action? If there are, then being mainstream can be nothing more than a contributi
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
We could be seeing the "mainstream" thing from two different angles; here in Sweden the newspaper polls show 50+ of questionees admitting to filesharing.
Very good point, and Sweden is one of the countries with a pirate party, so things could play out differently there than in the US. Furthermore, I don't know much about Swedish recording industry, but I'd bet the music industry in the US is a bigger segment of the economy, thus in a country like Sweden it could even conceivably be seen as 'sticking it to the US' or something. I don't know if that kind of thing is popular among Swedes, though.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Not the best comparison. Try comparing copying to sex, not to hacking or cracking.
Since long before "thou shalt not commit adultery", people have tried to regulate sex. In the Middle Ages they even refused medical treatment to people afflicted with diseases that were "obviously" caused by certain moral weaknesses. I have a 1948 English dictionary that defines masturbation with just 2 words: self pollution. On every least sexual advance, such as the Pill and other contraceptives, gay marriage, porn, o
A bit off... (Score:2)
It may end up the same with file-sharers. Eventually the law will catch up with what they are doing, chase them down, and make the potential cost of sharing too much higher than the cost of music/movies. That's clearly what these guys are trying to do.
It won't happen. Whereas in the '80s or '90s there were perhaps a few thousand hackers, in 2010 there are millions. Public perception is changing, the vast majority of teenagers see that there really isn't anything wrong with file-sharing. Governments get their power from the people, eventually, we will have to have more relaxed copyright laws. Perhaps not in 2010, perhaps not in 2015, but soon.
Computer literacy was much, much, lower in the '80s or '90s, it was really reasonable that someone didn't ha
Re: (Score:2)
Eventually the law will catch up with what they are doing, chase them down, and make the potential cost of sharing too much higher than the cost of music/movies. That's clearly what these guys are trying to do.
Or they could just, you know, change their fucking dead business model instead of spending all this money trying to screw with the laws, going against our social morals (sharing is good, selfishness/greed is bad), to try and make the cost of sharing worse than a criminal offense, ruining countless lives in the process.
Re: (Score:2)
At the end of the day, though, Mitnick-style hacking requires getting into someone else's computer: there's always going to be a pissed off business on the other end of your hacking.
With piracy, though, the only way to know that it has happened is by conducting surveillance on the people who are committing it. You can certainly make life less convenient for the high-profile piracy groups, but the idea of piracy going the way of black hat hacking is pretty ridiculous.
Honestly, I think we're really only one
Re: (Score:1)
There is a huge difference there though. Do you honestly believe everyone's iPod is filled with legal music? When did you have the extra money to dump 45k into music for your ipod? The difference is the number of people involved and the difference is breaking vs fair use.
Re: (Score:1, Insightful)
A matter of perspective indeed. There are more hackers (in the take-over-other-systems sense) today than there were in the 90s and they control more systems too. There's a story right now about getting private information out of the cellphone networks. There are millions of botnet drones which work harder for hackers than for their legitimate owners. People still hack, people still social-engineer. There are just fewer "stars" because hacking is so much more widespread and there's little left of the illusi
Re: (Score:2)
Besides that file sharing is much more commonplace and mainstream than hacking or cracking, as already pointed out, it's also the case that copyright is a compact between society and content creators (really owners). And many people, particularly those most aware of the history of copyright, strongly feel that the current balance of law is improperly tilted toward content owners, at the expense of society as a whole.
Thus copyright infringement in many cases can be seen as a form of civil disobedience. (Sure
Re:Won't somebody please think of the children? (Score:5, Insightful)
*bullshit*
Citation needed.
There's a child molester in every chat room.
There's a terrorist in every van.
Smoking a joint leads to crime, violence, and insanity.
Copying a music file cripples our economy.
Oh, and drinking alcohol doesn't hurt you.
Eating cheap processed chemicals doesn't hurt you.
Polluting our air and water is worth it.
Our climate is fine.
What do all these statements have in common?
They are making some entrenched interest a lot of money.
Re: (Score:1)
*bullshit*
Citation needed.
There's a child molester in every chat room.
There's a terrorist in every van.
Smoking a joint leads to crime, violence, and insanity.
Copying a music file cripples our economy.
Oh, and drinking alcohol doesn't hurt you.
Eating cheap processed chemicals doesn't hurt you.
Polluting our air and water is worth it.
Our climate is fine.
What do all these statements have in common?
They are making some entrenched interest a lot of money.
I could argue very easily that many of the people making the opposite arguments also have strong financial and political interests.
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:1)
Wow, you are so far behind the schedule! When's the last time you've been on Freenet [freenetproject.org]?
Re: (Score:2)
I haven't ever used Freenet, but even if it's got tons of stolen software, child porn, and radical Wahabi rants that wouldn't prove how many sources the stuff is coming from. It could be 5.9 billion people or 59 people.
And to the point of the GGGP's post, I'd bet that there is more unauthorized IP on any kind of file sharing network than child porn.
Re: (Score:2, Insightful)
You saw the big circus over Chelsea King [go.com] in San diego. Two cute girls dead and the whole fucking city shows up for a candlelight(soon to become torchlight) vigil. It was so disgusting, even the victims' family remarked that it turned their horrible loss into a insulting and condescending feeding frenzy of t