Google Proposes Fighting Piracy By Blocking Ad Money 202
judgecorp writes "Google has published a report, written by the Performing Rights Society and BAE Detica, which says the way to fight piracy is not to chase the sharers, but to cut off the money in the system. 'Some 86% of advertising on the pirate sites surveyed by Detica comes from networks that have failed to sign up with the UK’s self-regulatory bodies or commit to strong codes of conduct. More than two thirds of the sites that rely on subscriptions or payments display well-known credit card logos. Online advertisers should be encouraged to sign up to self-regulatory codes of conduct. Credit card and online payment facilities, the pirate’s oxygen supply, must be blocked.'But is Google absolutely sure it isn't doing that with AdSense?"
Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Interesting)
Cutting off the pirates' oxygen supply will help with the bigger outlaw commercial operators. But it won't faze ThePirateBay in the least. Until somebody can come up with a solution to that one, the problem isn't likely to get solved. Longer term though, the bandwidth caps are going to do more to curb the problem on the Internet than anything law enforcement could ever do.
Eventually we will rediscover the bandwidth of sneakernet. Not much to be done about that one. And it gets worse.
Ponder this one 'content industry'... How much storage would it take to store every popular song? How easy is it to pass that around? All somebody needs to add is a P2P phone app that works over WiFi to continually sync new songs in as people socialize. Poisoning might be a problem but hashes can resist that. Somebody really serious about peeing in the industry's corn flake could solve the problems and post 'an app for that.' We are getting close to carrying around enough storage so that every kid could just expect to have 'everything' ever released on a major label sitting in their mobile device. Just a few more turns of Moore's Law. How much longer until the same thing happens with TV & movies? Forget the cloud and monthly fees or paying by the minute, just have every movie or tv show ever made riding around on every phone.
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Insightful)
But it won't faze ThePirateBay in the least. Until somebody can come up with a solution to that one,
I wasn't aware ThePirateBay was a "problem"?
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Interesting)
I wasn't aware ThePirateBay was a "problem"?
We really should have this conversation about something else that is a far more serious problem that could be fought in a similar way. We should ban paid political media ads to cut the cash flow chain of political corruption.
Many serious problems in the world, including the financial crisis, can be traced back to crony capitalism, where money taken in through campaigns or funneled directly to media during campaigns buys influence leading to regulatory changes that are contrary to the public interest. Additionally, misleading ads also distort public perception. An informed public is crucial to the proper functioning of democracy.
Attempts at controlling fund raising have been a dismal failure. What's needed is similar to the what the story here suggests. Ban PAID political advertising in the media, and bring back local media ownership. Controlling what online would be more difficult, but that is needed too. The changes could be done at the FCC level and not involve campaign laws. Media owners would be subject to fairness rules governing informative public service time that the GIVE away.
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But it won't faze ThePirateBay in the least. Until somebody can come up with a solution to that one,
I wasn't aware ThePirateBay was a "problem"?
It isn't. Not really anyway. It's just a search engine specializing in bittorrent (TPB does not host any 'warez' of any kind). You can find the same and much, much more using Google or Bing.
The only thing that makes TPB special is that it continues to expose overpriced lawyers' lack of knowledge concerning international law and the limits of US law.
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But getting back to his original point, how will this affect TPB in the least?
Probably about the same as it affected your favourite "Canadian.VIAGRA Pharmacy" :)
Peace,
Andy.
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Many (not all) of them have "Premium" subscription or donation type things. The summary even points out that they're referring to not just advertising networks, but also to payment providers (like PayPal). If the pirate sites can't get ad money, donation money, or subscription money, how are they meant to survive? Exactly.
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If the pirate sites can't get ad money, donation money, or subscription money, how are they meant to survive?
You can run a pretty busy tracker off a $100/month VPS [wikipedia.org]. I'm fairly certain there are people who would run such a tracker just to avoid spending money on cable TV. Or, there could be people who just think that sharing copyrighted material isn't wrong, and $100/month isn't a big deal to "keep up the fight".
Maybe they couldn't, centrally (Score:3)
Perhaps they'd have to find some way for peers to share data with each other.
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Private trackers cost money, they get it by ads, subscriptions, or voluntary donations. Hence the two-pronged attack -- go after the ad networks to vet sites, and go after the payment processors to vet sites, and you've blocked all three sources.
Until the sites all take donations in bitcoins... Citizens think! Think!
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http://www.forbes.com/sites/timworstall/2012/05/24/the-riaa-do-not-believe-a-word-they-say-ever-for-theyre-claiming-72-trillion-in-damages/ [forbes.com]
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Do we? Where do you take your data from?
Personal experience from both sides of the debate - as a former warez user who paid lip service to "Try Before Buy", but now works with an ISV (Independent Software Vendor, if you don't know what it means ...).
The research financed by the big labels? Maybe the same research that generated this
No. These mega-corporations are lying to us, that's obvious.
Working for an ISV helped me realise that downloading and using software from small indie developers without paying for it benefits no one but myself. It certainly doesn't benefit the indie developer in any way!
Nothing sinister. No **AA involved. Just honest, hard working developers with a passion for building products that help people get things done. In the case of these ISV's there generally isn't the luxury of running an international cartel dedicated to screwing over the rights of artists and consumers. We know that piracy hurts our business - at least to a certain extent - but that seems to be lost on people who consider anyone with a website and products to sell to be in the same league as $$MEGA_CORPORATION$$.
Peace,
Andy.
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All in all apparently the great majority of people do not think piracy is wrong, and considering we are living in Democratic coun
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:4, Insightful)
certainly not enough to justify the witch hunting US and its aligned countries have been practicing against end users.
So there are a couple of problems with what you said. First, there's no data to perfectly prove a relationship between downloads and selling losses because we can't test this in a vacuum, with two perfectly equally desirably products where one can be pirated and the other can't. So you're always basing stuff on estimates, which means any argument will eventually boil down to you saying "you can't prove that was a lost sale" and the other guy saying "the effect is statistically significant, we're just sure exactly how much, but that makes a bad sound bite so I simplified it", Secondly of course is that there's a lot of piracy from places you can't sell to, or don't try and sell in (think china). I was working with an indie game dev and they figured half of their piracy was from china etc. type places where they can't sell the game anyway, so that's clearly not a loss.
Where you run into problem is that you're assuming that the 'witch hunting' isn't in the end a necessary evil. All laws ultimately limit freedoms and privacy to try and investigate crime, and all laws can, indirectly, destroy someones life even when it's not dangerously criminal (think doping in sports, or sports gambling by athletes). Software piracy undermines the industry of people creating software to try and sell. Making a copy of a book costs next to nothing compared to the cost of writing the first copy, but we still want there to be authors, and you can't expect book to be published solely by people who have some other job that pays the bills. I think most reasonable people agree there should be laws to prevent theft for example, but of course 'piracy' isn't exactly theft, and nor is counter fitting, so then we're trying to find the sweet spot between letting people own the work they did long enough to get paid enough to justify the time they spent making it versus letting everyone benefit from knowledge and hoping that some socialist utopia will come along that will pay people for whatever they do somehow. In the digital era when a 'counter fit' copy can be a perfect copy of the original you run headlong into an extreme example of a problem we've had for as long as we've been making things, who gets credit for making the first pointy stick so to speak?
All in all apparently the great majority of people do not think piracy is wrong, and considering we are living in Democratic countries last time I checked
That's a dangerous statement. Tyranny of the masses and all that. I'm sure Bill Gates house is nicer than yours, but you can't just move into it for the fun of it. You might actually be able to make a copy though, because the act of making the copy is the primary value of the house.
The value of the production of knowledge is what keeps the entertainment industry going, and basically all of academia. But they have completely different business models. In academia the government pays for information to be mostly free and mostly public (or thereabouts), and it gets the money for this by taxing people like you, to pay people like me. In the entertainment business they try and find some way to sell you an experience (live performance, theatre, the content itself on a disk or on paper), and that justifies the creation of new content. Without some financial incentive to create content no one can do so. The pirate argument with music is that the radio etc. are actually just ads for live performances, ok fair enough, I'm not sure it's true, but that's a valid business model. There isn't any obvious business model for Books or TV/Movies or Video games other than ads, and those create their own slew of problems. Your mileage may vary, but I'd rather the business model involve paying for content and not have to have it filled with ads than the reverse (and I will point out that in the reverse scenario rather than trying to find ways to du
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Tyranny of the masses is a term I used specifically (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Tyranny_of_the_majority) - the idea that a majority of people can oppress the minority in a democracy. In the context I used it I mean specifically that the majority of the population could demand free stuff from the existing content creators without paying for it. It can be done, and it's probably legal, parliament is supreme after all, but it's not a way to foster business.
And yes, MPAA, RIAA etc. 'lost sales' figures are
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"the effect is statistically significant, we're just sure exactly how much, but that makes a bad sound bite so I simplified it"
You seriously believe this? When the large corporations protecting their copyright have lied, lied, and lied again about individuals and organisations. They've sued innocent people over and over again, they've gone after listing sites which do little more than google, they've infiltrated the legal system and got extraditions based on something that is not illegal where people li
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You seriously believe this
No, I believe that the MPAA and RIAA are pulling numbers out of their ass to try and persuade governments to do something about it. But that doesn't mean there isn't a kernel of truth to what they're saying. Anyone suggesting there are *no* losses due to piracy would be equally dishonest.
I'm all for remuneration of musicians, but the music industry is not doing it. It never really has, to be honest.
I specifically split apart a number of types of industries including music. Since musicians give their music away for free on the radio already why do they get to charge for it somewhere else? They're using a recording
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Making a copy of a book costs next to nothing compared to the cost of writing the first copy, but we still want there to be authors, and you can't expect book to be published solely by people who have some other job that pays the bills.
First, technically, what we want is for there to be newly created original, creative works. I don't care if authors produce them or if they magically fall out of the sky (or more likely, are eventually produced by computer programs that take a random number as an input and generate a ripping good yarn as output). Even if we only develop tools that assist authors, this can be pretty good, as it reduces the number of author-hours needed to create a work, and either 1) results in the same quantity of works for
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All in all apparently the great majority of people do not think piracy is wrong
We can simplify this statement further:
The great majority of people like to get something for nothing.
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IP was created by us. It is an abstract thing. It served a purpose which does not exist anymore, and so it is time for it to go away.
Money is also an abstract concept created by humans - particularly the digital kind that exists in your bank account - so can I have all of yours, please?
Don't get me wrong - I'm not suggesting that "download" == "lost sale" or "virtual bits" are the same as "a car" but I am getting quite sick of seeing people argue about these rights, hiding behind the premise that downloading stuff for free is some how sticking it to the man. It's not - it's just getting something without paying for it.
Here's a hint: if
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And seriously, if I am not buying who exactly will benefit if I don't download it as well? Please, enlighten me. I do not care even a little bit about what that dinosaurs think. The sooner they go the bett
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Same "curriculum" here (Score:2)
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Working for an ISV helped me realise that downloading and using software from small indie developers without paying for it benefits no one but myself. It certainly doesn't benefit the indie developer in any way!
Care to explain that.
Take WinRAR as an example. Small developer, very popular app. If it were not available as a fully functional nag-ware version and easily piratable I doubt that the RAR format would be nearly as popular. So while the developer may have lost some sales to piracy I bet they made a lot more due to the priceless marketing and market penetration it offered.
I have noticed that the more restrictions on software, the less functionality the free version has the more likely it is to fail in the ma
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"Working for an ISV helped me realise that downloading and using software from small indie developers without paying for it benefits no one but myself. It certainly doesn't benefit the indie developer in any way!"
Sure, but that doesn't also mean that someone not pirating would benefit you either. It will likely just mean they go for say, a cheaper, or free competitor, or just do without your product. So why worry about it? I like you work as a software developer but worrying about piracy is pointless, it's
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TPB runs ads -- how do you conclude cutting off ads revenue won't hurt them?
As for people walking about with a complete music library, that's just delusional; a typical song at high quality is 5 MB, a typical album is 10 songs, or 50 MB, so a 64 GB device can only hold 1000 albums. That's about 6 months' worth of the US & UK output alone. Quibble with my numbers if you like, but there's no way your getting two orders of magnitude out of that.
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As for people walking about with a complete music library, that's just delusional; a typical song at high quality is 5 MB, a typical album is 10 songs, or 50 MB, so a 64 GB device can only hold 1000 albums. That's about 6 months' worth of the US & UK output alone. Quibble with my numbers if you like, but there's no way your getting two orders of magnitude out of that.
He did mention Moore's Law. In the last couple of months I can recall a couple of articles about predicted hard drive sizes in the next 10 years. It may very well go up a couple of orders. If a portable device had a couple hundred TB, or even a PB, then we could very well be in a different ball game.
Will sizes increase? For music I cannot imagine by much. Certainly not orders. Even FLAC is not more than several times the size. Movies could possibly increase in size.... but to what real value? Do you
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And, one might argue, an endgame for content, too. The counter-argument to which is usually something along the lines of smaller, independent content creators rising up to fill the void. Just remember, those guys aren't always what's "most current and popular..."
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Moore's Law doesn't apply to storage.... if it did, my system with 1/2 terabyte striped drives in 2005 would be very scary now.
I admit, it was a little scary then....
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My prediction, once storage size allows, is that a single community website/program/app/portal will emerge that contains all music, and remains updated by the community. You would then periodically sync your device if you want to listen to a newly-released album, receiving 100s more.
I think this is inevitable. It closely mimics human behavior anyways. When you have a distribution system that allows for the term "viral", it is a matter of when, not if, such a system is created. Illegal, or not.
This is why the alternative business model arguments will eventually fall flat. There is almost no way for artists or businesses to offer a superior product to this. For music, perhaps concerts may work, but then only for music that works in a live setting. Much electronic music doesn't fall into this category (and can be replicated live by someone other than the artist pushing the play button). For movies, screenings are becoming less attractive with home theatre For books, live readings are hardly going to cut it even for fiction, and I'd like to see the Gang of Four touring the world with renditions of Design Patterns.
What is the product though? I think you are confusing a distribution system as a product, and the content as a product.
Current content distribution systems will be hugely inferior to such proposed and hypothetical systems. Not only will they cost more, but they will offer less features and mo
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Perhaps it shows that society is all about pragmatism and equality of wealth distribution rather than ideals and innate rights.
Copyright and patents were founded on pragmatism and have never been based on innate rights. States agree to enforce a limited monopoly as an incentive to get creators to create, not because creators have an innate right to control the IP of their creations.
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Much electronic music doesn't fall into this category (and can be replicated live by someone other than the artist pushing the play button).
You are _so_ confused if you think this is the case. Firstly, anyone who just plays the button can be applied to nearly all forms of music. "Live" performances of rock, pop, blues, jazz, and other genres are often not so - they often rely on pre-recorded tracks. "Electronic" music uses some samples, most of the time, though sometimes it does not. The latter is whe
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Exactly my point. Right now you could easilly walk around with blocks like:
Billboard Pop Charts - ALL
Billboard R&B/Soul/etc - ALL
Billboard Country - ALL
And so on.
With "ALL" defined at first as the Top 100 chart for every year since they made a chart. You can do that now, the Pop chart will fit on a 32GB MicroSD card. Soon every song that charted, period. A little later every album from a major label that charted. Then every album from a major label, period. It is coming. Inexorable, unstoppable.
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Tax havens, allow Politicians to strip mine their countries assets, allow arms dealers to trade in weapons, allow major drug dealers like the CIA to launder their money, allow corporations to cheat on hundreds of billions in taxes globally, allow organised crime to hide their assets, allow hundreds of millions in bribes to be paid top corrupt countries all over the globe, allow for assassins to be more readily paid, facilitate global espionage payments basically they allow every kind of corruption to occur
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http://motherboard.vice.com/2012/1/3/inside-the-cell-phone-file-sharing-networks-of-western-africa-q-a
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Piracy is driven, solely, by the media industry that's complaining about it. They could end it tomorrow if they wanted to. But they have this rediculous pipe dream that the internet will lead to them cutting costs by not having to produce physical copies of their media any longer, but at the same time they can raise the price of that very same media. Sorry, that's not going to happen guys. It's 2012, time to get a clue.
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>>>All bandwidth caps do is drive consumers to lower quality encoding
Yep. I still use 56k downloading when stuck in hotels w/ no internet. It takes about 4 hours per episode, and the quality is the same as VHS tape. That may seem like a long time but the electricity is free, and my laptop has nothing better to do anyway except download. I get six TV episodes per day to watch... plenty of entertainment.
>>>industry seems to think that $300+ per month is a reasonable price for a cable/sat
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Informative)
>>>industry seems to think that $300+ per month is a reasonable price for a cable/satellite connection that has "all" the channels
Aren't you exaggerating a bit? Comcast charges around $100 and Dish just $50 for hundreds of digital channels.
No, he's not.
Shaw cable up here in Canada encrypts their channels. It's $150 a month plus equipment rental, which is required by the service and flaky as fuck to boot. If you want to get decent HD selection (let's go out on a limb and say HBO HD), you're looking at at least $225 with taxes.
The fact is, it's cheaper, easier, and more reliable for me to just rent my entertainment. Nothing down, nothing a month.
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That's your intro rate for the first 6 months, is it not?
I'm on the West Coast. It's Shaw or Telus, no resellers.
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Aren't you exaggerating a bit? Comcast charges around $100 and Dish just $50 for hundreds of digital channels.
The number of channels is meaningless, really. The right metric is the fraction of content broadcast per unit time that you would actually sit down and watch (remember that you pay per unit time even when you arent watching anything.) Due to high rates of repetition of the good while the bulk being utter crap anyways, "hundreds of channels" doesnt tell anyone anything.
The reason his "all the channels" comment is meaningful is because those packages maximizes the amount of content available. No sacrifices
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This is the 'ol "It's not my fault I pirate
Re:Dunno, might help but not solve problem (Score:5, Insightful)
Sorry, you can't fool us into believing that the problem is some imaginary $300 / month subscription fee - we know that pirates are the problem.
The false dichotomy here is thinking only one of them can be the problem. Clearly they have a problem with people whose sole reason for piracy is to save money, whether it's cheapskates who pirate when they can and buy when they must or freeloaders who wouldn't pay anyway, but demoralizes the paying customers - why should they pay when the freeloaders don't. Because of that they're implementing copying restrictions and DRM systems and region codes, annoying unskippable warnings which is also abused for trailers and commercials, pushing for mass surveillance, three/six strike laws that lack judicial oversight and mass shakedowns that are economically impossible to defend against, carry excessive penalties (thousands of dollars for one 99 cent song) and so on.
That pisses a lot of other people off, people who like to run a media server like me. People that run Linux like I did, not anymore but that's a different story. People that have a laptop with no optical drive which they feel they should be able to watch it on. People that feel once they have bought it, they should be able to convert it to watch on their phone or tablet. People that don't like them poking their noses in all private communication. People that don't like kangaroo courts. People that are afraid they'll get a thousands of dollar lawsuit because their wifi was open or their machine was hacked or their tenants or relatives was on P2P. On top of that particularly the TV and movie industry cling to an outdated business model which makes the pirate service far more convenient.
You have a problem with pirates? Well, the feeling is mutual because I have a problem with you because I would like to pay but there's nothing worth paying for. You've made your content so locked up and difficult to access and use as I want that the pirates win without a fight. The service I want you're not willing to offer to me for any price. Your current efforts are futile and the totalitarian society you'd have to build to stomp out piracy is not one I'd care to live in. As far as I'm concerned you're a hindrance to my enjoyment and a menace to society and the best way of neutralizing you would be to take your copyright away. If people want you to continue creating, they'll pay. If not then find some other work. It's not the perfect solution but getting rid of copyright is the lesser evil, you're the greater.
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Try this one:
I live in Australia. I use Linux.
Ok you are screwed right there and I haven't even gotten to my preferences yet.
I would prefer:
* Downloading, not streaming. I have a file server for a reason and traditionally Aussie internet is slow. Better to cache everything locally.
* Immediate release. If it is shown in the US I don't want it a week later. I want it available when most people get to see it.
* Fair price. No a ebook for $10 is not fair when the paperback is $16 and includes postage. The 1mb co
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Printing and binding a paperback costs less than the difference you quote.
Typically, between under a dollar for a large quantity of a small book, to three or four dollars for a short run (eg 5000) of a thick book. Add in another two dollars or so for postage and handling and you're pretty close.
While the $10 for writing, editing, proofing and formatting may be arguable, the difference is about right,
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There are plenty of ways to pay for content without buying a "$300+" cable subscription.
Yeah... good luck with that. Seriously, try to buy content when it comes out, or even close to when it comes out. Especially internationally.
You're wrong, or deliberately lying. There aren't any ways for many people to pay for content _at all_, when it is released.
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You don't seem to remember much from history... The first "Big dog" in piracy was Napster, and they flourished at a time when the vast majority of the public had 56k connections at best.
For those of us who are really old, there was audiogalaxy before napster. I don't know if anyone else here remembers that, it was not even peer to peer in any sense it was simply a site that served every song known to man. I found stuff on there that was super rare and hard to come by, even with the massive modern archives we have access to. It had a great search function and all songs were guaranteed to be what they were labelled as and a good recording. I still miss it. I used to dare people to come up wi
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Some of their biggest customers are pirates.
where's the data to back that up? or did you really mean "some" as in at least 2?
really, i'm sure there are some "pirates" that mainly pirate as a try-before-by mechanism, but in lack of real data i think that's unlikely. it's human nature. if i've already stolen something, it's actually extra time AND money for me to go back and purchase it. that doesn't come naturally.
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But it won't faze ThePirateBay in the least. Until somebody can come up with a solution to that one, the problem isn't likely to get solved.
Get the founders arrested after passing a new law specifically targeting them. Or extradite them to another country, like the United States, have a show trial, and then disappear them. Not hard to solve one website.
Longer term though, the bandwidth caps are going to do more to curb the problem on the Internet than anything law enforcement could ever do.
No it won't. People use more bandwidth on Netflix than piracy. And bandwidth caps are the result of antiquidated infrastructure, which in turn was caused by government-assisted monopoly and short-term thinking. Caps aren't happening to combat piracy; If that was the thinking, we'd all be on dial-
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Mobile phones can't generally make adhoc connections.
Both the iPhone and at least some Android models can connect using ad-hoc, though at least in the former case the app can't set up itself the connection.
But in any case, nobody said it had to be over ad-hoc: public APs (with and without passphrases) are common, and syncing over them is equivalent to an ad-hoc connection for the purpose.
it's The Laws of Physics, and they are suing you for defamation.
And what Laws would those be, considering that IBM has already achieved storing 1 bit in just 12 atoms, which would just take 10^-6 cm3 to store a petabyte?
Sure, it's far fro
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Because you're forgetting the biggest problem with mobile devices: The battery. Without energy, it doesn't matter how much whiz-bang you can do. It's still just a paperweight.
I have a portable, external battery that is about 3"x3"x1" and runs my phone for normal use (which is 4G always on, background data always enabled, bluetooth and GPS always on) for a week. It's also pretty easy to be near a USB port, and these days that's enough for every decent phone.
Wow! A smartphone sneaker net. Clever idea. (Score:2)
It would need a P2p style app on IOS and android that always runs in the background using NFC and bluetooth to discover hosts. You'd become a node in a sneaker network. Imagine how fast data replicates on school grounds and in busy shops. Lots of potential to link in local product promotions too.
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The "we'll resort to the sneakernet" argument is retarded. The sneakernet is inconvenient and will always lack the variety and quality of a globally accessible repository like PirateBay. If companies can push people to the sneakernet, it will be a huge win for the content industry. Most people won't do it, there will be a several-month delay before you can get cracked copies of softwar
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We are getting close to carrying around enough storage so that every kid could just expect to have 'everything' ever released on a major label sitting in their mobile device. Just a few more turns of Moore's Law.
Moore's Law doesn't really apply to storage devices, they actually progress much faster than microprocessors. It's sometimes called Kryder's Law.
Just my two bits.
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Perhaps in the US, but most everywhere else the bandwidth is still increasing. Here's the latest figures [www.ssb.no] from Norway, solid green line is average speed and solid blue line is mean speed. All cable/DSL/fiber lines are sold uncapped and our consumer protection agency is making sure you get what you pay for, so those figures are quite meaningful. I've personally downloaded a 500GB+ torrent in 3 days on a 60 Mbit/s line and it was no problem. You can see about a year ago the average speed made a huge jump, that
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Longer term than that, bandwidth caps will be replaced by variable pricing, so people will simply schedule their downloads for the wee hours when it's cheaper or free, similar to unlimited nights and weekends on your cellular plan.
People already schedule their downloads for the early hours, but for another reason (QoS).
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Cutting off the pirates' oxygen supply will help with the bigger outlaw commercial operators. But it won't faze ThePirateBay in the least. Until somebody can come up with a solution to that one, the problem isn't likely to get solved. Longer term though, the bandwidth caps are going to do more to curb the problem on the Internet than anything law enforcement could ever do.
Bandwidth caps are shitty. I just had a hard disk failure.... I have about 1/2 a terabyte _purchased_ games on steam - that's the poi
IE Banks and Visa are profiting from piracy (Score:3)
Every transaction on a credit card makes money for the middle men.
Interesting sort of incestuous fight within the Royal Court of Capitalism.
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The content industry is not engaged in capitalism. They have a competitor in the distribution sector that they cannot beat on merits, so they are trying to legislate it away. Capitalism would demand that they compete rather than go home and cry to mommy.
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How many people actually click through an ad on a warez site and buy something? I seriously doubt anything significant. Even if they have the money (which, relatively speaking, is not likely since they're on a warez site) they're probably savvy enough to not associate something like their Amazon account to their piracy habit through those ad cookies.
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instead of asking that, ask if yourself if you would pay money to advertise somewhere if no one was seeing (pr paying attention to) your ad? nothing is the right answer. the advertisers don't have to guess if people are clicking through. they know, and they wouldn't continue to pay their $ if no one was clicking through.
Blocking credit card & online payments (Score:2)
That's how they dismantled wikileaks. Funny that the google would espouse the same solution for torrent sites as the government did for infoleak sites.
Oh well. (shrug). I never pay for pirate sites anyway. I figure if I'm paying to watch a movie or TV show, then I might as well just go buy the legal DVD or amazon release instead... and watch the money goto the actors, writers, artists, etc.
Re:Blocking credit card & online payments (Score:5, Interesting)
Except they won't let you buy what you want. Back in the 70's there was a popular TV show that I enjoyed watching when I was a kid. Go ahead, try to find a DVD set of "WKRP in Cincinnatti"... My wife's cousin came over and lamented how she could only find the 1st season on DVD but the music wasn't what was in the original show... I relayed that I had also been hoping to buy the DVD set... So I went to TPB and downloaded the full series with original music.
WKRP is credited for popularizing many songs back then and helping artists rise to fame. However, the reason there are no DVD sets of WKRP is allegedly because of the difficulty in licensing the music from the content providers. When WKRP shows are aired in re-runs, they are aired with crappy sound-alike music... In many episodes, the songs are contextual so part of the plot is ruined when they removed the music.
As the cherry topping, I introduced my 10yo son to WKRP and he devoured all of the episodes, watching some of them twice and three times; with original music... He enjoys the music and has been buying it from iTunes...
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Are you sure? Usually when TV studios negotiated music rights, they negotiated the right to air them during (1) first run (2) reruns and (3) on VHS or Betamax tape. So reruns should be showing the original songs.
Quantum Leap had the same problem. Seasons 1/2 DVD set does not have the original music, but then the fans complained so seasons 3/4/5 restored the music (and upped the pricetag). I solved the problem by recording the reruns straight off the TV.
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Possibly you are more correct than you think you are. It sounds like they had the license for TV broadcasts, and for video tape. But not for DVD or any other formats.
But the quetion remains why they had to change the music for TV re-runs - I would indeed expect they have a license to use the music for unlimited re-runs. Unless after changing the music for the DVD release, they only made available for TV broadcast the new version. The TV stations usually buy series on a per-run basis, afaik.
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As the cherry topping, I introduced my 10yo son to WKRP and he devoured all of the episodes, watching some of them twice and three times
now that's parenting.
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That show was syndicated to NZ in the 80s.
Curses, now I have that jingle in my head.
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Indeed, the same thing happened to MTV's Daria.
You would think that a company like MTV would have all of their licensing issues sorted for such a scenario, but apparently that's not the case.
There's a reason that the rare and incomplete VHS releases are prized among fans...
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Except they won't let you buy what you want.
They won't let you buy what you want, so you just take it? I know lots of places that won't sell you want you want, I guess you just take their stuff too?
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It's okay to take what you want if (1) the person isn't selling it and (2) your copying doesn't cost that person anything. Obviously it would be wrong to steal bread from Walmart, as you've deprived them of their property, but it's not wrong to copy a movie from a studio since (1) they aren't selling it and (2) they experience no loss.
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Indeed there are DVD sets but, as the OP said, not with the original music.
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Yeah, and how'd that work out for them? Wikileaks is still there and going strong. They accept Bitcoin; as soon as someone sets up an ad network to do the same, attacking the CCs to attack the piracy "problem" will become equally as futile.
Don't all pirates have adblockers? (Score:4, Insightful)
Since all pirates have adblockers, doesn't that make the proposal irrelevant?
Incredibly naive. (Score:2)
As long as there is traffic, there will also be advertising. Running ads benefits both the site and the advertisers, after all. They'll just switch to another method.
Why is it Google's problem? (Score:3)
The war on piracy hurts them much more than piracy itself, why is Google suddenly backing it?
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The war on piracy hurts Google because Google is considered one of the pirates.
They're now just trying to show they're on the anti-pirates' side.
opt out (Score:2)
I'd like to be the first to state that the idea that a network has to "sign up with the UK's self-regulatory bodies" is horrifying on so many levels.
First is the notion that a network has to "sign up" to be able to exist. Second is the notion that "self-regulation" is anything but a horrible idea. Third is that not signing up with these "self-reg
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It works for spam (Score:2)
Here's an idea (Score:2)
Why not give the people what they want full access too all musical works from all record companies with proper ownership rights.. Can't be that hard and all the money wasted on litigation could have paid for that service already.
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Of course, this seems simple when put into so few words, there's got to be something I'm missing. What is it? Aside from the general "Content companies only want control," what excuse would major labels give for this?
I've been buying mu
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Why not give the people what they want full access too all musical works from all record companies with proper ownership rights.. Can't be that hard and all the money wasted on litigation could have paid for that service already.
For Free? Because that is what most people want.
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With other words.... (Score:2)
- We do not do evil, but only if no one else does evil. Oh, and don't look too hard at how we made our first billion...
From years of RIAA/MPAA sympathies are diminished (Score:2)
Everytime I hear "Copyright" I think hindering innovation and exploitation. My desire to see any pirates pursued at this point is nill.
Also: Fighting Unpopular Opinions (Score:5, Interesting)
This also works with unpopular opinions and content.
Case in point, Recently SomethingAwful's harassment of the TVTropes website reached a head when they started attacking TVTropes by complaining to Google about Trope pages that had odd content. The example was "Naughty Tentacles" which was the cliche of tentacles in anime tending towards being somewhat risque even in non-risque works. Google pulled all advertisements from their site until this page was removed and cut all their advertising money.
The catch being that Naughty Tentacles and other "Not Safe For Google" pages were not serving Google Ads, which means that Google is now claiming that if you have an Ad Sense ad on a SINGLE page then Google has editorial rights on ALL pages on your site.
That sick feeling in your stomach is normal, it merely means you are wise enough to realize what a huge disaster this could possibly be.
(Not to say that TVTropes handled it well themselves. The administrator had a very public nervous breakdown over the whole thing, began harassing anyone who posted Japanese media tropes, tried to argue that Romeo and Juliet was child pornography because R&J are both 14, etc etc... Many people, including myself, were publicly banned and our names dragged through the mud because we disagreed with his "great porno purge" on what was supposedly a collaborative website.)
Another recent example of something similar was when the concern troll at L7World began harassing [l7world.com] websites that hosted "Kodmo No Jikan", a very risque Japanese manga involving a precocious child abuse victim and the male teacher who is the subject of her torment (and who is attempting to save her from her abusive stepfather). While the content is... as close to pornographic as possible without actually reaching that point, the fact of the matter is the L7World troll used as many "fainting couch" attacks he could, including photoshopping things out of context and directly attacking the Advertisers that went through Google, to harass every manga hosting website he could. (He then later admitted he likes KnJ, reads it, and was just fucking with as many people as he could because he could get away with it.)
Several months later, a similar attack was done by someone claiming that all Manga hosting websites had to remove not only any works with underage characters -- but also any manga works that had Gay or Lesbian themed content, because the "web is a product of the United States, a Christian Nation, and thus they had a duty to uphold Christian morals". When this troll was ignored and banned for these frothy rants, suddenly Google was getting all kinds of complaints out of the blue about these sites and pulled their advertisement money.
This attack destroyed OneManga, severely hurt every other manga site, et cetera. Even sites that do not host manga, and are simply series database sites, such as BakaUpdates, were affected. So don't think that you're only in danger if you host Troll-Unapproved content, if you talk about things that trolls don't like, they can go through Google to attack your site now.
And before anyone takes umbrage with the "underage characters" part, I would point out that the most popular children's comic in the world, Doraemon [wikipedia.org], as well as The SImpsons [rottentomatoes.com] technically fall under the same overreaching umbrella of what this troll was complaining about, and are not pornographic by any sense of the word.
tl;dr: In short, I find it very unsettling that Google is openly bragging about the possibility that legal trolls such as the MPAA could now use attacks that Religious fundamentalist trolls (and, in the case of SA, just plain normal trolls) have used to silence websites that they do not agree with.
Re:Also: Fighting Unpopular Opinions (Score:5, Insightful)
If I had mod-points right now, I'd upvote this. But I don't.
Oh well. You beat me to the punch by mentioning the TvTropes incident. And yes, that is bloody terrifying. Though really, advertising hitting publishers with the money stick to impose their editorial will is nothing new orbiting the sun.
That doesn't mean I have to like it.
The worrying thing is, many of these withdrawals are pretty much automated. Google has an almost machine-like bureaucratic apathy to the advertising world, it's systems grinding mindlessly along uncaring how automated reports are. It'll yank them anyway because it doesn't cost them anything to do so. It's the cheapest and easiest option. It's expensive to actually follow up the report and investigate the actual circumstances.
That requires a salaried employee with a brain.
Or in short form. I agree with everything you said, and just wanted to try post more than 'I agree with everything you said'
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One day he got into a bit of a feud with another blogger -
this is what SOPA/PIPA did (Score:2)
Or would have done. Well, first they would have blocked DNS for site too, but that was dropped from the bill after the early complains.
After that, all SOPA/PIPA did was make it possible to block payments to sites which hosted infringing content.
I would say that the rejection of SOPA/PIPA means the internet rejected this idea, except i think few actually bothered to read or understand SOPA/PIPA before passing judgement on them.
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I didn't. If you ask me, blocking ad-money has the opposite effect, and improves privacy.
Further, if ads were integrated into movies and games, then piracy would not be a problem, and in fact it would be a solution. But of course, google does not like that solution, because they can't get between that flow of money.
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Then liberals would throw hissy fits over the entire thing
I think just about anyone would disagree with that. Taking over countries for the "greater good"? How arrogant can you get?
Re:Heh! (Score:4, Interesting)
I wonder how many people believe this, while at the same time believe that RIAA/MPAA exploit the artists, riding their publicity to generate money from advertisers. They make money indirectly, so it's not exploitation either right? I mean... "websites", "established commercial distribution channels", what's the difference?
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Shiesty advertisers are in the same catagory as spam.
p2p is people sharing. Let them go after the rip off artists
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