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Piracy United States Movies Music

ISPs Finally Abandon The Copyright Alert System (engadget.com) 113

"Major internet providers are ending a four-year-old system in which consumers received 'copyright alerts' when they viewed peer-to-peer pirated content," reports Variety. An anonymous reader quotes Engadget's update on the Copyright Alert System. It was supposed to spook pirates by having their internet providers send violation notices, with the threat of penalties like throttling. However, it hasn't exactly panned out. ISPs and media groups have dropped the alert system with an admission that it isn't up to the job. While the program was supposedly successful in "educating" the public on legal music and video options, the MPAA states that it just couldn't handle the "hard-core repeat infringer problem" -- there wasn't much to deter bootleggers. The organizations, which include the RIAA, haven't devised an alternative.
"Surprise: it's hard to stop copyright violators just by asking them," reads their article's tagline, which attributes the failure of the system to naive optimism. "It assumed that most pirates didn't even realize they were violating copyright, and just needed to be shown the error of their ways."
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ISPs Finally Abandon The Copyright Alert System

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  • error in whose ways? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by KiloByte ( 825081 ) on Sunday January 29, 2017 @06:54AM (#53758681)

    "It assumed that most pirates didn't even realize they were violating copyright, and just needed to be shown the error of their ways."

    Right. So those Jews who tried to avoid concentration camps were merely misguided and should be told their race is so inferior they should welcome extermination? Arguing that an unjust law is not unjust is not that easy when it's you, personally, who paid for its enactment.

    We should not dismiss the harm of copyright. It grieviously damages culture -- not just receiving culture as in "freeloading" watchers of a random crap movie, but also creating more works. It's impossible to create a cultural work without building atop of references and conventions built up previously -- it would be totally incomprehensible to any reader. Because of copyright, direct references to any semi-modern works are outright banned, and less direct ones are not banned yet only because the copyright cartel didn't yet bribe^W"campaign donate" appropriate legislation.

    Culture is what puts us apart from animals (in the common sense of the word) -- as biologically we are animals with most of the same urge. It's transmission of works that makes humanity. Thus, a crime that hampers this transmission is a crime against humanity itself.

    (You might call my stance "extreme", starting with self-Godwining at the start. Don't let the propaganda that "piracy is evil" cloud you.)

    • by aliquis ( 678370 )

      Whatever copyright is unjust could be argued.

    • Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • how dare you compare copyright infringement to concentration camps! WTF!

        There's more than one type of crime against humanity. Decrying a second one doesn't make the first any less appalling.

        Two more arguments:

        • * you're bound to die anyway, murder "merely" speeds that up. In a few years, maybe a cousin will once mention that uncle yayoubetcha did so-and-so, and that's it. On the other hand, culture you create has a chance to live almost forever. And that's not restricted to "high" culture -- that cat meme might survive. A scatologic grafitti you painted on a wall might get
    • You are seriously equating these two:

      A) If you want to listen to Justin Bieber rather than the millions of free songs available on Myspace and elsewhere, please pay your 99 cents share of the cost.

      B) Being toward to to death.

      Your total and complete lack of any sense of perspective, your absolute self-centeredness, is sickening. Trivializing actual suffering by implying that it's no worse than paying 99 cents for a song (or choosing a different, free, song) is profoundly insulting to those who have actually

      • I've got to start using the Preview feature.
        I don't use it because it's an extra click, which is basically the same thing as being in a Nazi labor camp as you starve to death, according to GP.

      • If you want to listen to Justin Bieber

        In this particular case of "culture", copyright restricting access grants us all a favour.

        Your total and complete lack of any sense of perspective, your absolute self-centeredness, is sickening. Trivializing actual suffering by implying that it's no worse than paying 99 cents for a song (or choosing a different, free, song) is profoundly insulting to those who have actually suffered

        A single murder is immensely worse than a single act of restricting access to culture. But compare the number of victims a single Auschwitz guard has killed to the number of lost copies that haven't been created because of actions of a single MAFIAA executive -- it's no longer anywhere close to one-to-one. There's so many orders of magnitude difference in counts, that, even though each act of the latter is miniscule,

  • by Anonymous Coward

    Copyright violations have ALWAYS BEEN & WILL ALWAYS BE an symptom of something else than what the MPAA/RIAA want to admit. They are caused by either scarcity or there too low of a value proposition. Scarcity is when the user can't obtain a product any other way (such as a rare song, a rare book, etc.), and low value proposition happens when you charge too much for your product compared to what people perceive the value to be.

    I bought close to 100x DVD movies over the span of a couple years from Big Lots

    • by gweihir ( 88907 )

      Copyright violations have ALWAYS BEEN & WILL ALWAYS BE an symptom of something else than what the MPAA/RIAA want to admit. They are caused by either scarcity or there too low of a value proposition.

      Very much this. Were I live, private downloading is legally tolerated, and I have hand instances were I bought the whole DVD-collection but found it unwatchable because of all the crap they put in there and the bad UI. So I download the hassle-free, good-quality, plays-everywhere "pirated" version in addition. Recently, I have been running more and more into the problem that a legal version was not even available. In that case, I regretfully download the pirated version without compensation to the creators

  • As if any millenial knows what a letter is! Most of the letters that end up in my letterbox are (a) from the bank or any utility company or (b) unwanted and uncalled for.
  • Movies. (Score:5, Insightful)

    by ledow ( 319597 ) on Sunday January 29, 2017 @08:21AM (#53758973) Homepage

    Was looking for a film to watch last night.

    (Bear in mind that I pay for everything legitimately. I don't own any music. I buy DVD's or LICENCED online content for everything I watch.

    I do this so that I'm rewarding the creators of things I like. I've bought shareware. I've paid for donationware. I've bought some things several times over and bought them for friends.

    The point is - I'm one of those rare people who pays for EVERYTHING I use. The vast majority of people I speak to are quite happy not to pay if there's no chance of being caught and will happily use Kodi or downloads or streams or tolerate what their child does, etc.)

    I went on Amazon Prime. I didn't fancy anything on the Prime offerings, so I flicked through the "Buy" listings for movies. As there was nothing on Prime, I also loaded up the Google Play Store for movies and did the same on there. I have bought 50% of my online movies on each service, and even rented a couple of times.

    I looked through all the recommended, the newly released, etc. and went back as far as I could without hitting anything I liked the look of. Fair enough, personal taste. Then I went through all the cheap movies, all dross and most I'd never heard of. Then I went through categories of movies, Action or Sci-Fi is always a good bet.

    About 20 pages in, and a lot of scrolling, on both services the only things that I had any interest in were old 80's action / sci-fi movies. Okay, not a problem. I own a lot of them on DVD, though, but I wanted to watch online. I'm not going to pay a fortune again.

    But then the problem hits - once I found a category I was willing to buy from and didn't already own, the prices were a piss-take. GBP10 for a movie from the 80's that's had endless re-runs on TV. 25GBP for a TV series that's on constant loop on multiple TV channels, and that's just the first series. Sorry, but I'm not paying that for an Arnie movie from the 80's, Indiana Jones, James Bond or a series of Friends to flick through. And the stuff I already have on DVD? Same prices. No way am I paying that just to "have it online".

    The irony was, I'd have happily laid down the 25GBP for a complete boxset of something, or 10GBP for a new movie, or a few GBP for one of the old dross (Indiana Jones, etc.). But I couldn't justify it to myself to pay those kinds of prices.

    In the end, after about an hour of scrolling through both stores, I bought nothing. My entertainment time was gone, my funds weren't going to be spent like that, and that's with me LOOKING to buy.

    The other annoying part? You can't buy certain things anywhere. I love an old TV series called The Good Life (Good Neighbours in the US). I have it on DVD. I'd quite like it online too, to watch when I'm out on holiday etc. I bought series 1 & 2 online and - despite being from the 70's - series 3 is nowhere to be seen. Literally, nothing. I've been checking almost every month for years now.

    Try and get Aliens:Special Edition. Half the online streaming stores just don't carry it at all, or don't mention if it is SE or not.

    And then there are the TV series from years ago that still have never made it to DVD or online at all. The most annoying ones are like above - someone converted one series and then said fuck it and left it at that.

    I have no surprise at all when I find out that people pirate or stream or whatever. They just want to watch the fucking movie that they like. But you can't. And even when you can, the price is ludicrous.

    Because I won't pirate, this gives me one option. Stop watching. Even the old stuff. Stop buying.

    The movie and TV industries are killing themselves. I have no sympathy for them.

    Also, we TOLD THEM THIS several decades ago when they started on the pointless crusade against piracy. If they'd listened then, maybe they wouldn't have wasted money on stupid DRM schemes, they'd have not lost public favour, and they might have been able to try things like streaming, downloads,

    • by Megane ( 129182 )

      Sounds like you need to get to work using Handbrake to re-encode your videos, then carry around the results on your own private storage. It'll also save your wireless data quotas and can give you a better picture than streaming. But you'll need to find an RPC1 DVD drive or firmware patch first, because the MPAA conspired with the optical drive industry to make drives fail to operate properly if there's the tiniest hint that you're trying to rip the contents of discs that you purchased, even to use only for

      • by ledow ( 319597 )

        Nope. I have the technical capability.

        I refuse to do so, just to watch a movie. That's hours of pissing about just to watch a movie at some point in the future.

        It's easier to just stop watching movies, which will also be a lot cheaper in the long run.

        • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

          by Anonymous Coward

          Nope. I have the technical capability.

          I refuse to do so, just to watch a movie. That's hours of pissing about just to watch a movie at some point in the future.

          It's easier to just stop watching movies, which will also be a lot cheaper in the long run.

          In the time it takes you to watch a movie, you could be ripping three more. If your only remedy is to stop watching, I don't even know why the hell you spent the time pissing about drafting your original post.

          Oh, and you probably should stop talking about the "next" generation. Between the laziness and the bitching, you've certainly morphed into a lazy, spoiled Millennial in the worst possible way. Might as well sell your DVD collection, since pulling one out of the closet to put in a player is now too m

          • by ledow ( 319597 )

            1) What you propose is a legal grey area.
            2) How does it solve the problem or portability? I would have to spend MONTHS of time converting my collection, defeating DRM, and storing it, and then carry around a several-Tb drive everywhere I go.
            3) I have the DVD's. I continue to watch them, as normal. What I'm NOT doing it giving the movie industry a penny by doing so - most of those DVDs were second-hand and it won't be long before DVDs don't exist, like VHS before it.

            When I'm quite happy - and trying - to

            • So run your own streaming server and keep everything at home. Plex is fairly easy to setup.

              It's not too hard to automate ripping DVD's so the only user intervention required is swapping discs. Then you can use software like FileBot [filebot.net] to organise everything consistently. But getting episode numbers of TV show DVD's right is a fiddly process.

      • by djinn6 ( 1868030 )

        Sounds like you need to get to work using Handbrake to re-encode your videos, then carry around the results on your own private storage.

        Or, you know, just download a copy from someone else who already did that. If you're making a copy from the DVD to the hard drive (and several more copies in the process of conversion), then you're already violating copyright law. Why go the extra mile?

      • Nothing wrong with good 'ol DVDDecrypter. I still use it to this day.
    • Just come to the dark side - everything searchable in one place, high quality, no DRM so it works on all of your devices. If you lose it in the future you won't be upset.

    • Fact is, movies and TV have to be considered purchases.

      I just take the MPAA/RIAA up on their insistence that we're buying a license, not purchasing a product. Any song or movie I've already paid for, I just download it from a pirate site. After all, I already bought a license (on record, tape, CD, VHS, DVD, or Blu-Ray).

    • The one thing that I consider to be the biggest problem is the fact that simply repackaging a work is enough to consider it a new work, at least in the sense of licensing.

      The second thing that seems to be the MPAA/RIAA don't care about customer convenience.

      I've proposed it in the past, but was shot down by Slashdot because it would cost truck drivers their jerbs(!!!1!!).

      What we need is a way to buy a license for a work that isn't attached to a specific physical or digital download. A "pirate license", per s

  • by gweihir ( 88907 ) on Sunday January 29, 2017 @08:40AM (#53759027)

    They will simply do without your content if you manage to stop them. They will never, ever pay for it. And, surprise!, it is actually much worse for you to have them not watch your stuff at all than to have them watch it for free. But it takes some minimal understanding of how a market works and how word-of-mouth works. You do not have that.

    One exception: All the really, really bad "AAA" stuff would profit from people not downloading it early, because then people would go to cinemas unaware how their time will get wasted and their money essentially stolen. But since that morally amounts to fraud on your side, I cannot find it in me to see that any injustice is done to you there.

    • One exception: All the really, really bad "AAA" stuff would profit from people not downloading it early, because then people would go to cinemas unaware how their time will get wasted and their money essentially stolen. But since that morally amounts to fraud on your side, I cannot find it in me to see that any injustice is done to you there.

      That, my friend, is the actual reason for "anti-piracy" laws: if people have access to good quality movies (or, more generally, culture), why would they watch marketed crap?

  • Make all your material available all the time, everywhere, in convenient ways, at reasonable prices. Stop the artificial scarcity nonsense. Stop making people feel like criminals. Stop limiting where and when they can watch/listen to the material. Abandon the the-material-is-ours-not-yours-we-just-let-you-watch-it-as-and-when-we-want mindset. Hardcore pirates will still practice piracy. Normal people will do the right thing, just because it is right, and for peace of mind. It is, of course, your right, to
  • Here come the goons to break people's kneecaps.
  • I believe in making a good-faith effort to buy what I want fair and square. But occasionally, I run into silly geographical restrictions on purchasing digital content, generally movies and books. I want to see a given movie that is available online but not in the US, am willing to pay a rental on standard sources, but they won't let me make this purchase.

    I then take the easy way out and download it from a pirate site. Sorry, asshole middlemen.

  • "It assumed that most pirates didn't even realize they were violating copyright, and just needed to be shown the error of their ways."

    I'm sure that is true, what with the pirates being so busy stealing boats and robbing people at sea and all, they probably had no idea they were infringing on copyright.

  • Interesting how they forgot to mention the two lawyers who got busted by putting porn files on TOR, and when the copyright alarm went off shaking down scared surfers at $1,000 a pop, that turned out to be a fraud.... Which was the driving force behind the ISP's getting off the program.

    But that wouldn't bring out the intellectual property whiners, we've already seen today's story about how Trump is destroying the galaxy, we've already seen the story about solar energy jobs, and a Windows bashing story, an
  • I always wonder if we wouldnt be living in a better world if the windows wouldnt have been so extensively pitrated...

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