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MPAA School Propaganda Program Examined

Anonymous Coward copies-and-pastes: "'As part of its campaign to thwart online music and movie piracy, Hollywood is now reaching into school classrooms with a program that denounces file-sharing and offers prizes for students and teachers who spread the word about Internet theft. The Motion Picture Association of America paid $100,000 to deliver its anti-piracy message to 900,000 students nationwide in grades 5-9 over the next two years, according to Junior Achievement Inc., which is implementing the program using volunteer teachers from the business sector." Only $100,000 to advertise to 900,000 students? What a deal! We mentioned this earlier.

11 of 433 comments (clear)

  1. Just like DARE by AlgoRhythm · · Score: 5, Insightful

    And we all know how much THAT works.

    At least taxpayers aren't paying for it.

  2. Bad idea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Anytime you tell a kid that something's bad, their first instinct is to go investigate it. After listening to the **AA's lectures, they'll immediately go home and log on the net to see what this "Kazaa" thing is.

  3. overly simplistic by toasted_calamari · · Score: 5, Insightful

    From the article:
    "If you haven't paid for it, you've stolen it."

    I honestly hope that this program has a more complex take on IP than this. I can easily think of many, many things on line that can be obtained for free, legally. (the entire contents of sourceforge comes to mind.) IP law is phenomenally complicated and cannot be boiled down to simple slogans and sound bytes.

  4. start while they are young by Zanek · · Score: 4, Insightful

    This reminds me of one of my favorite books, 'A Brave New World'.
    Program the kids while they are young and by the time they are adolescents they may think copying music (not stealing :-)
    is as bad as physically stealing from a store. I wonder if someday some kid will be
    like "Copying music is worst than stealing cars"

    --


    Help pay for my wedding! Go to my kickass website
  5. You're forgetting... by StringBlade · · Score: 4, Insightful

    They already know more about Kazaa, filesharing, and the Internet than most adults.

    --
    ...and that's the way the cookie crumbles.
  6. er its a school not a billboard by pacman+on+prozac · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Why should any business or company be allowed to advertise in school, regardless of what their message is.

    Besides what are they teaching the kids, that it doesn't matter if you make a load of worthless crap aslong as you have lawyers to back you up? yea great.

  7. Brainwashing ? by MoonFog · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Andrew Irgens-Moller, 14, buried his head into a backpack on his desk and rolled his eyes as the guest teacher warned of computer viruses and hackers that could take control of a user's desktop via file-sharing programs. He objected that antivirus software could scan downloaded files and only sophisticated hackers could pull off the remote desktop computer takeover.
    Then the teacher cut him off.


    These are brainwashing tactics... It is downright scary that these "guest teachers" are even allowed to spread such FUD. If they want to move young kids away from filesharing, try at least to feed them with false information.
    "Your computer can be taken over at the minute you install Kazaa"

  8. Contrast this by cubicledrone · · Score: 4, Insightful

    With the average volunteer who might want to help kids in the local school districts learn to read or to operate a computer. Schools would require such a person to navigate a bureaucratic maze for weeks.

    But for $100,000, they'll gladly put the taxpayer-funded curriculum on hold for the day and allow a live advertisement for the latest feature film to kids who can't read or construct a complete sentence. Incredible.

    --
    Business isn't willing to pay for products, innovation and careers, so we get brands, mortgage commercials and layoffs.
  9. One good thing about it... by Dave21212 · · Score: 4, Insightful


    If they passed out pamphlets to the students, at least they won't be able to read them.

    "Why Can't Johnny Read ?"
    --- Because the teachers spend more time trying to brainwash and subdue the little brats than actually teaching them perhaps ?

    Lovely...
    Do any lawyers think there might be a case for equal time/access ? Send Linus or RMS around to teach kids for a while...

    --
    "Whoever would overthrow the liberty of a nation must begin by subduing the freeness of speech."--Benjamin Franklin
  10. Re:Only a step from by EinarH · · Score: 4, Insightful
    And they want to scare of the parents as well. A part of the program is a take home and fill-out-together letter to the parents.

    I wrote a long comment about this and the program last time this was mentioned.
    There are some links to the pdf files in the program there.

    The Starving Artist is a discussion based game where students are divided in group and shall produce a CD but then they are ripped off by "file swapping". "how does this makes you feel?"


    Share the following statements with the students to summarize the lesson with the class. These statements help summarize the lesson and connect the concepts to the students personally.
    - To legally own it, legally buy it.
    - If you haven't paid for it, you've stolen it.
    - Copying a movie or CD for a friend is illegal.
    - If you wouldn't take a movie or CD from the shelves of a store without paying for it, then why do it online?

    I must say that $100,000 is dirt cheap for a program like this.

    --

    Melius mori in libertate quam vivere in servitute.

  11. This Is Worse Than You Think by SirChive · · Score: 5, Insightful

    This is really bad. Not so much because the MPAA is going to schools to deliver it's particular propaganda. But because ANY group from private industry can buy access to school kids.

    What's next? Representatives from the Brokerage industry going to grade schools to preach the virtues of buying stock? Fast food evangelists marching freely through classrooms brainwashing kids to eat only Happy Meals.

    The MPAA is evil. But no more evil than any other industry group that will push it's own profits at the expense of all else. We are truely losing our integrity as a society if we let any of them into our schools.