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Projectionists Using Night Vision Goggles in Theaters

sam0ht writes "Los Angeles police arrested Ruben Centero Moreno, 34, after the projectionist used night vision goggles to spot his video camera in a showing of The Alamo. He has been charged under the new California anti-camcorder law, and could face up to 1 year in jail if convicted. The BBC reports that 'The MPAA has established a nationwide telephone hotline for cinema employees to report violations, and studios and cinemas are also investing in metal detectors and night-vision goggles'. Motion Picture Ass. Head Jack Valenti said he hoped it would 'send a clear signal such crimes will not be tolerated'. Clearly, the 'War on Copyright Violation' is following the successful strategy used for the War on Drugs, with significant resources of technology and police time mobilised to send violators to jail for a long time. Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams." The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

178 of 1,080 comments (clear)

  1. Beautiful. by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 5, Funny

    From this day forward, I shall refer to Jack Valenti as "Motion Picture Ass Head". Thank you, sam0ht.

    --

    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    1. Re:Beautiful. by sfled · · Score: 5, Funny

      The position itself will be "Motion Picture Ass." head. The Ass.'s current head is Mr. Valenti. Or current head of the Ass., if you prefer.

      --
      I'm not really a web designer, I just play one on the Internet.
    2. Re:Beautiful. by zoward · · Score: 4, Funny

      LOL - It reminds me of one of my favorite Dilbert cartoons, in which the Pointy Haired Boss tells his secretary that his title is "Director Of Product Enhancements", and to stop referring to him using the acronym... ...to which she replies, "I didn't know you were Director Of Product Enhancements".

      --
      "Can't you see that everyone is buying station wagons?"
    3. Re:Beautiful. by scheming+daemons · · Score: 3, Funny
      Or how about the Dilbert where the PHB announces that marketing has come up with a new name for their latest product, taking terms associated with astronomy and electronics and combining them together to make....

      Uranus Hertz

      --
      "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
      don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

    4. Re:Beautiful. by miceuz · · Score: 3, Funny

      "Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams" i wonder if students lighting up a joint are THAT rare :)

    5. Re:Beautiful. by the_mad_poster · · Score: 3, Informative

      Nitpick: that was Dogbert, the consultant's idea, not marketing's.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    6. Re:Beautiful. by gstoddart · · Score: 2, Funny

      *laugh* Only in a geek forum can someone correct a Dilbert quote and be moderated informative.

      =)

      --
      Lost at C:>. Found at C.
  2. So? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 5, Insightful

    To put it simply: Good

    Taking a camcorder into a theater is breaking the law. If they can spot people with night vision goggles, that's great. They shouldn't be doing it.

    Completely setting the MPAA aside, this is blatant copyright violation. It's clearly prohibited, and no one can reasonably feign ignorance on this. How many people reasonably take the camcorder for purely personal viewing with no intent to distribute the copy?

    If it's for personal viewing, they can wait, spent $4 more, buy the DVD, and be legal.

    --
    That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    1. Re:So? by drmike0099 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Amen, you beat me to posting this. If anything, this is exactly what we want the MPAA to be spending its time and resources combating, not running around trying to get laws passed that prohibit legitimate fair use. These are the people that cost them actual money, and if they could shut them down, they would no longer be able to show that piracy is causing them so much damage that they need ridiculous legal protections that screw over people like you and me. Thank god they're doing this.

    2. Re:So? by mahdi13 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree, why are people getting upset about someone going to jail for breaking the law?
      sam0ht seems to be a bit irate over this for some reason...if you are going to break a law, don't bitch when you get busted!
      If you drive your car over the speed limit and get a ticket, it's not the cops fault.
      If you do drugs and your parents catch you, it's not their fault
      If you have sex in a public place and you get arrested for indecency, it's not the police's fault.

      "If you do the crime, you better be prepared to do the time"

      --
      "Some things have to be believed to be seen." - Ralph Hodgson
    3. Re:So? by idesofmarch · · Score: 5, Informative

      It does not matter if the recording is for personal viewing or for distribution. You still do not have a license to record the movie. Your ticket gives your the right to watch the movie once in that theater at that time, and that is all.

    4. Re:So? by RT+Alec · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree. This is not the battle to fight, it is a clear cut case of breaking the law. If this is where the MPAA wants to direct their resources, so be it.

    5. Re:So? by cgranade · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That may be, but one may feel (as I do) that perhaps if it is such a big deal, the police ought to be the ones taking action, not vigilantes from the MPAA, and that perhaps a year of jail time does not fit the offense. So MPAA lost a couple hundred dollars in profit. Boo-hoo. Mayhaps a fine would work just as well, then? As it is, this strikes me as another minor crime that lawmakers have overinflated, filling our prisions at taxpayer's expense. Look at the cost of keeping someone in prision for a year, and compare that to the amount that MPAA might have lost from this offense.

      Now, note that I'm not defending this guy, but rather making the point that there's a serious problem with scale here. If things like this really mattered to lawmakers, wouldn't Ken Lay be in jail? He hasn't seen a day of jail time from the Enron scandals. I guess the moral is, then, only screw those people without the money to defend themselves. That was this guy's big mistake...

      --

      #define DRM chmod 000

    6. Re:So? by Xepo · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Yes, it is good that they caught them. That's a good thing, most people on here would agree.

      What we disagree with is the fact that they're enforcing copyright violations as if it's drugs, or terroristic activities, or whatever. Putting someone *in jail* for filming a movie for "a long time" is what I disagree with. I don't think they should even go to jail, that's too harsh for a copyright violation. Simply slap them with a large fine, and be done with it.

      It's very similar to slashdot's general attitude towards malevolent hackers. We don't think it's right that someone is spreading a virus, or cracking into systems, and defacing a web site, but we also don't think it's right that these people are being punished like they killed someone.

    7. Re:So? by Your_Mom · · Score: 2, Insightful

      BEGIN_TROLL
      Exactly, just like if you're going to bypass CSS encryption, it's not the DVD company's fault.
      END_TROLL

      There are lots of ways to look at breaking the law, you can break laws as an act of civil disobedience, although I can almost guarentee this is not the case for this story.

      --
      Objects in the blog are closer then they ap
    8. Re:So? by Eagle5596 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      This is where Slashdot really ticks me off sometimes. Yes a lot of us (myself included) choose to copyleft our works, instead of copyrighting them. However, this doesn't mean everyone else is obligated to do so. Taking a camcorder into a movie theater is wrong, plain and simple. People laid down a serious investment into making the movie, and if you think it is too much, then wait for it to come out on video, don't steal it through the use of a camcorder in the theater.

      Further more, hey Michael, what's with the comment, huh? The lesson isn't to "stay out of movie theaters", it is, quite simply, DON'T STEAL! If you come into a bank and try and rob it, and get busted, the lesson is not "stay out of banks", but "don't rob banks". Do you truly think people should just give everything to you Michael? Then perhaps you should just donate your time to your job, huh? I have friends who work for special effects companies in the movie industry, and yes it is an industry. It's about producing something that people want to buy. If you don't buy it, and see it illegally, you're stealing.

      Grow up guys, and learn to respect the rights of others. The responsible thing to do is either pay for the movie, or don't see it. If a movie comes out that I think I might want to see, but don't want to pay $8 for it, I wait for it to come out on video, and then pick it up from the local video store on their two for $0.99 tuesday deal. At under $0.50 for a show, split amongst five people, I don't think there is a pricing problem here at all. This isn't even like the software industry where they charge $300 per copy. I pay less than $0.10 to view a movie, and I'll gladly do that any day.

      I wish that the readers and submitters here would learn to respect other people's hard work, and that the editors, and Michael in particular, would keep their editing professional and not post idiotic comments that have no bearing on the substance of the article, and no basis in reality.

    9. Re:So? by jefe7777 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      you probably won't have much disagreement about the action in question being illegal.

      but I imagine many will question the penalty.

      so under 3 strikes, an 18 year old goes to prison for a very long time, if caught 3 times?

    10. Re:So? by Austerity+Empowers · · Score: 5, Insightful

      You have your reasoning and you're entitled to it, however I think our limited jail cell space ought to be used for more significant crimes. To me, taping a movie on your camcorder is a misdemeanor offense, such criminals ought to have to go pick up highway trash for a few months and other "rehabilitating" punishments. Selling copies of said tapes to the public ought to land you in prison for a year or so, that's the real crime.

    11. Re:So? by frodo+from+middle+ea · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Yes but is the one year in jail term , right ?

      I mean, the only reason they have such severe sentence , is to serve an example to others and deter others from doing it. But is it legally or morally justifiable to make an example out of one offender , to deter others.

      Even riot control police fire in air first and then use rubber bullets, they don't shot real bullets at random people , hoping it will deter other rioters.

      --
      for the last time people, I am "frodo from middle eaRTH", not "middle eaST".
    12. Re:So? by pete-classic · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I agree that camming is pretty hard to defend.

      On the other hand The Law is not something handed down from God.

      Ideally, it is a public agreement to restrict ourselves in certain ways for common benefit. In practice it more often degrades into power-hungry groups imposing their will on their fellow man.

      Consider respecting your fellow man instead of respecting the law.

      -Peter

    13. Re:So? by thomasa · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Personally, I think you misunderstand. The point he is trying to make is that this will have little impact on the bootlegging of movies. Just as the drug laws are just employment laws for the police and have little impact on actual drug consumption.

      At least that is my opinion.

    14. Re:So? by cgranade · · Score: 5, Insightful

      As I've said before, here as well as other places, then why isn't Ken Lay in jail? One year for a few hundred bucks that aren't even stolen directly? In the examples you gave, there are many points that you haven't addressed:

      • You probably aren't going to go to jail over a speeding ticket, nor Ford is likely to give you the speeding ticket.
      • It isn't universally agreed that one should go to jail over drug crimes... far from it. This is a very recent idea in law enforcement. For many, many years, there were no such laws. Besides, if you're parents catch you, then that can very easily be handled inside the family without causing the taxpayer expense of keeping someone in prison who isn't that dangerous!
      • Define public place. Certainally, there are times and places where this would be inappropiate, but would you also be opposed to a couple (married, even!) having sex, at night, on a beach when no one else was there? Or during a camping trip? A national park might be considered a "public place." So, really, have we even established that the hypothetical couple has commited a moral offense?

      Laws are not always right, nor are the associated punishments. Just because something is a "crime," doesn't mean that you need to go to jail for it. I hope I never see the day that people go to jail over speeding tickets.

      --

      #define DRM chmod 000

    15. Re:So? by timeOday · · Score: 2, Interesting
      I agree, unless he actually gets a year in jail. Good grief, I'm not interested in paying $100,000 of taxpayer money to put somebody through the system and incarcerate them for a year for that. How about a $1000 fine instead.

      I never have and never will film a movie with a camcorder. I do sneak in food and drinks all the time though. I sure hope I can't get a year in jail for that.

      That aside, I don't think I would care to attend the movies if an usher was going to stand next to me the whole time and watch me pick my nose or whatever. I guess we'll have to see how widespread this becomes.

    16. Re:So? by rzbx · · Score: 4, Insightful

      If you share your future electronic book with a friend and he doesn't pay the book licensing fee and your both in jail for 10 years, don't blame the publishers, it is obviously your fault. That has to be some ridiculous reasonining you have there. Who was upset when MLK went to jail? Why not? If the law is unjust, then of course we should be upset. You may be a boy scout now, but 10-20 years from now even you will be finding yourself breaking laws that you had no idea existed before. The problem with this law is that it is a pointless extension of a law that already exists. Consistantly increasing penalties for such small crimes while we still have bigger problems to solve. People that murder, steal, rape, molest, etc. are being penalized less than someon who uses a drug, shares a song, or bypasses the encryption on their DVD to play a movie they bought. Do you see the problem here? Did you know that child molesters have a better chance of being released from prison earlier than those with drug offenses? What do you know? Why should business interests worry about child molesters, it doesn't cost them any money (directly at least). It makes me even more sad that there those that moderate your post insightful. It has little insight, simply a bunch of remarks to defend the established law system that needs rewriting, NOT EXTENDING. How about the next law we put in place is 10 year minimum sentence to anyone caught downloading an mp3? Sound fair?

      --
      Question everything.
    17. Re:So? by Oculus+Habent · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Law enforcement was called in to arrest them. It's not MPAA vigilantes; if no one reported the crime to the police, they would never know about it.

      The theaters aren't just fighting for the MPAA - many don't like the MPAA, who sucks up much of the ticket cost - they are doing it because it's potentially lost income, not to mention that laws are being broken on their premises.

      --
      That what was all this school was for... to teach us how to solve our own problems. -- janeowit
    18. Re:So? by WIAKywbfatw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Let's make one thing clear: the law as it stands makes you a criminal for possessing any video recording device whilst in a cinema, regardless of whether it's switched on off and in your backpack, or whether it's on and in your hand. That's a bad thing: it's the equivalent of punishing someone for having a packet of cigarettes in their pocket when they visit a non-smoking restaurant or bar.

      As for the issue of mobile phones left on during a public performance, well, if you're arguing that it's both selfish and inconsiderate to other patrons then I agree with you totally. But, as I've pointed out, it's the mere possession of a device capable of recording video that makes you a criminal here, not its use, and asking all cinema-goers who have video mobiles to leave them at home is hardly the proper solution here. The most appropriate solution is to punish people who are caught breaching copyright, not those that are just watching the movie that they paid to see.

      --

      "Accept that some days you are the pigeon, and some days you are the statue." - David Brent, Wernham Hogg
    19. Re:So? by Phillip2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps he is irritated at the large amount of time and effort going to enforcing increasingly draconian efforts to support the failing business model of the movie industry.

      Like the oil industry which requires us to make continual military interventions into many parts of the world to survive, the movie industry is asking society to spend enourmous amounts of cash and suffer attacks on its freedom so it can make money. This is the industry that told us that video recording was going to kill it. Actually it said that TV was going to kill it before that.

      They should get a life, learn to compete with the new realities, and stop belly aching. Why they can not realise that there is money to be made out of enabling people to watch a film in comfort, with good sound and visuals I don't know. A wobbly camcorder image with the sound of hardening arteries from the popcorn eating kid in the next seat is not competition.

      Phil

    20. Re:So? by deanj · · Score: 4, Informative
      Ken Lay? Well, if you're going after all the corporate fraud that occurred during the 1990's an created the "great economy" that all turned out to be built on lies after it fell to pieces starting in March 2000, you better damn well have your ducks in a row before trying to nail the guy. Here's an article about just that.

      Personally, I hope they take their time and nail this guy to the wall.

    21. Re:So? by infinite9 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I think the problem is that copyrights are supposed to be a civil issue. If what you're doing is a copyright violation, they should be able to sue you. But inacting a criminal law for this smacks of corporate america controling the legal system. Also, the punishments for these sorts of things are usually way too harsh. For example, what would you have to do with your car to get a year in jail on the first offense? DUI? No. Manslaughter? That would probably do it. What about drugs... go to jail for a year on the first offense for possesion? I don't think so. But all you have to do is enter a movie theater with a camcorder and you're busted. It may be wrong to record movies, but this law is certainly unjust.

      --
      Disconnect your television. Do your own research. Draw your own conclusions. They're probably lying. Don't be a sheep.
    22. Re:So? by merky1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I agree with you that putting this guy in jail for one year just for the camcorder hurts society as a whole. Not just from the prison costs, but imagine the after shock of spending a year in jail. Any IT managers hiring jailbirds? Community service, sure. Fines, hell yeah. Jail time, not unless you can prove that he is a MAJOR distributor of cams. At that point there is no defense.

      --
      --WooooHoooo--
    23. Re:So? by Kenja · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Civil disobedience requires you to EXPECT and ACEPT the consequences of your actions in the hope that your persecution will enlighten others as to the injustice of the law you're breaking. It is NOT being surprised and pissed off when you get caught. That is just being a petty criminal.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    24. Re:So? by miskatonic+alumnus · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Here we go again. STEAL??? For the N-thousandth time, copyright infringement is not STEALING. If it were, then we wouldn't need extra laws and extra terminology. It would just be called stealing, for which there is extant laws, terminology, and punishment.

      I don't see what the big deal is, personally. These copies aren't high quality. A year in jail is outrageous. Just throw the bum out of the theatre and ban him. Why does the United States have this OBSESSION with punishment. It is not sufficient to slap someone with a little fine; we have to bankrupt them, throw them in jail, ruin their lives, all for a trivial little offense. What the fuck!!! Show some goddamned common sense. After all, there are so many laws on the books, I feel I can safely say that 100% of the people in the U.S. are in violation of at least one of them at least once per year. It could be your turn next.

    25. Re:So? by ocie · · Score: 3, Funny

      They should sentance him to 100 hours of community service -- cleaning up movie theaters.

      --
      JET Program: see Japan, meet intere
    26. Re:So? by zod1025 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      There *definitely* is a mismatch between what should be a criminal offense and what should be a civil offense. Clearly copyright violations should be civil offenses, as should anything dealing with intellectual property, because it's all make-believe anyway (no humans were harmed in the violation of this copyright!)

      So fine the dude a thousand or a million or whatever, ban him from theatres, whatever. But jail time? Get real. Completely inappropriate.

      --

      -ZOD-
    27. Re:So? by 110010001000 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Failing model? Slashdot really is caught in a reality distortion field. The movie industry has enjoyed record profits every year for the last 5 years, partly due to their enforcement efforts to crack down on ILLEGAL copying of copyrighted works.

      Other fallacies often repeated by Slashbots:
      - Software is a commodity
      - You can't make money selling IP like software, music, etc in the 21st century
      - Linux is ready for the desktop

    28. Re:So? by Catbeller · · Score: 4, Insightful

      1. copying isn't stealing. it isn't rape, murder, barratry, assault, or slander, either. please stop murdering the english language. (or is that stealing the english language?) George Orwell is crying somewhere, while Gingrich is laughing.

      2. making a bad copy of a movie does not warrant a felony conviction, jail time, loss of the right to vote, loss of the ability to make a living, or the loss of the right to serve on a jury. this is insane. it was a civil infraction, punishable by fine, until the MPAA and RIAA made it a federal crime more severe than the act of murder.(rape? angary? does semantics matter when money is on the line?)

      3. as many have said, why isn't Ken Lay in jail if the Law is the LAW? Some schmuck is going to be raped for years and have his life extinguished because the MPAA bought a law? who the hell in Hollywood has gone to jail for raping a creator out of millions of dollars in royalties?

      4. i keep hearing that he was in private establishment. but Paul Reubens (Pee Wee Herman) had his life ruined and his bank account drained for masturbating in a PUBLIC PLACE: the porno theater.

      if the theater is a public place, this means we are not permitted to record video in public? Judge Scalia CAN confiscate voice recorders? if it is a private establishment where Constitutional rights are suspended, why was Reubens arrested and humiliated for being in public?

      5. if the Law is the LAW, would it be right for a locality to execute you for a speeding ticket? After all, you are expected to know the consequences for your illegal actions. Discuss.

    29. Re:So? by theLOUDroom · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I agree, why are people getting upset about someone going to jail for breaking the law? sam0ht seems to be a bit irate over this for some reason...if you are going to break a law, don't bitch when you get busted!

      IN A DEMOCRACY YOU ARE SUPPOSED TO EVALUATE THE A LAW AND ITS RESULTING PUNISHMENTS.

      If you speed, you might get a ticked, but that doesn't mean that putting a 55 MPH speed limit and a road that was designed to the a 65 isn't anything but an excuse to rip people off.
      Also, you want the punishment to fit the crime.
      Are you aware that our prisons are bursting at the seams with non-violent drug offenders? So much so that violent criminals are being paroled sooner than usual?

      "If you do the crime, you better be prepared to do the time"

      Does that include MLK and Ghandi?

      I'm not saying that this guy is Ghandi. I'm saying that your "The law's the law" attitude is absolutely stupid and counterproductive in a society where the law is CHANGEABLE and the citizenry expected to participate in this process of changing it.

      When someone get's arrested and goes to jail it should be ok because that law makes sense to you and the punishment fits, not because "The law's the law".

      With your attitude, we'd still be trading slaves, women couldn't vote, etc.

      --
      Life is too short to proofread.
    30. Re:So? by ayjay29 · · Score: 5, Funny

      >>If you have sex in a public place and you get arrested for indecency

      The projectionist with the night vision goggles usually keeps pretty quiet about that one.

      --
      Offtopic, Inflammatory, Inappropriate, Illegal, or Offensive comments might be moderated up.
    31. Re:So? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 4, Insightful

      I could go rent it, but it's a pain in the ass.

      Taking a cam corder into a movie theater is breaking the law, and deserves to be punished.

      Assuming I keep the movie, and all other provisions, etc

      So... you defend the law by only following it when it's convenient and you defend your actions by saying you'll accept the consequences IF they ever come and subject to provisions you invent?

      How the fuck is this insightful? You can't selectively follow and defend laws based on your own personal convenience and have any credibility. If they're going to waste the public's money dragging people with camcorders from the theatre into a police cruiser, then they ought to do the same to you for using your internet connection to do exactly the same thing: violate copyright. The mechanism for infringement is irrelevant.

      Look, I'm sorry to just go ad hominem on this guy's ass, but that was a stupid post, and this person is stupid for posting it.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    32. Re:So? by swv3752 · · Score: 3, Insightful

      One- it is not theft. So stop trolling. It is a copyright violation, which should be a civil matter not a criminal one. Making civil violations criminal acts only leads to creating more criminals. Have we learned nothing from our past? (For those that have not figured it out- here is the clue bat: Prohibition).

      Two, what happens in five years when we all have cell phones more powerful than our desktops that can record full video for 10 hours? I already have a PDA more powerful with more RAM than a notebook I had several years ago. Do you really want to go to jail because you happened to check a page that vibrated in on the cell? That is the scenario we moving to.

      Third, are all those five people household members? If not, then it is arguable that is a public showing. By your terms, you are a thief depriving those hard working people at the MPAA of thier rightful works. You may want to get off that high horse.

      I am all for respecting others rights, but I also expect some reciprisosity. Copyrights were meant to be applied for a limited time; not for effectively forever. More and more laws are being passed to trample on my rights.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    33. Re:So? by 3terrabyte · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Actually, I'd compare these guys camming as "Mules" in the drug trade. Something like 100-300 dollars for selling the copy seems to be as crappy as being a mule to me.

      However, those buying these copies are making tons of money by making master DVD's and selling them.

      --

      Why are there only 19 people folding@home for slashdot?

    34. Re:So? by Lumpy · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I have a great solution...

      have 5-10 people go into the theatre with camcorders WITHOUT a tape in it. hell let's get flagrant and make sure the record LEd is blinking!

      have them all get arrested, Be sure that fox news is outside to record it... and watch how all cases get thrown out of court as it is not illegal to bring a camcorder into a theater without the intent to record the movie.

      unfortunately finding people with the balls to do this stuff is difficult today...

      --
      Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
    35. Re:So? by DavidBrown · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Bad cases make bad law. Sure, it's overkill to send someone to jail for sharing an mp3. But this isn't the case here. This guy was videotaping a film, in the freakin' movie theater. This isn't fair use under any stretch of the imagination. It's illegal, plain and simple, and the guy ought to be prosecuted and sent up the river. But he's not going to be prosecuted for a felony. He's going to be prosecuted for a misdemeanor, which carries a one-year max sentence. And even if he gets sentenced to one year, he'll be out in six months if he stays out of trouble in the county lockup. This is not a cruel or unusual punishment. It is not a ten-year sentence, so please stop with your Parade of Horribles already.

      It's also not a small crime - what this guy was probably going to do was to take his video tape and turn it into a DVD and sell it to others. When Elf came out last year, Actor/Director Jon Favreau was a guest co-host on Jimmy Kimmel live. During a street-interview segment, a woman talked about buying DVD's and displayed her copy of Elf, which had been in the theaters for less than a week. This happens all of the time. Just do a search for bit.torrents and you'll find movies that haven't been released yet up for grabs. If you think that what this guy was doing wasn't a crime, you've got to be kidding. The law was passed for the simple reason that prosecutors had no way of convicting criminals like this guy of anything unless they actually caught him selling his ill-gotten goods. And please don't compare him to Martin Luther King, Jr. This isn't a civil rights case. He ain't Rosa Parks standing up for herself refusing to obey a discriminatory and unconstitutional law. He's a jerk out trying to make a few bucks at the expense of others.

      Also, you're completely wrong when you say that people who murder, steal, rape, molest, etc. are being penalized less than someone who uses a drug, shares a song, or bypasses DVD encryption. That's an exaggeration intended to buttress the fantasy that this guy isn't doing anything wrong, or if he is, there's no victim and it's "fair use" anyway.

      In reality, most people who get caught for drug possession charges (unless it's with intent to distribute) get into diversion programs on a first offense. Hell, in California, the penalty for ordinary possession of marijuana is a $50 fine. And penalties for serious crimes are very severe. Ever hear of 3-strikes? Yes, the drug war is stupid and drug laws should be revised, but that has nothing to do with this man's crime.

      --
      144l. ph34r my 133t l3g4l 5k1lz!
    36. Re:So? by Dun+Malg · · Score: 4, Insightful
      This is not the battle to fight, it is a clear cut case of breaking the law. If this is where the MPAA wants to direct their resources, so be it.

      The problem is, it's not the MPAA's resources. It's our taxpayer-funded municipal law enforcement organization that's doing the dirty work. That's why it shouldn't be a crime. The MPAA should have to devote THEIR resources through civil action, like everyone else does.

      --
      If a job's not worth doing, it's not worth doing right.
    37. Re:So? by Just+Some+Guy · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Your ticket gives your the right to watch the movie once in that theater at that time, and that is all.

      No. No. No. No. I'm sick of these "implied contracts" that we've all supposedly agreed to without having seen. While I understand and agree with the idea that you shouldn't be recording the move, I didn't agree to a license of any type when I bought my ticket. I paid for the privilege of being allowed to occupy a given room at a given time. I may bring a book, stare at cute girls, or take a nap. If the theater is otherwise empty, I can even play "MST3K" with my friends and yell at the screen.

      I'm tired of this "but your license says..." crap. I have yet to sign a contract regarding my rights to use a ticket, or DVD, or piece of software that I've purchased. Give me a piece of paper with clear terms and a signature line, and I'll be willing to admit that I have a business relationship with the entity I'm buying a product from. Until then, forget it.

      --
      Dewey, what part of this looks like authorities should be involved?
    38. Re:So? by Kenja · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I may be wrong, but I dont recall Thoreau sitting around and whining when/if he got caught. Did he except the consequences of his actions or just bitch about it online?

      "I have paid no poll tax for six years. I was put into a jail once on this account, for one night; and, as I stood considering the walls of solid stone, two or three feet thick, the door of wood and iron, a foot thick, and the iron grating which strained the light, I could not help being struck with the foolishness of that institution which treated my as if I were mere flesh and blood and bones, to be locked up. I wondered that it should have concluded at length that this was the best use it could put me to, and had never thought to avail itself of my services in some way. I saw that, if there was a wall of stone between me and my townsmen, there was a still more difficult one to climb or break through before they could get to be as free as I was. I did nor for a moment feel confined, and the walls seemed a great waste of stone and mortar. I felt as if I alone of all my townsmen had paid my tax. They plainly did not know how to treat me, but behaved like persons who are underbred. In every threat and in every compliment there was a blunder; for they thought that my chief desire was to stand the other side of that stone wall. I could not but smile to see how industriously they locked the door on my meditations, which followed them out again without let or hindrance, and they were really all that was dangerous. As they could not reach me, they had resolved to punish my body; just as boys, if they cannot come at some person against whom they have a spite, will abuse his dog. I saw that the State was half-witted, that it was timid as a lone woman with her silver spoons, and that it did not know its friends from its foes, and I lost all my remaining respect for it, and pitied it."

      Seems that unlike your current champion of civil disobedience Thoreau was willing to except that his choices had consequences but that they where outweighed by injustices he was trying to stand against.

      --

      "Have you ever thought about just turning off the TV, sitting down with your kids, and hitting them?"
    39. Re:So? by dubl-u · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I never have and never will film a movie with a camcorder. I do sneak in food and drinks all the time though. I sure hope I can't get a year in jail for that.

      You realize that criminalizing one makes as much sense as the other, right?

      In both cases, somebody (studio, theater) does something (makes, shows a movie) with a particular plan about how to make money from it. Then somebody else finds a way to get the value without coughing up like the producer expected.

      Videotaping a movie happens to be illegal, while bringing in your own drink is only against the rules. But that's only because the MPAA has more money to lobby. They're both equally wrong (or right, depending on your choice of moral frameworks).

    40. Re:So? by Control+Group · · Score: 3, Insightful
      The violations of the law you posted are very far out from what copying is, using excessive exaggeration does not prove your point. Copying is stealing, just in the same way that riding a bus or train without a ticket is stealing, you're illegally taking something you didn't pay for, even if all it is, is time, space, or rights.

      This was not exaggeration, it was pointing out that just because something is illegal doesn't mean it's stealing. It's very simple. Copyright violation and stealing are two different legal violations. The definitions are not the same. Analogizing copyright violation to not paying for a bus ride is also flawed: it costs the bus company money for you to be on that bus, in terms of more fuel used and more wear and tear on the equipment. In this case, you are stealing. Copyright violation does not cost the copyright holder money, it might cost the copyright holder potential money. This is the fundamental difference between copyright infringement and theft. Theft deprives the victim of something s/he has, copyright infringement deprives the victim of something s/he might have gotten. Hence the appropriate response to coyright infringement: determine the losses incurred by the infringer, and recoup money for the holder from the infringer. Making this a criminal violation achieves nothing.

      Murder and rape are not less severe than copying

      His point is that, in a sense, they are: neither murder nor rape is a federal crime (unless committed on federal property, while trafficking aliens, in pursuit of drug-related activity, and a few other exceptions). Violation of copyright is. Again, this is not an exaggeration, simply a statement of fact.

      You will also note I didn't say I thought the punishment was proper, that is for a court to decide though, not the MPAA, as the trial hasn't gone through yet, we have no idea what the punishment will be

      Partially correct. We have no idea whether jail time will be served, fines will be assessed, etc. However, we do know that if convicted of a felony, the guilty party loses the right to vote, the right to sit on a jury, and must make any employer aware of a felony conviction. This is independent of the penalties assessed, and is what the original poster was referring to. We do know these penalties will exist, assuming only that the violator is convicted.

      Kenneth Lay has NOTHING to do with this story, stay on topic! Kenneth Lay should rot for what he did, no one will argue differently here. The person who commited this crime still did something wrong, and should be punished, once again, how much depends on what the judge rules, and how appeals go, this hasn't even been broached yet, so stop speculating wildly. And FYI, tons of Hollywood king pins have been sued, and they have lost, for the infringment of other people's copyrights, and for unfair contracts. It happens all the time, research before you post!

      Completely correct. Just because Ken Lay should be in prison doesn't necessarily mean this guy shouldn't be. I couldn't agree more.

      Once again, learn how to debate, excessive exaggeration DOES NOT make your point.

      Well, it's poorly presented, to be sure. But the point is that just because something is illegal doesn't mean punishments should be arbitrarily onerous. Though clouded in dubious rhetoric, the original poster's point is valid, since s/he's trying to argue that the punishments being assessed for copyright infringement are excessive. Of course, one doesn't need to appeal to making speeding a capital crime to make this point, one only needs to look at the RIAA's "legal" tactics against Kazaa users.

      --

      Reality has a conservative bias: it conserves mass, energy, momentum...
    41. Re:So? by Spillman · · Score: 2, Interesting

      No. No. No. No. I'm sick of these "implied contracts" that we've all supposedly agreed to without having seen.

      Just because you haven't seen them and don't like them doesn't mean that they aren't there. When you buy a ticket the theater is obliged to show you a movie at that time, and you agree to watch it at that time. Sure you can goof off if you want as long as no one else is going to be disturbed. The point is that it is an impiled contract that the theater will show you the movie at that time and that's when you can watch it.

      I have yet to sign a contract regarding my rights to use a ticket, or DVD, or piece of software that I've purchased. Give me a piece of paper with clear terms and a signature line, and I'll be willing to admit that I have a business relationship with the entity I'm buying a product from.

      First, you are a consumer, you don't have a "business relationship" with any "entity". Second, as with the ticket, if you buy a DVD you recieve a license to view the DVD privately in your home. It is clearly stated in the beginning of most DVDs. If you don't agree to it return the DVD and don't watch it.

      I don't want to piss you off but what I'm saying is that you can't pretend that implied contracts are not real and therefore do not apply to you.

      --
      sig?
    42. Re:So? by Midnight+Thunder · · Score: 2

      Look at it another way: A cinema is a private property open to the public. For this reason you are under the obligation of respecting the 'directives' of the premises, on the condition that they do not over-ride any of the laws of the teritory of which the property is part of (local, provencial, country, etc). If you do not, they have the right, in mose cases, to chuck you out.

      --
      Jumpstart the tartan drive.
    43. Re:So? by npsimons · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Why does the United States have this OBSESSION with punishment[?]

      Because the United States was founded primarily by Puritans ("The infliction of cruelty with a good conscience is a delight to moralists. That is why they invented hell.").


      Sure, we also got the Puritan work ethic ("the devil finds work for idle hands") and the Puritan education ethic (the true path to enlightenment is through study) which are the two primary reasons for America's success today (that and it's natural resources), but we are also unfortunately saddled with Puritan morality (ie, harsh punishment and much ado about nothing (a nipple)).


      After all, there are so many laws on the books, I feel I can safely say that 100% of the people in the U.S. are in violation of at least one of them at least once per year.

      I don't doubt it. It's frustrating, but what can you do?
  3. LOL by grub · · Score: 5, Funny


    The thought of spending a year in "Le Hotel Cornhole" over The Alamo?! HA aha ahaha... man that's too funny.

    --
    Trolling is a art,
    1. Re:LOL by petepac · · Score: 2, Funny

      He probably recorded Gigli too.

      --
      >> Practice Safe Hex
  4. Yeah...right by Gr33nNight · · Score: 4, Funny

    I bet the projectionist was making his own copy of the film and didnt want competition!

    Projectionist = Centropy asshat customer = FTF

  5. I found the number by thebra · · Score: 5, Funny

    'The MPAA has established a nationwide telephone hotline for cinema employees to report violations'
    1-800-88G-REED

  6. Cam? by lofoforabr · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In fact, I rarely get any camera recorded movies, because of the usual low quality.
    Don't we all love TeleSync and (even better), DVD-Screeners?
    IMHO, camera recorded movies aren't all that worth the download, are they?

    1. Re:Cam? by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Informative

      A telesync is when you point a cam at the screen. You're thinking of a TeleCine , which is where the film is run through a machine. I've seen some telesyncs that looked pretty good actually, but usually either the picture or the sound or both are hosed.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    2. Re:Cam? by hanssprudel · · Score: 2, Informative

      Using warez terminology though, something taped from the audience with a smuggled in camera is called a "cam".

      The word "telesync" is used for something shot from the projectionist booth in an empty cinema, with the sound sourced directly from the movie. Telesyncs require the aid of the cinema owner of projectionist, cams simply require somebody to do what the guy in the story attempted. I have seen movies that people called telesyncs which where really just good cams though.

      As the grandparent noted, the best quality are "screeners". Screener, of course, is an old Hollywood name for the tapes given to actors/reviewers/awards judges etc. These are/were often in DVD form, allowing for perfect ripping. You know you are watching a screener when the "Not distribution, if you purchased this tape, please call 1-800-NO-COPIES" text or some version thereof, appears at the bottom.

      Hollywood are fighting screener leaks by watermarking them, so that they can find out who is supplying the groups. They are fighting cams by way of methods like this (though it is dubious whether it will work - most cams I have seen have been shot outside the USA - Singapore, which often gets films early for the far east - seems common). Presumably there is a plan in place to start watermarking the films sent to cinemas as well, to find out which projectionists are allowing telesyncs to be made.

      Anyway, if people stop making cams, I don't think anyone will be very upset. Only an idiot would watch a Cam of his own free will. Telesyncs are often not a lot better. Most hardcore downloaders I know will shun everything that isn't a screener - better to wait until the DVD comes at which point high quality copies are plentiful.

      (Queue the Slashdot "piracy is BAAADD" choir. Can copy - will copy. Trying to stop people is stupid.)

  7. Hahahaha by Alranor · · Score: 3, Funny

    Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams"

    Because we all know that the war on drugs has completely eradicated the evil scourge that is marijuana use ....

    Lol.

  8. yes, the message is clear... idiot. by garcia · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    How about stay out a movie theatre with recording equipment, night vision goggles, and/or the intention of stealing stuff... Perhaps then you won't get arrested.

  9. You missed the message by duffbeer703 · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you don't film the movie with a camcorder, you will not be dragged off to prison from the theatre.

    Does anyone honestely believe that this is a privacy issue?

    --
    Conformity is the jailer of freedom and enemy of growth. -JFK
    1. Re:You missed the message by hackstraw · · Score: 2, Funny

      If you don't film the movie with a camcorder, you will not be dragged off to prison from the theatre.

      Does anyone honestely believe that this is a privacy issue?


      Yes, its clearly a violation of one's privacy to be in a public place, commit a crime (or even just break the rules of the public place like smoke, drink, etc), and get punished for it.

  10. I guess the lesson isn't that clear after all... by ptomblin · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    Uh no, the lesson is don't fucking steal, dipwad.

    --
    The next Cmdr Taco duplicate will be ready soon, but subscribers can beat the rush and see it early!
  11. Yay by Omnifarious · · Score: 3, Insightful

    An excellent use of technology to catch a criminal. The contract for entering a movie theatre is clear about not having recording devices or food. It was so obviously wrong that even a projectionist had no qualms about wearing some night vision goggles to notice someone with a camera and eject them. This doesn't even need to invoke copyright law to be considered wrong.

  12. Really? by ideatrack · · Score: 2, Funny

    Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams.

    Really? That prevalent? The rest of the article makes it sound like it's going to become quite rare.

  13. The Lesson by jaaron · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    The lesson is clear: don't be stupid and take a video camera into a movie theatre.

    --
    Who said Freedom was Fair?
  14. Big ol Flashlight. by Deflagro · · Score: 5, Funny

    So would they mind if you brought a massive flashlight with you?
    That way when the fools with the night vision are peeping around, just turn on the flashlight quickly and listen for the scream.
    Although, if they had metal detectors, that would foil my evil plan.

    --
    Der Tod ist der einzige Weg hier raus!
    1. Re:Big ol Flashlight. by technos · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Eh.. IR LEDs.. Most "Night vision" rigs are sensitive to IR/UV. Blind him invisibly.

      --
      .sig: Now legally binding!
    2. Re:Big ol Flashlight. by JabberWokky · · Score: 2, Interesting
      just turn on the flashlight quickly

      Having worked in the theater side of sneak previews and film festivals, I'll tell you the result. Instead of being kicked out by the studio reps with the night vision, you'll have a theater employee coming down at you to kick your ass out on the street and ban you from the theater. And your fellow patrons will be happy to turn in the jackass with the flashlight (or laser pointer). It gives quite a bit of respect for the human race when you walk down to the middle of the aisle, loudly say with authority: "laser pointer?" into the crowd, and the entire mass of humanity all swivels to point at the asshat.

      --
      Evan

      --
      "$30 for the One True Ring. $10 each additional ring!" -- JRR "Bob" Tolkien
  15. War on Drugs? by mwhahaha · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Anyone else think the comparison with the War on Drugs is a bit much? Especially when the War on Drugs has been touted as a failure by many people for it's over spending and inability to really curb the influx of drugs into this country. So does that mean the MPAA is just going to blow tons of money and fail to get anything done? Maybe it's just me...

  16. Quality by Bartgroks · · Score: 2, Insightful

    This should eliminate a lot of the poor quality copies.

  17. Asinine comments by PorscheDriver · · Score: 2, Insightful
    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested

    er... no. Let's try:

    The lesson is clear: don't record films in movie theaters using a camcorder and you won't get arrested

    Welcome to Slashdot, would Sir like a knee-jerk reaction?

    --
    "This is your life, and it's ending one second at a time."
  18. In other news.. by JusTyler · · Score: 3, Insightful

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    If you like getting into your car and driving around at 100mph, you might be arrested. Ah well, the lesson is clear: stay out of cars, and you won't get arrested!

    I'm all for jumping over privacy invasions and the ever domineering power of the state, but cracking down on things which are blatantly illegal isn't a violation of our freedom.

  19. Leakes by Manip · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Most of the illegal films on the internet are from within the movie industry it's self, although this will help reduce the number of 'cam' films being shared around, it will not help reduce over-all piracy.

    Honestly, I have no good suggestions beyond giving up on cinemas and just release everything on DVD ASAP to reduce piracy. Thing is, people want the media, and they want it right now... and until the industry catches up with what people want this is going to continue.

  20. Slashdot: News for trolls. Stuff that's biased. by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    From the /. write-up...
    Motion Picture Ass. Head Jack Valenti
    Was "Association" or even "Assoc." was too much to type there?

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.
    Uhm, how about "Don't take video cameras into movie theaters and you won't get arrested?" They're not arresting random patrons, just the ones who are caught making illegal copies.

    From the linked Register piece...
    You've been out at the beach all day and you met a friend in a bar who says she is going to take in a film. You join her and caught up in the conversation and don't notice some of the new signs up at the cinema. Suddenly someone wants to search your back pack and the next thing you know you're in prison for a one year stretch for taking the camcorder which you forgot was in your pack, into a cinema. The $2,500 fine isn't funny either.
    That's not the California law. The law requires that the camcorder operator demonstrate an intent to copy the movie. I don't quite see how you can accidently aim a camcorder at the movie screen and turn it on. Somebody "caught in the act" is clearly demonstrating intent, while somebody who has the camcorder off an in their backpack is clearly not.

    The law has been written with future technologies in mind and can equally apply to any type of recorder, including a mobile phone. So in California at least it is soon going to be illegal to take your phone into the cinema.
    Again, only if you're intent on copying the film. Don't aim your phone at the screen and hit record and you'll be fine. Besides, does anybody have a camera phone with two to three hours of memory?

  21. Next time.. by telemonster · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Next time the camcorderist should sit in the upper right or upper left part, that way he can't be seen.

    Somehow, I just don't see these crappy video CD and DivX distributions of zero day movies a threat to their profits. Sure, bored kids with no money might sit at home wasting hours downloading them but anyone with income to afford the DVD copy will most likely buy it.

    Wasn't it Europe where the movie industry wanted to stop text messaging because people were messaging each other and giving advice as to which movies sucked, which supposidly undermined the advertising campaign that overhypes crap?

    Just like software piracy, some 14 year old running 3dStudio Max on mom's PC is not a loss in profits.

    --
    Southeastern Virginia REPRESENT!
  22. saw this first hand by pojo · · Score: 5, Interesting

    I run a college movie group that sometimes does sneak previews of upcoming films. I was blown away when I heard that for our most recent preview (Gothika, total crap btw) they wanted to bring in night vision goggles. They wound up basically frisking everyone that came in too, and even turned away kids with cameras in their cell phones. The people who got in didn't actually seem to mind the search that much, they kind of understood. Nonetheless, it was the first time we had a major external security force at one of our screenings.

    1. Re:saw this first hand by SmackCrackandPot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      and even turned away kids with cameras in their cell phones

      Would a cell phone have enough juice to record and transmit 90 minutes worth of video? Even if it did, the call charge would probably be more than the cost of buying the DVD when it came out. And the resolution is going to be rather low, not forgetting the reduction in frame rate, plus the loss of stereo let alone Dolby surround sound.

  23. The reason reason for the night vision... by jplamb · · Score: 2, Funny

    I think the real reason the projectionist wanted the night vision goggles is to watch people getting it on.

  24. Blinded by the light by LostCluster · · Score: 4, Funny

    From the BBC piece...
    Mr Joun was arrested after another audience member complained about a red light on a camcorder at the Pacific Theatre at the Grove.
    Just how much hacking is needed to take the red light out of a consumer camcorder? He would have gotten away with it if it wasn't for that LED.

  25. How ironic... by lxt · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...that it would be cheaper for the cinemas to use Video Cameras with NightVision as oppossed to goggles...

  26. Ass Head by djhertz · · Score: 5, Funny

    And I have been calling Jack Valenti a shit head the whole time... I stand corrected.

    --
    Modest doubt is called the beacon of the wise - William Shakespeare
  27. Interesting... by l33t-gu3lph1t3 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    While I personally don't agree with being watched in a movie theatre, these guys are just trying to prevent the asshats from ripping off their stuff. If you want to watch a movie, you go to see it, rent it, or buy it. If it's really good enough to want to see then it's good enough to want to buy.

    How is this a violation of rights? Security cameras are everywhere these days. I fail to see how this is any different. I do consider it a waste of time, however. Isn't the projectionist supposed to be watching the *movie* to make sure it's showing up in focus?

    One thing that's kinda funny is the law that this dumbass is being charged under. Bringing a camcorder into theatres is illegal? Maybe the *use* of such devices should be illegal in a theatre, but not the mere presence. That's tantamount to charging someone with conspiracy to commit murder for owning a gun.

    I believe what the theatre SHOULD do is reserve the right to confiscate any electronic equipment :)

    --
    ------- "From bored to fanboy in 3.8 asian girls" ----------
  28. Okay. So what equipment... by sczimme · · Score: 2, Insightful


    will theatre owners/operators use to pinpoint the asshats making lots of noise during the movie?

    Yes, the video cameras are prohibited but at least they're quiet. I guess making the moviegoing experience more enjoyable (tolerable?) isn't that high on the priority list.

    /waits for movies to be released on DVD 'cause movie theatres are no longer enjoyable. YMMV.

    --
    I want to drag this out as long as possible. Bring me my protractor.
  29. first by WormholeFiend · · Score: 4, Funny

    first they came for the people smuggling food into the theatres, but I didnt say anything because I wasnt a theatre food smuggler...

    then they came for the cellular phone users, but I didnt say anything because I dont use a cellphone while watching movies at the theatre...

    then they came for the camcorder users, but I didnt say anything because I didnt tape movies at the theatre...

    when they came for me I didnt say anything, I just decided to spend my money elsewhere.

  30. C'mon by p4ul13 · · Score: 4, Insightful
    "The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested."

    The message is don't videotape a movie playing in the theater. I mean really, is *this* a problem for you?

    --
    Paul Lenhart writes words!
  31. Come on, use some common brain cells. by Saeed+al-Sahaf · · Score: 5, Insightful
    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    The whole feel of the implied editorial of this write-up is that there is something sinister and wrong about using noght-vision scopes to catch people who bring a video cam into a theater. But remember, it is people just like this ASSHOLE who got busted, that give RAII and the motion picture Nazis the fodder to shoot down P2P. Come on, there is no legitimate "fair use" excuse for bringing a video cam into a theater and filming the movie. Exactly who is the "ass-hat" here?

    --
    "Who are in control, they are not in control of anything - they don't even control themselves!" - Glen Beck
    1. Re:Come on, use some common brain cells. by Ryan_Terry · · Score: 5, Insightful

      agreed.

      Its about time people realize that the world was never meant to be a place full of free stuff to take whenever you want it. This idea that its your right to do whatever the hell you want, and when a mega corporation tries to stop you they are suddenly infringing on your god given rights is ridiculous.

      --
      MessEdUp
      .sig
      #/var/www/v
    2. Re:Come on, use some common brain cells. by Loki_1929 · · Score: 3, Interesting

      "Its about time people realize that the world was never meant to be a place full of free stuff to take whenever you want it. This idea that its your right to do whatever the hell you want, and when a mega corporation tries to stop you they are suddenly infringing on your god given rights is ridiculous."

      I think the problem that I, and some others have with a situation like this is that the law was bought and paid for by Mega Corps. Aside from the fact that no company has any right buying off legislators (campaign contributions? give me a break...), we're turning civil matters into criminal matters, removing even the appearance of distinction between large companies and government. No longer do the movie companies have to bring up civil cases against copyright infringers. Now, with the help of a few bought-and-paid-for politicians, they can get the taxpayers to foot the bill for punishing the infringers. A secondary issue to that is the fact that the distinction between infringement for commercial gain and non-commercial infringement is rapidly evaporating.

      Personally, I would have no problem at all if the company that owns the copyright to the film in question were to fire off a lawsuit against the man whose obvious and unmistakable intent was to create a copy of that film. Instead, rather than go through that trouble, the film industry as a whole has essentially bribed members of the legislature to create a criminal offense from a civil matter, thus removing virtually all the burden of copyright enforcement from the copyright holder.

      I don't particularly care for copyrights and patents. I think it was a pretty good idea at one time, but I think that it's gotten way out of hand. The concepts behind intellectual property are now being used more often to stifle scientific and artistic growth, rather than to promote it. That being said, I still support the civil enforcement of copyrights by the rightful holder thereof. What I don't support is bribery, pandering, or the criminalization of civil offenses without good reason. This guy brought a camera into a movie theatre and tried to create a copy of a film. Why is it that we're ready and willing to give him more jail time than someone who beats the hell out of his wife? Why is it that we'll send this guy to jail for essentially trespassing across the front lawn of the MPAA? Why are the tax dollars of the people of California being (ab)used to fund the prosecution of a civil offense? These are my problems with this situation, and I suspect it's where much of where other peoples' problem comes from as well.

      --
      -- "Government is the great fiction through which everybody endeavors to live at the expense of everybody else."
  32. the war on drugs?? by neoThoth · · Score: 2, Insightful

    give me a fuggin break here. The illegal distribution of cocaine and herion is not an analogy I would ascribe to copying a movie! It's not like pirating produces junkies or even damages ones health if viewed (except those crap movies like Alamo).

  33. Re:Ummm...OK! by scheming+daemons · · Score: 2, Funny
    Stay out of theaters...don't buy CD's...don't listen to corporate radio...don't eat fast food...don't drive SUVs...don't wear Nike...don't eat Martha Stewart...don't drink StarBucks...don't use Windows...don't use Macs...don't use Sony...don't drink Budwieser...don't watch The Simpsons...

    Now there's an image we could have done without... Especially with the likelihood that she'll be in prison with a lot of .... ahem .... butch women

    --
    "I have as much authority as the pope, I just
    don't have as many people who believe it" - George Carlin

  34. Resonable doubt? by chrysrobyn · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Say I'm a tourist (where doesn't really matter) and decide to take a 2 hour break from walking around and entertain myself by taking in a movie. Out of mistrust for my fellow man, I take my possessions inside, instead of leaving them in the lobby. As a tourist, I happen to have a video camera. Maybe I set it on the armrest beside me so I can keep a firm grasp on it and out of a thief's hands.

    Would a projectionist have a duty to interrupt the movie and ask me why my camera is there? A duty to question my answer? Say the fuzz shows up and decides to do the questioning for the projectionist, who is at fault for the false accusation? Or am I resonably considered guilty for merely having a camera?

  35. How dare they!!! by ScottGant · · Score: 5, Funny



    How dare they tell me I can't videotape a movie I PAID MONEY TO SEE! I want to make a copy of it, I paid for the movie after all.

    Also, how dare they say I can't make a copy of my DVD. I want to make a copy of it to....um....well, I don't really know why I would make a copy of something that cost 14 bucks and doesn't really degrade from repeated viewing....but still, it's MY RIGHT to make as many copies as I want...doesn't matter that I really have no use for a copy.

    Wait, if I make a copy of a dvd I OWN, I should be able to decide how I want those copies of that dvd that I OWN to be distributed. If I want to make 1000 copies of a dvd I OWN (get the picture, I bought and paid for the dvd), then I should be able to sell those 1000 copies...after all I OWN the original dvd!

    I also think all movies should be free for anyone and everyone...no matter what. So what they spent millions of dollars making them, screw them! How dare they tell me I have to pay to see them! I thought this was a free country!!!!

    --

    "Music is everybody's possession. It's only publishers who think that people own it." - John Lennon.
  36. Projectionists catching pirates? by BitWarrior · · Score: 2, Interesting

    What's funny to me is that I was under the impression that some of the biggest offenders were the projectionists. I have several friends who do/have done that job and they frequently brought home high quality copies of films. They got perfect angles to the screen from their location and it was easy for them to hide the cams.

  37. How Medieval by randall_burns · · Score: 2, Insightful

    In Medieval Europe, denigrating certain symbols was a capital offense(i.e. stuff like throwing mud at a statue of the Virgin Mary during a religious parade could get you death by slow torture-and the only way to get a quicker death was to kiss a cross or something similar).

    Hollywood seems to have taken on the role of the Vatican. The US has all kinds of pressing crime problems-and somehow, the MPAA manages to get their concerns at the top of the heap--and avoid jurisdictional issues between the states and the feds.

  38. Re:yes, the message is clear... idiot. by frankie · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Let's get three facts straight:
    1. Jack Valenti is indeed an Ass Head, and the MPAA sucks
    2. movie bootleggers are criminal asshats who also suck
    3. copyright infringement is not theft
    Theft means directly taking something that isn't yours and depriving the owner of it. Camcorder guys do not prevent the theater from showing the movie, nor do they prevent fellow moviegoers from seeing it.

    To anyone who says "illegal copying == theft", I say "you are murdering both language and law." :p

  39. IR emitter caps by trailerparkcassanova · · Score: 2, Interesting

    From now on everyone should wear caps with a IR emitters on the button.

  40. Smoking joints after exams? by unformed · · Score: 5, Funny

    What wrong with kids nowadays. Back in my day, we used to light up BEFORE the exam.

  41. The problem is the penalty by rben · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I have no problem with the cinemas using night goggles to find people illegally recording the movie. That is clearly just a reasonable attempt to protect their investment. What concerns me is the sentence of one year in prison. With our prisons already busting at the seams, do we really want a violent criminal released from prison to make room for a guy who illegally filmed a movie?

    The penalties given out should fit the crime. Using a camcorder to tape a movie is an economic crime and should be dealt with on that basis. Give the guy a fine large enough to destroy any profits he could make plus some more to drive the lesson home and keep the prison space for people who are actually a danger to us.

    Another thought. I've seen new parents who carry camcorders with them everywhere. They stuff it into the kids diaper bag. Are we going to send them to prison because they forgot to take the camera out of the bag and leave it in the car?

    It's sad when anyone decides that their personal profits are more important than public safety. It's worse when members of congress race to suck up to such people and enact legislation at their bidding.

    --

    -All that is gold does not glitter - Tolkien
    www.ra

  42. Useful for Other Violations by ReadParse · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Always remember Pee Wee Herman. Yes, he was in a porno theater, which is an interesting bit of irony since there are only a couple of things one can imagine doing in a porno theater besides "watching" (yeah right) the movie, and what he did was the least offensive of them.

    Anyway, the point is... how many times have you taken certain liberties in a darkened theater? Night vision goggles really turn those tables around, don't they? It's a point to ponder before doing something in the theater you wouldn't do in church.

    RP

  43. Costs? by fatpelt · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Are the costs going to be passed down to us? While I don't dissagree with the move, I think it is a wonderful idea, are theaters going to be forced to charge us more to watch movies? If so, I will go even less than I already do! I just can't afford the nighttime prices, and work prohibits me from hitting a matinee --

  44. Comparison to WoD by Sloppy · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Clearly, the 'War on Copyright Violation' is following the successful strategy used for the War on Drugs
    Did they seize his car and house?

    Comparing this to the War on Drugs is absurd. The victims in the WoD are minding their own business when harassed by government, and not messing with anyone else without consent.

    Theater pirates are entering someone else's movie theater, recording without consent, and messing with their market. The pirates are violating a law (copyright) which has a basis right in the constitution itself (article 1, section 8, clause 8).

    One is a flagrant abuse of government power, and the other is at worst (and I'm not even 100% sure about that) overzealous/extreme enforcement of a popularly-recognized legitimate function of government.

    You would probably need a constitutional ammendment to make the war on drugs legal, but you would also need a constitutional ammendment to eliminate copyright. The comparison is just absurd.

    --
    As copyright owner of this comment, I authorize everyone to defeat any technological measure which limits access to it.
  45. The real lesson? Tape over the red light. by oneiros27 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Yes, it's against the law to copy the movie with a camcorder... And yes, they used night vision goggles to catch someone.

    But the other guy that's been arrested for suspicion didn't even cover up or in someway disable the red 'recording' light on the camcorder. So he's also distracting other people around him, who have paid their money to see the movie.

    C'mon, at least have some common curtesy for the rest of the people in the theatre with you.

    At least I haven't any dumbasses playing the laser pointers in the movie theatres in a while. Or throwing things. Or with screaming children in an R-rated movie. Although, come to think of it, I also don't go to the movies very often anymore... that might have something to do with it.

    --
    Build it, and they will come^Hplain.
  46. Lighting up after exams by DavidLeblond · · Score: 2, Funny

    Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams.

    Wow, obviously they didn't goto my high school.

  47. Re:I guess the lesson isn't that clear after all.. by MartinG · · Score: 4, Informative

    learn what "steal" means. seriously.
    then learn what "copyright violation" is.

    Then compare the two and realise that they are nothing like each other, morally, legally, or otherwise.

    It's not that I condone filming movies with camcorders in cinemas, but please don't fall for the "copyright violation == stealing" propaganda.

    --
    -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  48. Stupid comment, Michael by acoustix · · Score: 4, Interesting
    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    WTF is that supposed to mean? You should have put: "The lesson is clear: break the law and you will go to jail."

    I'm tired of all of this petty whining BS. Yes, the MPAA can suck at times, but this is the law. Oh wait, I forgot. This is America - no one resposible for their own actions. I suppose it's the usher's fault or the policeman's fault that someone went to jail.

    Get a clue.

    -Nick

    --
    "A plan fiendishly clever in its intricacies"- Homer Simpson
  49. Editorial (-1, Flamebait) by jargoone · · Score: 5, Funny

    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    I can't wait for the day that you can moderate the little editorials. Michael would never get to post a story again.

    The lesson is more like: don't break the fucking law and you won't get arrested.

  50. Nightvision Google? by Lispy · · Score: 2, Funny

    Whats next? Now that we have gmail, this could be their next big thing.

  51. Cams in theatres are pop-culture now by WormholeFiend · · Score: 3, Interesting

    slightly offtopic, but have any of you guys seen the hilarious Hong Kong comedy/horror Bio Zombie? (www.imdb.com/title/tt0277605/)

    The movie starts just like someone is taping it with a camcorder, with people passing in front of the camera, and people shushing, telling others to stop smoking, etc.

    Proof that camcordering movies is seeping into pop culture.

    I wouldnt be surprised if at some point some hollywood movie uses such a reference.

  52. Google bomb by xant · · Score: 5, Funny

    I thought he was trying to create a google bomb. In fact, it's such a good idea, that I think I'll help him. Jack Valenti is a Motion Picture Ass Head.

    --
    It's rare that you're presented with a knob whose only two positions are Make History and Flee Your Glorious Destiny.
  53. Couldn't be more right... by east+coast · · Score: 2, Insightful

    "Soon, copied films will be as rare as students lighting up a joint after their exams."

    As we all know that the prohibition of weed and the war on drugs has brought the flow of marijuana to a near stop.

    Oh yeah...

    Heh!

    --
    Dedicated Cthulhu Cultist since 4523 BC.
  54. treat your customers like criminals by morcheeba · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The lesson really is "stay out of movie theaters" if they are going to treat you like a criminal.

    The theater in my little university town was in financial trouble (they were paying too much rent), and then 9/11 came along, and they saw $$. All of the sudden, you couldn't bring in backpacks because of "security". This is a town I specifically moved to because I could walk to where I wanted to go -- and that often involved my backpack. (remember, this is a college town). It's pretty funny that they were trying to pass off their fear that someone might bring in outside food as a more justifyable fear that someone might blow up the place. People would be safer if the theater didn't pile their trash up against the emergency exit doors.

    Anyway, the place was hostile to customers. I took my business down the block where they allowed backpacks. And I bought a lot of their popcorn.

  55. Hmm...a question by bonch · · Score: 5, Insightful

    What exactly is wrong with the MPAA not wanting people to film movies? That is, after all, a crime and is also immoral to a degree. Slashdotters have yet to legally or morally justify pirating movies.

    Is it okay to pirate games and software? You know, stuff that programmers made? Can I pirate the fuck out of Doom 3 when it comes out? OH, THAT'S RIGHT--the subject of software piracy is never mentioned because Slashdot is made up of a lot of programmers and developers. Since software piracy would affect them, it's bad, right? They'll stick up for their hero John Carmack and tell you to buy the game when it comes out.

    And why all the sudden is there an equation to the War on Drugs? It's completely irrelevant. Does that mean that Slashdot editors also believe drugs should be legalized?

    This article fits all the attributes required for being propaganda. Even the juvenile "Ass. Head" remark, which does nothing to intellectualize your argument.

    Try all you want, but making a desperate connection to the War on Drugs, calling him an Ass. Head, and pretending it's some sort of bad thing that they used night vision goggles to spot a camera (the pirates are using high-tech gadgets, so what is wrong with the theater doing the same damn thing? I don't expect any answer to this...) in order to arrest him for doing something illegal, is not going to change the fact that you're wrong if you think movie piracy is okay and that everyone should just "accept" it. I'm sure people will bring out the tired old "the MPAA needs to find a 'new business model'", which is something Slashdotters love to say. Except that these business majors never mention what the new model is supposed to be other than giving away shit for free. Yeah--that'll work.

    1. Re:Hmm...a question by maddskillz · · Score: 3, Funny

      I agree with you, that's it's not justified. But the Ass. Head thing was still pretty funny.

    2. Re:Hmm...a question by rjelks · · Score: 5, Insightful

      I'm more concerned about them busting people for "outside food." I mean really, I could get a steak dinner for the price of their popcorn and a drink!

    3. Re:Hmm...a question by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Is it okay to pirate games and software?

      Please don't use the same word to refer to robbery and murder on the high seas, and copyright violation. It's not just inaccurate, it's stupid.

      And why all the sudden is there an equation to the War on Drugs? It's completely irrelevant. Does that mean that Slashdot editors also believe drugs should be legalized?

      Don't know about editors, but anyone with a lick of sense can see that after three decades, the War on (Some) Drugs is a failure in every way. Hard drugs are readily available in any urban area, our prisons are overflowing, our society several times more violent, and our liberties eroding.

      The comparison to the current push for a War on Copying is that both unauthorized copying and drug use are widespread non-violent activities. They are both impossible to stop, but both Wars require gross invasions of privacy and civil liberties to continue their futile attempts at enforcement.

      Except that these business majors never mention what the new model is supposed to be other than giving away shit for free.

      I've been suggesting for years that a model similar to that of songwriter royalites should be applied - copying is free (just like singing a song), profit-making use rquires royalties. Other models have been proposed, you apparently just haven't been paying attention.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    4. Re:Hmm...a question by Abjifyicious · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Is it okay to pirate games and software? You know, stuff that programmers made? Can I pirate the fuck out of Doom 3 when it comes out? OH, THAT'S RIGHT--the subject of software piracy is never mentioned because Slashdot is made up of a lot of programmers and developers. Since software piracy would affect them, it's bad, right?

      I think that if Microsoft started putting people in jail for pirating Windows, Slashdotters would be just as angry at them as they are at the MPAA right now.

      All in all, I think what makes poeple angry is that the punishment is way out of proportion to the crime that was commited. That's why it was compared to the War on Drugs.

    5. Re:Hmm...a question by tenasius · · Score: 5, Funny

      > Does that mean that Slashdot editors also believe drugs should be legalized?
      WHAT!! We don't believe... wait... woaahhh! My hand looks like a care bear. What was the question again?

    6. Re:Hmm...a question by The+Taco+Prophet · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Actually, I rather like the MPAA's model. Rather than simply whining about people stealing their shit, they release DVD's with several commentary tracks available, behind the scenes featurettes, etc. The extras are rather hit or miss at times, but I almost invariably enjoy the commentary tracks.

      Buying the DVD costs me less than taking my wife out to see a movie in the theater, I get more, and I get to keep it. I buy more movies today than I ever did.

    7. Re:Hmm...a question by j-turkey · · Score: 4, Insightful
      What exactly is wrong with the MPAA not wanting people to film movies? That is, after all, a crime and is also immoral to a degree. Slashdotters have yet to legally or morally justify pirating movies.

      There is nothing wrong with the MPAA not wanting people to film movies. However, I believe that there is something wrong with a lobbying group like the MPAA taking an existing law and tacking on additional penalties because the crime involves a computer (and worse, our congress approving such a measure). It's just wrong. Were the penalties not sufficient before? What really makes the crime any different now to justify such a steep penalty? Does one get a year in prison for stealing the film reel -- what about shoplifting a DVD from Blockbuster? I doubt it -- those sound more like misdemeanor petty larceny than a year-in-jail-felony-type-crime. Do you see where the discrepancy is now?

      As far as the war on drugs message goes -- I agree with you, it was totally out of left field. However, I didn't detect any sarcasm in the posting and don't agree with your analysis. I couldn't believe that I saw the word "success" appearing in a sentence with "war on drugs" without some kind of counterindicating word. Whoever wrote that musta been pretty high on something...I fail to see how the war on drugs has succeeded in any of its stated objectives.

      --

      -Turkey

    8. Re:Hmm...a question by Dirtside · · Score: 5, Informative

      Because as it stands, you will spend more time in jail for bringing a camcorder into a movie theater than you would for physically assaulting an usher. Plus, the MPAA keeps trying to get legislation to cripple home electronic equipment in an incredibly futile attempt to do something about piracy.

      The first thing tells everyone that a giant company's financial interests are more important than the physical safety of an individual. The second thing tells those of us who DON'T pirate movies that we have to suffer because the MPAA doesn't have a clue how to deal with the problem sanely. Crippling my computer is NOT going to prevent people from downloading movies in any way. Cap Codes prevent me from enjoying a movie I *paid* to see. *That's* what pisses me off.

      If the law says X, and a company uses X to their advantage, it's hard to fault them... unless the law is unjust, stupid, ineffective, or otherwise bad. Nobody with half a clue thinks that the movie industry should just give up and let everyone pirate their movies. But copyright should be handled in the civil court system, not the criminal system. The fact that the MPAA is in the legal right doesn't excuse the parts of their behavior that are doing everyone harm and nobody good (hell, they're hurting themselves by acting like this!).

      Oh, and good work lumping all Slashdotters into a single mold by pretending we all like to claim that "the MPAA needs to find a 'new business model'" as if that were the answer to the problem. That's a real, real valid way to argue.

      --
      "Destroy science and religion. Science would re-emerge exactly the same; but not religion." - Penn Jillette, paraphrased
    9. Re:Hmm...a question by HPNpilot · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think most people basically understand that bringing in a camcorder to make a copy (especially to sell) of a movie is wrong and to be discouraged.

      However, the big issue I feel is in the heavy-handed approach to enforcement. I have never considered bringing a camcorder into a movie, but I cringe at the thought I am being watched by someone with NVGs. I have an expectation of some privacy while watching a movie. They want to install metal detectors? The day they do that is the day I completely stop going to movies; enough is enough!

      Regarding penalties for unauthorized copying, I understand they want to get maximum publicity and "make examples" of people but let's have some semblence of balance here. There is a big difference between someone making a copy for their own use and someone making a copy so they can then make 10,000 copies to sell on the street, so let's have the penalties be different.

      There is a lot of pent-up anger in people these days from the feeling of helplessness they feel against the political power of large industry groups such as the RIAA and MPAA. Politicians seemingly are more interested in protecting big donors than creating legislation that is well thought out and which is fair to both the public and the corporations.

    10. Re:Hmm...a question by D'Sphitz · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I bolded the relevant part for you so you don't have to think too hard.

      pirate
      n.

      1. a. One who robs at sea or plunders the land from the sea without commission from a sovereign nation.
      b. A ship used for this purpose.
      2. One who preys on others; a plunderer.
      3. One who makes use of or reproduces the work of another without authorization.
      4. One that operates an unlicensed, illegal television or radio station.

    11. Re:Hmm...a question by BobGregg · · Score: 3, Insightful

      >>...I cringe at the thought I am being watched by someone with NVGs.
      >>I have an expectation of some privacy while watching a movie.

      Um... no. No, you don't. You have *no* expectation of privacy while watching a movie. Movie theatres are a *public* place. You may not, for instance, whack off while watching a movie - at least, not without getting arrested and being societally shunned. Not even if you're the only person in the Kitty-Kat Theatre (thank you, Pee-Wee Herman).

      Your behavior and actions are limited while you are in the theatre, and one of the limits is this: thou shalt not electronically record the movie you're watching. If you don't like being (potentially) watched, well, don't go out in public.

      >>The day they [install metal detectors] is the day I completely stop going to movies;

      Exactly. That's a valid choice - and probably the choice I'd make too. But just complaining about the fact that people can see you when you're in public is not valid.

    12. Re:Hmm...a question by bishiraver · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Agreed. Hell, I work at a theater and I agree.

      My managers don't agree and bust my ass when they find out I've let someone in with a bag from Bear Rock Cafe or Wendy's in. I tell 'em, "Hey, do we sell deli quality sandwiches, or spicy chicken sandwiches and chili?"

      I figure we have two options: make them eat it outside the theater, or let them eat it inside the theater.

      Upside to the first one is that if they want something in the theater, they've got to buy it there. Downside is, they're likely pissed off and won't buy anything anyways. In fact, they're likely to not even come back to the same theater.

      If we let 'em eat it inside, upside is they might want some popcorn to supplument it, or some candy or something. Upside is, they won't get upset. Upside is, we get a repeat customer. Downside is we have to clean up their shit if they leave it behind.

    13. Re:Hmm...a question by bishiraver · · Score: 2, Informative

      Film reels are hardly petty larceny. Movie theaters rent them from the distribution agency. If the theater has to replace a film due to damage (usually from projectionist incompetency), it costs them several thousand dollars.

    14. Re:Hmm...a question by jobbegea · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I hardly buy anything in the theater. You would think people would be able to survive without food for 90 minutes.

      --

      Net sa best, mar it koe minder
    15. Re:Hmm...a question by swv3752 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Actually it being a crime is part of the problem.

      Copyright violations used to be purely civil matters. Enforcement was left as a task for the Copyright holder. BeforeI justify te moralness of Copyright Violations, you need to justify where you get off criminalizing a civil matter. And justify why I need to pay for some big Corp to enforce thier copyright. Then justify why copyrights should last forever.

      One we do not need to be sending more people to prison. Two, I should not have to pay for someone to enforce a State granted Monopoly.

      Also, do you really want to be spied on in theater by some teenaged punk? The same guy that is suppse to be taking care of the jerks on thier cell phone and the screaming baby.

      Lastly, do a little historical research on Prohibition. Then look at the current Drug War. Now examine the new Copyright War. I see a number of parallels. Take a behavior that was not criminal and make it a criminal offense. Spend lots of money to prosecute it. Violate all sorts of rights and liberties to find the new criminals.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    16. Re:Hmm...a question by rjelks · · Score: 2, Funny

      I could wait the 90 minutes, but after I take a smoke break about 45 minutes into the movie, the concession lines are so short.

    17. Re:Hmm...a question by bishiraver · · Score: 5, Interesting

      You don't even want to know what goes into the concessions at my (20 screen) theater... *shudder* and in actuality, from what I've seen, we break about even on ticket sales. Hell, selling tickets on a saturday night, I pull in probably 3,500 dollars. That's enough to pay the wages for all the workers for the week. In 6 hours. Considering we have 4 people usually selling tickets, that's 14,000 dollars in 6 hours. Multiply that by 4 (evening friday, saturday afternoon, saturday evening, sunday afternoon), and that's 56,000 on average per weekend. 224,000 per month. I'm not sure of the specifics on electricity costs for the theater, or air conditioning for that matter. However, I do know that a 50lb bag of unpopped corn costs approximately 30 dollars, and makes approximately 63 tubs of popcorn ($5.75 each). 362 dollars income for 30 dollars spent? Not too shabby.

      And nobody who works at the theater sees any of this dough. Workers get paid 6.50 an hour, 10 cent raise after a year - if you're lucky. Managers get paid around 9 dollars an hour. Projectionists about 8. The only full time staff member we have is the General Manager - so nobody gets benefits. Given that our HR manager drives a fifteen year old toyota, and our GM drives a Porche 911, I can imagine where the money goes.

    18. Re:Hmm...a question by herosw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The issue I have is not that they are trying to stop piracy but the punishment doesn't fit the crime. I'm sure we could stop speeding if we make that a crime with mandantory jail time.

    19. Re:Hmm...a question by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Interesting
      You can't say for sure that things would be better if we legalized drugs.

      Ask the people in jail.

      I can look at American history before the 1914 Harrison Act, and failures of alcohol and tobacco prohibition here and abroad, and I can look at the success of harm reduction policies in other nations. It's not like our current drug prohibition is unique in history - failed drug prohibition schemes go back thousands of years.

      I can't say for sure, any more than I can say for sure that the sun will come up tomorrow, but I would bet my right arm that under a scheme of outright legalization of soft drugs, prescription hard ones for addicts, and accurate drug education (not D.A.R.E. propaganda), things would indeed be better.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    20. Re:Hmm...a question by Mr.+Slippery · · Score: 2, Insightful
      I mean really, is that your only argument?

      Of course not. Touchy, aren't you?

      It's still fucking _stealing_ you ass clown.

      No, it's not. It may (or may not be) copyright infringment, but copying is not stealing. If there was ever any doubt - which there shouldn't have been - the Supreme Court removed it in the Dowling case. "[I]nterference with copyright does not easily equate with theft, conversion or fraud." - Justice Blackmun.

      --
      Tom Swiss | the infamous tms | my blog
      You cannot wash away blood with blood
    21. Re:Hmm...a question by letxa2000 · · Score: 2
      No kidding. The first time I snuck food into a theater was because I wanted a double cheeseburger from McDonalds in the same mall but there wasn't time to eat it and make it to the movie. So we stuffed it in my wife's purse. That's sort of when I realized how easy, better tasting, and of course cheaper "external" food is. We now regularly smuggle double cheeseburgers in, I almost always bring my own M&Ms, and my wife has gone so far as to smuggle in Sushi! I do still buy my soft drink at the the theater, though.

      I know the theater's need to make a buck, but charging $2 for M&Ms that cost about 70 cents outside is just gouging.

      Of course, the obligatory Steve Wright reference: "I got arrested for bringing my own food to the movie theater. My argument was that the concession stand prices were outrageous. Besides, I hadn't had a good barbeque in a long time!"

    22. Re:Hmm...a question by SkunkPussy · · Score: 2, Insightful

      > It's still fucking _stealing_ you ass clown.

      Mate (or should I say ass clown),

      _stealing_ implies depriving the victim of property. "Piracy" deprives noone of property therefore is not stealing or theft. It is merely infringement of copyrights.

      --
      SURELY NOT!!!!!
    23. Re:Hmm...a question by jratcliffe · · Score: 2, Interesting

      "I can imagine where the money goes."

      I hate to break it to you, but there's two huge costs you're forgetting (it's not just you, your fellow employees, and electricity):

      1. The Movie Studios (you know, the folks who actually make the movies)
      Theaters get the bulk of their revenues from concessions. The studios get 70% of the revenue from ticket sales of new releases, although this declines to about 30% by the time a movie's been out for six weeks. This is designed to ensure that the theaters get about the same $ per showing even as the movies age and screenings get less crowded.

      2. Mortgages
      United Artists, Carmike, Loews, Regal Cinemas, and General Cinemas (5 of the 6 largest chains) have all gone through bankruptcy in the last five years, mainly because they overbuilt theaters, and didn't attract the audiences necessary to make the payments on the debt they took on to build those theaters.

    24. Re:Hmm...a question by The_dev0 · · Score: 2, Interesting
      In Australia, a movie ticket is AUD$10-13, and the smallest box of popcorn is AUD$5.90 (USD$4.40).

      I'm in Australia too, and it works out far cheaper for me to buy the movie outright on DVD and get some takeaway dinner than it does to take my girlfriend to the movies and split a large popcorn with her. That's pretty bad. The only movies i've gone to the cinema to see in the last few years have been indy films that will most likely never see DVD release over here, and the Lord of The Rings Trilogy. I don't think i'll go to the cinema at all any more, and you know what? a lot of my friends are in the same boat. It's too cost prohibitive, and there is almost no value for money.

      --
      Never fight naked, unless you're in prison...
  56. Sam Fisher, Help! by Esion+Modnar · · Score: 2, Funny

    I can see it now. In the "War on Copyright Piracy" we'll be enlisting NSA ninjas to patrol our nation's theater's with night vision to catch videocam "terrorists."

    --

    They say the first thing to go is your penis. Well, it's either that or your brain. I forget which...
  57. Song of the piracy apologist by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you agree with any of this, feel free to repost it in the future.

    (1) I don't personally believe in copying CDs illegaly-- but I think we should
    avoid using unkind words like "piracy" to describe those that do -- instead, we
    should describe it as an "infringement", much like a parking infringement.

    (2) I don't believe in the record companies emotively abusing the word "theft",
    but I do believe in emotively abusing words like "information" and "sharing".

    (3) I believe that piracy is driven by "overpriced CDs" even though CDs have
    dropped in price over the years.

    (4) I believe that piracy is driven by overly long copyright duration, even
    though most pirated works are recent releases.

    (5) I believe that illegitimately downloading music is giving the author "free
    advertising". I don't buy any of the music I download, of course -- but lots of
    other people probably do.

    (6) I believe that ripping off the artists is wrong. The record companies
    always rip off the artists. Artists support P2P, except the ones that don't
    (like Metallica), and they don't agree with me, hence they're greedy or their
    opinion doesn't count or something.

    (7) I believe that selling CDs is not a business model, but giving away things
    for free on the internet is.

    (8) I believe that artists should be compensated for their work -- preferably
    by someone else. I mean, they can sell concert tickets (which someone else can
    buy) or sell t-shirts (to someone else) or something. As long as someone else
    subsidises my free ride, I'm coooooool with it.

    (9) I believe in capitalism but only support music business models which
    involve giving away the fruits of ones labor for free.

    (10) I believe that copying someone elses music, and redistributing it to
    my 1,000,000 "best friends" on the internet is sharing. Music is made for
    sharing. It's my right.

    (11) I believe that record companies cracking down on piracy is "greed", but
    a mob demanding free entertainment is not.

    (12) I believe that it's not really "piracy" unless you charge money for it,
    because, receiving money is wrong, but taking a free ride is fine.

    (13) I believe that disallowing copying and redistributing music over Napster
    is the same as humming my favourite song in public. Because when I hum my
    favourite song in public, everyone likes it so much that they run home, get
    out their tape recorders and once they've got a recording of it, they aren't
    interested in hearing the original any more.

    (14) I believe that when illegal behaviour destroys a business, it's "free
    enterprise at work".

    What I find amusing is that the pirates seem unable or unwilling to distinguish between creative activity and brainless copying.

    Since a lot of the people here are GPL/OSS advocates: the "OSS way" applied to
    this domain is to learn how to play an instrument. Or how to sing or whatever.
    Then get together with a bunch of other people who can also play music, and
    make some noise.

    One of the unfortunate things that has happened to the OSS movement is that a
    lot of the loudmouth advocates for it don't understand what it's really about.
    They view it primarily as a means to get free stuff, and then they turn their
    eyes from the free stuff to the non-free stuff and think to themselves "maybe
    I'm entitled to get that one for free too". The noble ideals of grass roots
    participation in the creative process, and/or supporting it in a principled
    way (namely, boosting the "free foo" movement by preferring free foo to
    nonfree foo), or for that matter, any other form of moderately principled
    codes of ethics, are completely lost on them.

    I think it's a shame that these leeches use OSS, but there's not a whole lot
    that can or should be done about that. But I'd be much happier if at the very
    least, they wouldn't confuse the OSS movement (free as in freedom) with the
    Napster driven movement (free as in "loader")

  58. Yes, Really. by abb3w · · Score: 3, Interesting


    Really? That prevalent?

    As one other poster noted, this may have been done by a projectionist who didn't want the competition.

    My then-girlfreind worked as a manager for one and another local theatre with one of the Big Chains. There was a "gentlemen's agreement" between all of the managers for all of the chains allowing the "build screenings" (where they watch the movie after it is first spliced together to make sure it is in the correct order & direction... which was not always the case) were open to any local theatre employee, with one significant other allowed as a guest.... which is how I got to see this first hand.

    The managers and some of the more senior trained staff generally took care of the projection duties. At the main theatre for the Other Big Chain, one of the projectionists had a $10K pro-level video camera up in the projection loft for every major release, making a quality copy for his cousin in NYC to redistribute. None of the other theatre managers cared, since it wasn't their theatre, and thus not their problem. The manager for that theatre didn't do anything either, since he was presumably getting a cut of the sale to the DVD maker, and was certainly busy doctoring the books to rob the chain of half the popcorn sales. I cared a little, but not enough to risk pissing off every other manager in town at my GF.

    The projectionist had a better sense of timing than the manager-- he quit and left town about three months before the manager was audited and fired for theft. To the best of my knowlege, though, neither were ever caught for their piracy.

    The majority of theatre employees, in my experience, are underbright, underpaid, overworked, and consider anything they can get away with five-finger discounting a "perk". (However, restaurant workers are worse on par.) And anyone who deals with computer threat assesment can tell you, the biggest threat to security is from an employee doing an inside job.

    --
    //Information does not want to be free; it wants to breed.
  59. Re:I guess the lesson isn't that clear after all.. by Have+Blue · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Conversely, don't fall for the propoganda that recording movies and distributing them on the internet is any less wrong than stealing just because "it's not stealing".

  60. Apples and oranges by bonch · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Indeed. Breaking CSS encryption to make a legal backup of your DVD or watch movies under Linux is "civil disobedience" that I can accept and understand.

    Some moron going into a theater with a camcorder in order to put a movie online for others to download is just breaking the law, and is not "civil disobedience." I still don't understand how anybody could think they magically own the copyright to distribute someone else's works however they want. Why don't you spend a year or two making a movie or writing a major commercial software project, only to fire up eMule and see "your.Project.Sharereactor.rar" pop up with 357 sources? Let me know how you'd feel, and if it is "free advertising" for other people to decide to abuse your works however they want without asking you first.

    Meanwhile, we complain when companies don't follow the copyright of the GPL...does anyone else see the hypocrisy in that?

    This is just Slashdot wanting people to get up in arms over the fact that some guy is going to jail for a year, the theater was using night-vision goggles (which someone will probably have the audacity to argue is a privacy invasion--yuk yuk), and that for some reason this is supposed to be like the "War on Drugs," which I guess is the submitter's way of saying piracy should be legal just because it happens a lot.

    Sometimes I get afraid this place is turning into a leftist hellhole like Kuro5hin...the anti-RIAA, anti-"M$", anti-capitalism spiel we hear all the time really gets on my nerves. Cool tech news, please? No more self-righteous movements and agendas.

    Oh, I forgot, OSDN owns Slashdot so it's in their best interests to own a site claiming to be news,that posts articles derogatory toward competitors and such...

  61. Interesting by Slugworth01 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    Kill a motorcyclist, get 100 days in the county jail, and get work release after 30 days.

    Record a movie, get up to a year in prison.

    This sends AWESOM-O into CPU overload, as it does not compute.

  62. As usual, slashdotters missing the bigger picture. by ph4s3 · · Score: 5, Insightful
    Wow. I can't believe how many "don't take a camera into a theatre" posts there have been. It seems most people are, yet again, missing the point.

    Several things here warrant serious attention...
    1. Criminalization of acts covered by civil law
      • Last I checked, violating copyright was a civil issue. This law seeks to make a criminal case out of a clearly civil case.
      • It also acts as criminalizing the 'contract' that you enter into with a theatre, namely not bringing in outside food/drink or recording/flash devices. If one part is now criminal, why not the other?
      • The theatre has every right to make its own rules and kick people out violating them, but that is a distinctly civil law/contractual issue.
      • Why in the hell are we granting the power of the state, i.e. use of force, search and seizure, to movie theatres and studios? Talk about jack booted thugs.
    2. posession of a recording device != copyright infringement
      • Just because I have a camera with me does not mean I am violating copyright. Perhaps I had it earlier in the day, couldn't get home, and won't leave it in the parking lot to get stolen. That should be my perogative, at the discression of the theatre if they authorize it.
      • Even if being used, that still doesn't mean I'm violating copyright, i.e. I'm recording an audience's reaction to a film or something. This law doesn't make provisions for that case, which would normally be granted by the movie theatre. Even if the theatre says it is okay, the law is still being broken.
      • If not true, then everyone that ever bought an optical drive for their PC should be arrested under similar laws for the potential of violating copyright law. This law is no different than outlawing posession of VCRs, DVRs, CD-R/W, DVD-R/W due to their potential use.
    3. Ignoring real piracy sources.
      • The last time I looked, screeners where the most common dupes out there, not camcorder versions of the movies.
      • Why is the industry criminalizing what some schmuck does in a theatre that doesn't lead to wide spread piracy?
      • Why is the industry ignoring the real sources such as screener copies and digital copies of the reels that go out to the theatres?
      • There is no possible way you can convince me that the DVD quality copies with liner notes available on the streets of Hong Kong one day after the movie's release are from a camcorder of some guy in LA. How ridiculous.
    Personally I couldn't care less about what goes on in theatres. My wife and I haven't been to the movies but maybe once or twice in the last six months since we started using NetFlix (which rules, by the way). However, this law and it's enforcement seems like just another encroachment on individual freedom instead of the policing and punishment of actual illegal criminal or civil activity. I mean, why do the hard job of policing the activity, when you can make the tool illegal and make your job 100 times easier.
  63. Morons. by spray_john · · Score: 2, Interesting
    I agree with others that taking your camcorder into a movie theater is pretty stupid, and quite clearly illegal: the alarmist tone of the story is unwarranted.

    However, anyone who downloads digital copies of movies (like me, terrible person that I am) knows that the vast majority are DVD/CD rips. Anything done with a camcorder is crappy quality (particularly the sound).

    These shoddy captures don't hurt the cinema business. Most of the time a cinema customer is there to go to the cinema rather than to see a movie. If they were actually just interested in seeing the movie they would rent the DVD and save some money.

    If anything, the proliferation of useless quality rips is helpful to those selling relatively high quality DVD products. A lot of people will get turned right off shared movies on the basis of seeing a couple of lemons.

  64. That's the problem: it's the device that's illegal by blorg · · Score: 2, Informative

    ...not the activity of recording. According to the Reg article quoted in the story it's illegal simply to bring the recording device into the theatre, irrespective of whether you record or intend to record the film. That point is backed up in this Sacremento Bee article.

    They point out that the law is phrased to cover future recording devices and could even cover video-recording phones, so that taking your phone into a theatre would be an offence.

    They word the law like this so that it's easier to prove guilt, but that doesn't make it a good law.

  65. Re:As usual, slashdotters missing the bigger pictu by ph4s3 · · Score: 2, Insightful
    D'oh! I forgot to mention the most important part...

      • The California law makes posession of a recording device in a theatre a criminal offense, as opposed to using it to violate copyright.
  66. Re:No you idiot you have it backwards. by anachattak · · Score: 2, Insightful
    First of all: if you're in a public place (read: movie theater), it's reasonable to expect that somebody could be looking at you. It could be the guy sitting in front of you, it could be the girl sitting behind you, or it could be the usher with night-vision goggles. Worried that people might see what illegal acts you commit in public? Stay home and break the law in privacy. Courts understand certain things, such as bathrooms and public telephones, as places and objects where people have an expectation of privacy. But just because you're in a dark room, I doubt that a court will be sympathetic to your argument that you expected privacy "because the lights were off."

    Now I'm no friend of the MPAA (the real Great Satan), but I don't have a problem with them keeping camcorders out of movie theaters. It's not unreasonable on their part. Do what I do: stop seeing movies in the theaters. I personally don't care to sit with a hundred total strangers, listening to them cough, sneeze and talk on their cell phones for two hours at a personal cost of $12.00+ per film.

    Will this cut down on bootlegs? Just of new releases, and then maybe not that, depending on the enforcement of rules in other parts of the world (yay SE Asian pirates). If Jack Valenti wants to arrest moviegoers for piracy: be my guest. I think it's fair to say that person won't be filling a theater seat for some time to come.

  67. Language Evolves, Matey by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Please don't use the same word to refer to robbery and murder on the high seas, and copyright violation. It's not just inaccurate, it's stupid.

    Meh. Less inaccurate and stupid by the month. The phrase "pirating" meaning "to copy and/or distribute digital media without the consent of the copyright holder" is pervasive throughout all the media and academia. It's way past acceptance in the popular vernacular as well (L337 H4XXorzz who insist upon using "cracker" in lieu of "hacker," or "virii" instead of "viruses" are, happily, not consulted by the popular vernacularists). I'd say that the peg-legged fellers with the parrots on their shoulders will "officially" become joined at the llinguistic hip with their warez-dealing juvenile offender cousins in the OED imminently.

    We may not like it, we may even view it as a victory by the "Evil Corporate PR Suit Machine," but language evolves, and no amount if kicking, screaming, or name-calling changes that.

    1. Re:Language Evolves, Matey by shayne321 · · Score: 3, Funny
      So if Bigus Dickus had a brother, would they be the Dickuses or the Dickii?

      (ducks)

      --
      Today I didn't even have to use my AK; I got to say it was a good day -- Icecube
  68. The difference by randall_burns · · Score: 3, Offtopic
    Outsourcing and predatory immigration policies like H-1b have their roots in corporate welfare. Even pro-business, pro-immigration economists like Nobel prize winner Milton Friedman call the 1998-2000 expansion of H-1b a "subsidy". I well know the experience of having my congressman, Brian Baird, supported my having an extended period of unemployment on a basis of principle-he has been a strong supporter of H-1b--even though his district has some of the worse unemployment in the nation(hint: Microsoft-a company not in his district is his biggest financial supporter).


    The original constitutional reason for copyrights and patents was to support "THE PROGRESS OF SCIENCE AND USEFUL ARTS"--not to protect the creation of what the great Ralph Nader calls "violent corporate sponsored pornography".


    I don't opposed government subsidies of "science and the useful arts"--if done on a basis that is fair and democratic --promoting technological development that creates the kind of advancements and culture much of the population wants. What Hollywood wants goes beyond free speech, or subsized technical advancements, Hollywood wants active government support of privately owned, corporate managed social control mechanisms. Given the fact that since protection of these mechanisms has intensified the last 40 years, we've seen a signficant drop in things like disposable income, and an increase in economic inequality, IMHO it is high time we use what political rights we have left and seriously look for alternatives here.

  69. The MPAA is right this time by kitzilla · · Score: 4, Insightful
    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters and you won't get arrested.

    Actually, the message is "keep your camcorder out of movie theatres and you won't be arrested." It's still okay to go to the movies and get what you paid for: watching a show. Taping it, taking it home and making it available for download, or selling bootleg copies ain't part of the ticket price. Period.

    Why do people think blatant piracy is acceptable? Stuff like this makes it easier for corporations to over-reach their authority and impede legitimate activities (such as ripping your own CDs to mp3).

    --
    This is my post. There are many others like it. If you don't like what you read here, go try one of the others.
  70. Those night vision goggles aren't looking for cam by C.+Alan · · Score: 2, Funny

    How much you wanna bet that those night vision goggles spend most of their time glued to people making out in the back row of a really bad movie.

  71. Minor edit. by Morologous · · Score: 4, Insightful

    [edit]
    The lesson is clear: stay out of movie theaters while using video cameras and you won't get arrested
    [/edit]

    The matter of concern here isn't that the individual got in trouble for recording a movie in the theater, it's that he got arrested for what is generally a civil matter (copyright infringement). If the police had come and thrown him out and taken away his video tape/media this probably wouldn't have been news. But they booked him. That's news.

  72. How about this? by Phreakiture · · Score: 2, Troll

    Night vision goggles use either near infrared, or phosphor amplification, right?

    Can't do much about the phosphor amplification, so we'll just discount those and concentrate on the near infrared.

    So what you do is put a bunch of high-intensity near infrared LED's and a battery pack together and shine back at them.

    These will not disturb anyone else in the theatre because the light output is invisible to the naked eye.

    If you want to be more creative, you can arrange the LED's into a marquee that reads, "F*** the MPAA"

    As a bonus, you can also do this outside of the theatre. Security cameras are going to be mostly based on CCD's, which will pick up the near infrared to some extent. Don't believe me? Point a remote control at your digital camera and push a button on the remote while watching the viewfinder of the camera.

    --
    www.wavefront-av.com
  73. There's only one problem with that attitude by HangingChad · · Score: 3, Insightful
    Actually, there are a lot of problems with that dogmatic, simple-minded mentality, but I'll try to keep it easy and just focus one obvious point: With the increasing burden of regulation there are more and more rules to break. Between Congress, state legislatures, county and cities we're being taxed and regulated to death and having more of our behavior legally restricted. Which tends to be more of a burden on people who care about obeying the laws than those who don't.

    I think the real question is should we be spending legal and criminal resources on people taking camcorders into a theater? The same with burdening the legal system with two consenting adults having sex in the car? Unless the car happens to be parked on a grade school playground during recess, I'd say no to both of those.

    Personally, I'd rather see police and legal resources being directed against the big problems like violent crime, identity theft, burglary and terrorism, not busting kids with camcorders at the movies. There are civil courts for that and in most cases simply confiscating their equipment would be punishment enough.

    But I'm really glad life is so simple in your world, where you apparently have an infinite amount of resources to put people in jail and manage the criminal justice system. Because in mine we're going broke putting people in jail for stupid shit like this and our honest citizens are laboring under an increasing weight of legislation directed at nit-picky bullshit.

    I'm not sure which is more frightening: Your attiude, or the +5 insightful mod it got?

    --
    That's our life, the big wheel of shit. - The Fat Man, Blue Tango Salvage
  74. It's very apt by freeweed · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's the perfect comparison, if you ask me. Think about it: the War on Drugs" basically did nothing other than fill up our prisons. Drugs are still around, very easy to get, and tolerated by a sizable chunk of the population. Yet tens of thousands of people have had their lives ruined because they got caught doing something that millions of others do. All for no real benefit to society.

    Let me relate my own personal "Camming" experience. Last year a friend got free passes to a preview for Disney's Haunted Mansion. Terrible movie, I wish Eddie Murphy would just die, blah blah. It was free, I'm a movie buff, so I went. First, we had our bags searched. Next, out came the metal detector wands. Finally, a good pat-down - as intimate, if not more so, than I've had at the airport. Eventually we got into the theatre and watched a really shitty movie.

    I got home an hour after it ended and found torrents for it, as well as EDonkey and Kazaa entries. I even downloaded them to make sure it was actually the movie. It was.

    I'm going to go so far as to suggest it's WORSE than the War on Drugs. Think: every single moviegoing patron harassed at the door. Potentially hundreds, if not thousands of new prison inmates a year.

    AND ALL IT TAKES IS ONE PERSON TO GET AWAY WITH IT. That's it. ONE. And the entire scheme breaks down. You know damn well they're never going to be 100% on something like this, unless every single theatre does an X-ray and strip search of every patron, and every single projectionist/screener receipient/anyone else involved is also put through the same procedure. All it takes is one person to get away with it, and the internet handles the rest.

    And in the meantime, the problem hasn't been solved IN THE SLIGHTEST, we've accepted being treated as criminals from the get-go, and we've created a lot of inmates. Unless of course, we go with what I suggested above.

    Personally, no thanks. To properly implement this, we'd have to run our society as something less nice than it is now. You may have heard of it; it's called a Police State.

    --
    Endless arguments over trivial contradictions in books written by ignorant savages to explain thunder in the dark.
  75. The Drug Warrior speaks! by Loundry · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Sure it's a failure

    Then it should be abandoned. Except that calling it a "failure" is a huge understatement. It has failed in every single one of its goals, killed and maimed innocent people in the process, and destroyed our freedoms (4th amendment, anyone?).

    but that doesn't necessarily mean there's a good alternative

    If it has failed it its goals (which you admit), then it is not achieving anything. Going back to the way it was before would necessarily be better, espcecially given that the War on Some Drugs also brings unintended consequences.

    You can't say for sure that things would be better if we legalized drugs.

    Things would be better because:

    a> Citizens would no longer forfeit property (contra the 4th amendment) simply because the government suspects that it was used as part of a drug sale
    b> We would have better police protection, as the police would be trying to catch predators rather than people who merely want to use a product that some people don't happen to like
    c> Productive members our society who are holding jobs and hiring people that happen to use drugs would not be put in jail
    d> The drugs would become less expensive and the profit (and, consequently, crime) motives for selling them would be removed
    e> The U.S. military could focus on its real job (protecting the country) rather than enforcing idiotic drug laws
    f> The U.S. Government could reduce in size

    I could go on and on!

    Perhaps *bad* is an improvement over *worse*.

    Except that you have assumed that things would be worse if drugs were legalized. You have not shown it. Most people claim that things would be worse if drugs were legalized because ... well, all of their reasons suck, and I believe yours will, too. Why don't you share them and we can discuss them?

    --
    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
    1. Re:The Drug Warrior speaks! by torokun · · Score: 2, Interesting
      In the 1800s, New York City had an unfathomably huge prostitution industry, by our modern standards. I think every part of the city had prostitutes. It was so bad that it began to become a public health risk and caused a big outbreak in syphillis and other diseases.

      Some probably said at the time that it would be "impossible" to prevent prostitution. After all, that's one of our most basic urges, right? There will always be prostitution...

      Well, whoever said that would have been right technically, but wrong practically. We've reduced prostitution to an almost negligible amount compared to that time.

      Drugs hold an even stronger addictive power and a greater prize in the pleasure they induce. Thus, it's harder to reduce the use of drugs through criminal law... But things could be a _lot_ worse than they are right now, and you should think about the possible ramifications of legalization as well as the problems of enforcement...

      I'm not sure whether the detriments of drug law completely outweigh the benefits of fighting it, even though there are abuses. I would rather focus on fixing those abuses first.

    2. Re:The Drug Warrior speaks! by RevAaron · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Cocaine and similar drugs are often quite nasty regardless, but with opiates like heroin and opium, most deaths are a direct result of the drug being illegal. E.g., a mismetered dose causing an OD. On the street, drug strength varies widely. If one could purchase heroin at Wallgreen's, you'd know what you were getting in dosage and strength.

      --

      Working toward a usable PDA environment in the spirit of Newton OS: Dynapad
  76. Re:The contract by necrognome · · Score: 3, Insightful
    GOOD FOR DATE AND SHOWTIME LISTED ONLY.
    The management reserves the right to refuse admission on this ticket by refunding purchase price. Management also reserves the right to designate where the holder of this ticket shall be seated.

    The fine print on the back of my movie stub seems to back up the grandparent post's point that a movie ticket lets you sit in a seat for the duration (+ buffer time) of the performance, space and whatnot permitting. Note that there's no signature line or text notifying me that by purchasing said ticket, I have agreed to a contract/license.
    --


    Let's get drunk and delete production data!
  77. LOTR Trilogy Showing by Karth · · Score: 2, Informative

    When I went to the LOTR trilogy showing in Portland, Oregon, they had 3 guys from New Line in the theater with night vision goggles. Since we were among the first to see it, they wanted to make sure we weren't recording/digitally rebroadcasting it to the net live. Pretty messed up stuff, but it's been happening for a long time. It's only news cause they finally caught someone.

  78. Adoption contract law by tepples · · Score: 2

    this does not constitute a contract

    Offer + Acceptance + Consideration = Contract.

    (or any wacko could post a noitce in his window telling you to give him your firstborn).

    Regulating the content of a contract is orthogonal to regulating the method of acceptance of a contract. Your contract that includes handing over custody of a child would fall under adoption contract law, which is more strict in most states than general business-to-consumer contract law.

  79. Re:I guess the lesson isn't that clear after all.. by MartinG · · Score: 2, Insightful

    fraud is more like stealing because if I defraud someone, I gain what someone else loses. When copyright is violated, I gain, but the copyright holders don't lose anything.

    It's true that they potentially could have gained if I had paid instead of infringing copyright, and so it could be viewed as a lost sale.

    However, that assumes that if I didn't infringe I would still want a copy of the work enough to pay for it.

    The RIAA and MPAA etc want you to think like that, but the reality is that (as an example) of all the people downloading mp3s and not paying for them, there are huge numbers of people who, if they had no free of charge access to the music would not have bought most of it anyway. They are by far the majority IMO. It's in that majority of cases where nothing is "lost" by the copyright holder and so that's why its nothing like stealing.

    As for films and "screener" filming, I don't think there are any reliable figures that convince me either way yet. I can't imagine someone watching the film at home instead of going to the cinema (in the same way that DVDs and home video don't reduce cinema going)
    Perhaps it could hit DVD sales instead but then maybe they should release the DVDs sooner.

    On the murder comparison, I dont think thats stealing a life either. Its destroying one. If i were to do that to some music then by analogy nobody would have a copy of it any more including the copyright holders.

    --
    -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  80. Oh, the fun... by Eosha · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Anyone else tempted to bring a few IR toys into the theater just to screw with the guys in the night-vision goggles...

    --
    I have a girlfriend whose name doesn't end in .JPG
  81. Right versus Law by ChrisMaple · · Score: 2, Interesting
    Laws change and are even completely reversed, even the U.S. Constitution. Right and wrong, in a fixed context, are immutable. Can you honestly claim that Prohibition was right when it was enacted, and wrong before its enactment and after its repeal?

    Bad laws are bad. People who support them, vote them into existence, and enforce them are evil.

    --
    Contribute to civilization: ari.aynrand.org/donate
  82. Re:Theatres are huge consession stands by JWSmythe · · Score: 3, Informative

    I used to be very close friends with the regional manager of a major theater chain. We'd "preview" movies the night before they were released, to "make sure they work". We'd smoke, drink beer and be generally obnoxious through movies. Of course, it was only theater staff at the previews.

    Basically, he told me that the local theater never saw anything of the ticket sales. Most of it went back to the movie companies themselves, with a small part going back to the theater chain. They generated their income from concession sales. That's why they'll usually push you to upsize your drink or popcorn, or offer you candy with your snacks.

    "You can upsize from a large to Bladder Buster for only 25 cents more!"

    For them to "sneak" someone in the door, while completely against theater policy, and the movie companies would have a cow, happens all the time. But to the local shift manager, what's the difference if they had several hundred tickets sold in a night, who cares if a couple people get in free. Well, the movie companies do. Say 4 people get in free in a given night at one theater. Multiply that by how many theaters are running their movies, and it makes a real dollar amount. It could the difference between schwarzenegger getting 3 or 4 new Hummers this month. :) Ok, for normal humans, it doesn't make much of a difference.

    But to be on topic, I just find it wierd thinking the projectionist is watching what we're doing in the theaters. What happened to just taking the camera away? I've seen bootlegged movies before. I've never watched the whole thing, simply because they suck. Well, unless you really like seeing a really low quality version of the movie, with the sound picked up on a camcorder's microphone. Ick. There's nothing like watching only part of the screen, and having the shot move around all the time. Camcorders are fine for recording your kids birthday party, but they're anything but acceptable for duplicating feature movies. They should worry more about people dubbing screeners. Those are decent quality, most of the time. Nothing can beat being friends with a theater manager, and previewing the movies in the theater with a couple cases of beer, and all the free popcorn we could eat, even if we did have to start watching movies at like 3am. :)

    Oh, I miss the good ol' days.

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    Serious? Seriousness is well above my pay grade.
  83. Damn Straight... by virg_mattes · · Score: 3, Insightful

    ...and damn wrong. You may think that you can only subject yourself to a contract by signing something, but that's just not how contracts work. Your ticket contract isn't "implied" just because you didn't sign anything or read the back of your ticket (or the printed contract on the wall of the box office). It's still legally valid, whether you like it or not. The ticket is a contract, not a "right to occupy the room". Sure, you can do other things than watch the movie, but if you were right, they could just leave the lights up and not run the movie, and you'd have no right to ask for your money back, since they didn't lock you out of the theater.

    Sorry, but your indignation, based on your lack of understanding of how contracts work, does not invalidate the contract you enter with a theater house. You can "forget it", but then don't expect them to forget it too.

    Virg

  84. Missing the point by theantix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I'm more concerned about them busting people for "outside food." I mean really, I could get a steak dinner for the price of their popcorn and a drink!

    As everyone and their dog knows, the theatres make most of their money on food and drink sales. Many people take this as a sign they should whinge and complain about the greedy theatre companies, but that's missing the point. The point is, the cost of the ticket is actually a good deal because by charging exhorbatent prices for popcorn they can get money from people with more disposable income while still allowing people with less disposable income to see the movie.

    See the point now? If you don't like wasting money you win, because you are paying less than you would if similar profit margins were applied to the ticket prices and the concessions. If you don't mind paying $5 for popcorn, you can and the theatre stays in business as a result. The only loss to regular folk is that they don't get cheap food while they watch an underpriced ticket -- I say tough beans because you're getting a pretty good deal as it is.

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    501 Not Implemented
    1. Re:Missing the point by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 2
      The point is, the cost of the ticket is actually a good deal

      $18 for the wife and I to see "Funny Guy 3: Pratfalls and Flatulence" at the local Chaineplex is decidedly not a good deal.

      We go to about two full-price movies a year, if that. Why bother, when the DVD will be out at Costco for $20 in a matter of months? Why bother, when the movie will be showing for $2.50 per person at the second-run theatre in a matter of weeks?

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      Obliteracy: Words with explosions

    2. Re:Missing the point by Randseed · · Score: 2, Insightful
      The point is, the cost of the ticket is actually a good deal because by charging exhorbatent prices for popcorn they can get money from people with more disposable income while still allowing people with less disposable income to see the movie.

      That's exactly it. I mean, yeesh. If you don't want to buy the popcorn, eat your steak dinner before the theatre. That's what I do. Well, unless I don't want to look cheap to a date. :)

    3. Re:Missing the point by amaiman · · Score: 2, Insightful

      $9 + having to sit through up to ten commercials before the movie starts is not exactly an "underpriced" ticket. The theaters are getting plenty.

      They have the right to charge whatever they want, though, as long as the people will pay it. I personally aim for the daytime shows, or go to theatres where they don't show as many ads.

  85. Re:Good deals by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 2
    No, it's not a good deal for everyone. It's a better deal than $11 tickets would be, certainly. But by no stretch of the imagination is an $8.50 ticket a good deal. We're still getting fleeced.

    Would $6 for a 16-ounce latte be a good deal if a shot of syrup cost $3? After all, they could be charging $7.50 for the latte and $1.50 for the syrup...or would you rather pay $3.00 for a latte? ($3 is still quite inflated, but c'est la vie...)

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    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  86. You are arguing by analogy by Loundry · · Score: 2, Interesting

    The problem with your entire argument is that you're talking about prostitution, not drugs. They are two different subjects.

    Perhaps prostitution went down because our notions of fidelity have also dropped. The punishments for adultery have gone by the wayside. Divorce is not seen as a necessarily negative thing. Women are more likely to have sex for recreational purposes rather than because their husband wants them to. All of these things lead to the decrease of the demand for prostitutes and have nothing to do with the draconian law enforcement that you tacitly defend.

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    I don't make the rules. I just make fun of them.
  87. This article is a troll from michael by bonch · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's an article about a guy getting arrested for filming a movie in a theater. That's already a dumb thing to do, but the submitter posts like it's a tragedy and even references the "War on Drugs."

    Then, it gets posted by michael with a headline "Projectionists Using Night Vision Goggles in Theaters." Huh? So now it's supposed to be bad that the theater employees scan for the cameras to begin with.

    There is case after case of michael posting troll articles. I remember his insane, all-caps ranting at Intel in the 64-bit article a while back. I wish he'd join JonKatz in...you know...not being here. :P

  88. Re:Learn to read by American+AC+in+Paris · · Score: 2
    Theantix, I do understand what you're saying. Do you understand that all I'm taking issue with is the assertion that this price balancing makes today's movie tickets a good deal. To be fair, it's a subjective call, but I'm not misunderstanding you at all.

    On the topic of exactly who is doing the fleecing--does it really matter that much to the consumer which link in the chain is fleecing them?

    As to the costs of maintaining those huge cineplexes, they must outstrip the income they get, because they're in worse shape than they used to be. Between cell phones, half-assed maintenance, and ticket price hikes that reliably outstrip inflation, it's not all that fun to go to the movies anymore.

    Finally, the local theater barely exists anymore. Most of them are Loews, AMC, Regal, Carmike--big, national chains with only nominal interest in the locales they're in. They effectively swallowed up the local places in a wave of buy-outs and price wars several years back...

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    Obliteracy: Words with explosions

  89. Re:Learn to read by theantix · · Score: 2

    Damn it, how I am suppose to have a good old-fashioned flame war if you're going to be so reasonable when you reply? ;-)

    So anyhow, I think we're in agreement about anything worth debating here. I should point out that there is a good local theatre just a few blocks from my house, but I do realize that you are correct -- that is the exception not the rule. Oh and if you follow the link... those prices are in Canadian dollars (heh heh heh).

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    501 Not Implemented
  90. Re:Just the US? by Nick+Harkin · · Score: 2, Informative

    For what it's worth, it's only happened in my sight once, and that was a friend taking in his Burger King meal.

    Most of the time they don't seem to mind at all.

    (I'm UK btw)