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MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research

Cpt_Corelli writes "Alwayson network claims that a recent survey conducted by Online Testing Exchange (OTX) and distributed by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) is crap. The MPAA's summary of the survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.' (It turns out this isn't true, but this is the factoid that was heard around the world the following week.) When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"

409 comments

  1. Well... by wolrahnaes · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Since when would we trust the MPAA anyways?

    --
    I used to get high on life, but I developed a tolerance. Now I need something stronger.
    1. Re:Well... by celeritas_2 · · Score: 5, Insightful
      It shouldn't matter whether 1 in 4 or 1 in 4000 computer users download movies, what really matters is this:

      Does movie downloading affect the economy of movie makers and all their dependancies in a major way?

      Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?

      How extensive should media creators' controls be over their 'art'?

      And finally: Who actually gives a shit?

      --
      -- Checking emails and kicking cheats `till the day I die.
    2. Re:Well... by Nos. · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Does movie downloading affect the economy of movie makers and all their dependancies in a major way?

      Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy

      Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?

      Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.

      How extensive should media creators' controls be over their 'art'?

      Relevant! I'm a firm believer that if someone creates a work of art they should be able to charge whatever they want to people who want a reproduction or to view/listen to that art. Now art is defined pretty loosely here, especially considering some of the stuff that hits the theatres. If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right. I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holders.

    3. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful
      If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.
      Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on laws.
    4. Re:Well... by Stripe7 · · Score: 1

      1 in 4 downloaded a movie, is that in 1 year or entire span of internet? Also define a movie, 5 min pr0n clip a movie? or is that a MPAA movie?

    5. Re:Well... by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy,

      It most certainly does in this case.

      Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.

      And again, it does in this case. Intellectual property rights are completely artificial constructs created for the purpose of providing economic benefit. From the US Constitution: "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries". Copyright is a totally artificial construct designed to promote creative work by creating a government-imposed limited monopoly. It's not even enshrined as a "The government shall not" it's a congress can if they want to. This isn't murder or theft or restriction of free speach we're talking about here, we're talking about violation of temporary monopoly granted for the public good. The entire point is to provide an economic benefit so that creators will create. If a use does not affect that incentive, then it shouldn't be considered "wrong". The MPAA/RIAA has done it's best to confuse copyright with being an actual, natural right on the level of free speech or life and liberty. Apparently it's working.

      --
      Why?
    6. Re:Well... by celeritas_2 · · Score: 3, Insightful
      I don't much care for laws, what is right and wrong takes precidence over what is legal or not in my dealings, and my previous post reflects that belief.

      First off, in my mind, economics is the one and only thing to consider in this matter. I cannot think of any other reason than money for media-producers to care who can view their product. Do they object to me downloading Finding Nemo and watching it becuase they don't like me? No, they object because they're not getting paid. The question is are media companies losing, gaining, or breaking even because of P2P? End of Story.

      2.) Those sons of bitches do to have a monopoly. I've never heard of a movie lowering prices from $9 so they can get more viewers. I've never heard of a record label instructing stores to lower their CD prices so they can sell more, instead (nearly) all of the record labels join under one RIAA roof, get out the gun, and sue their enemy, the twelve-years-old girl sharing on KaZaa. If that's not a monopoly what is? Competetion doesn't exist, it's just wrong.

      --
      -- Checking emails and kicking cheats `till the day I die.
    7. Re:Well... by Tim+C · · Score: 3, Interesting

      Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on laws.

      Ideally, the law should codify what is right and wrong, in as many cases as possible (there will always be exceptions). So while it should not depend on the law, it should certainly be reflected by the law.

    8. Re:Well... by Nos. · · Score: 0, Troll

      Do they object to me downloading Finding Nemo and watching it becuase they don't like me? No, they object because they're not getting paid
      You're right, that's exactly why they object. But that's not the point. Lets say you create something (movie, song, software, new type of propulsion, etc) should I be able to take a copy of it just because I don't feel its worth what you are asking?

    9. Re:Well... by NanoGator · · Score: 4, Insightful

      "If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right. I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holders."

      Perhaps not. However, the problem with movie piracy (on the net, I'm not referring to selling $1 DVD copies of screeners...) to the MPAA is that it levels the playing field to be more fair towards the consumer. They have a business model I refer to as "open your mouth and close your eyes". You cannot get your money back if you're disatisfied unlike just about anything else you can buy. As such, movie makers can get away with sup-par movies and recieve money even though the consumer did not get the satisfaction he or she was paying for.

      You're probably thinking I'm trying to justify downloading of movies. Frankly, it's not something I do. I have a substantial DVD collection but my computers only have a couple of rips I've downloaded. They are of movies I already have. I'm an artist. I make content for a living. I'm working on a movie right now. I don't want to lose my job because the movie wasn't successful, even if the blame could land squarely on piracy. However, there's something I have to think about: Content making is an art form, but it is also a business. We all paid to go see Matrix. We all paid to go see Star Wars, despite all the grumbling we did about it. If the movie I'm working on didn't generate the interest for people to run out and go see it, I can't say that piracy was the issue. The issue was that we did something wrong. Maybe the movie sucked, maybe we didn't market it well, maybe we asked too much for it. Yeah, maybe the result is a bunch of individuals did something wrong, that doesn't mean that we didn't either.

      So what do I do? I have confidence it'll be a good movie. We're all working to make it that way. It's effort that is MUCH better spent than running ads to guilt people into paying for it. I want to make money from this, but I don't want to do it and leave people saying "man, what a rip-off."/i.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    10. Re:Well... by celeritas_2 · · Score: 1

      That all really depends on how p2p affects the creator overall. If p2p has a small negative effect, or a substantial positive effect then producers have to right to tell me i can't download for free. If there is a large negative effect bankrupting studios and artists [doesn't appear to be] then they do have a valid argument, BUT if that is true p2p has only a small number of pirates compared to the huge numbers of street vendors selling pirated CDs Videos around the world. Unlinke p2p which gives everything away for free, the vendors make billions for themselves every year and pay no royalties to the creators. That is wrong.

      --
      -- Checking emails and kicking cheats `till the day I die.
    11. Re:Well... by mgv · · Score: 1

      all of the record labels join under one RIAA roof, get out the gun, and sue their enemy ...
      If that's not a monopoly what is?

      What you have described is an oligopoly

      A monopoly is when there is only one entity controlling a resourse for sale.

      Sorry, but you did ask.

      No argument with your line of reasoning, however.

      Michael

      --
      There is no cryptographic solution to the problem where the intended receiver and the attacker are the same entity.
    12. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your opinion is duly noted, but making assertions doesn't lead to good laws or free societies.

      Here's my assertion:

      The stronger the rights you give creators, the more restrictive the laws and the more power you give corporations and government over individuals. Therefore, creators should have as few extra rights as possible. Since any creator who disagrees can simply choose not to create, and I can pay any creator any amount of money to create something I want, this is fair.

    13. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where in the "live" (meaning with an audience) entertainment business can you get a refund because you weren't satisfied? It's not just the MPAA that does this. When is the last time you saw a comedian whose jokes weren't all that funny and you got a refund? Or that time that band didn't perform all the "good" songs that you wanted to hear? Yea, seems underhanded to me too.

    14. Re:Well... by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holder

      Actually, you do, provided you acquired it legally. Copyright law doesn't exist to guarantee anybody any specific method of making money from their creative works, it only exists to provide an opportunity. Historically, that opportunity to make money from creative works was by charging for distribution. But copyright law doesn't say "distribution".

      Furthermore, copyright law requires the creator to ultimately put their work in the public domain. That's what they have to do in exchange for the powers granted to them by copyright law. Have we got Mickey Mouse yet? What else haven't we got, yet? Winnie the Pooh? For this last reason, DRM is incompatible with copyright.

      Let's get back to first principles here. What is copyright for? Why does it exist, and how does it benefit society?

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    15. Re:Well... by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Ideally, the law should codify what is right and wrong, in as many cases as possible (there will always be exceptions). So while it should not depend on the law, it should certainly be reflected by the law.

      NO!

      The law should codify only what is necessary for people to get along together in one world. Ethics should not be even brought up; they are irrelevant, except in the practical case.

      The law is not about what is right and wrong. Or even what is moral and immoral. It is about keeping society functioning. What makes it possible for you to walk around without worrying about the safety of your life, limb, and property. It makes sure you pay the costs of your actions, good or bad, right or wrong, legal or illegal. And none of those categories necessarily overlap.

      The moment the law starts to be based on what is 'right' and what is 'wrong' we start having trouble. Always

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    16. Re:Well... by RALE007 · · Score: 4, Informative

      It is most certainly not an oligopoly. Go back to your Econ 101 book and reread the chapter on oligopolies, then flip through the chapter about cartels. An oligopoly would be a market with a few big players competing against one another. A cartel controlled market would be a few big players in an alliance, setting prices and essentially making their cartel a confederated monopoly.

      --
      Beware blue cats moving at .99c
    17. Re:Well... by NanoGator · · Score: 2, Insightful

      "Or that time that band didn't perform all the "good" songs that you wanted to hear?"

      Fair point. However, at least in a live performance, you can shout 'boo'. In the case of a movie, your money is gone. Every single movie is advertised as the best movie ever made. Right. That's not false advertising. They give you a clever little teaser designed to hook you in and grab your money, and gee, it sure is convenient that they have the no refunds policy in place. Buy a crummy DVD? You're stuck with it. So what recourse do customers have to drive the industry to try harder? Welp, until that policy is repealed or there's some actual competition, they have piracy. What's the best way to combat piracy? It's not to cripple the content or get the laws changed, it's to make something people want so much that they'll take the most direct route to get it.

      There are a few leeches out there, but people in general are honest. I understand why content makes want to protect their content. Heck, I want to take reasonable measures myself. But trying to get laws passed? Calling my customers thieves? Turning down a return because somebody bought the movie and they hated it? These aren't 'wrong'?

      I'm not a fan of people downloading content, enjoying it, and not paying for it, but I won't say that I don't understand where they're coming from. They may be 'in the wrong', but it is up to the *AA to make it right. At least we have iTunes now. I doubt that would have happened if consumers out there hadn't expressed demand for it.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    18. Re:Well... by McNally · · Score: 2, Interesting
      Ideally, the law should codify what is right and wrong, in as many cases as possible (there will always be exceptions). So while it should not depend on the law, it should certainly be reflected by the law.

      Do you really want the state deciding for you what's right and wrong? Most people would say no to that.

      Many of us believe that rather than attempt to be the arbiter of what's right and wrong, a more appropriate role for the law is to attempt to establish a reasonably stable and just baseline for society and to allow people's decisions about what's right and wrong to be informed by their own sense of morality and society's notions of propriety.
    19. Re:Well... by Darkangael · · Score: 0

      But that doesn't mean that it is. The fact that the law "should" say the right thing doesn't mean that because the law says something it is correct.

    20. Re:Well... by platypibri · · Score: 5, Insightful
      The law should codify only what is necessary for people to get along together in one world. Ethics should not be even brought up; they are irrelevant, except in the practical case.

      This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined. We have an ethic against stealing, and a law against it. Now, you say that is only right and natural, but many Native American cultures had no sense of possesion, and therefore, NOTHING could be stolen. Our speed laws are morally derived from how fast you can go without being a danger to others "IN IDEAL CONDITIONS". Yes, this means you can rightfully get a ticket for doing 65 on the freeway in the fog, because you may not care for your life, but you are morally and legally required to not put others in danger. All law we have limits people from performing actions deemed hurtful to others which is ethics at it's very core. And I , for example COULD get a big stick and beat you till you saw it my way, but I am ethicly, and legally prevented from doing so, much to our benefit.

      In conclusion in our society you, other than through participartion or lack there of, have no rights when it comes to what another has created. None. Fair use is a courtesty extended, nothing more. And while I like the idea of fair use, my only way to lobby for it is with what I choose to buy and not buy.

      --
      Yeah, I guess I'm funny like that.
    21. Re:Well... by drinkypoo · · Score: 2, Interesting

      However, at least in a live performance, you can shout 'boo'. In the case of a movie, your money is gone.

      Actually, many theaters will give you your money back if you walk out in the first half or less and ask the manager to reimburse you.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    22. Re:Well... by karmatic · · Score: 1

      I'll bite.

      If what you are doing does not cause me harm, what right have I to tell you not to do it?

    23. Re:Well... by cdrguru · · Score: 3, Interesting
      The issue isn't whether one user downloading one movie or song decimates the revenue of a large corporation.

      The issue is we are in danger of reaching a point like we did around 1982 where virtually nobody purchased software for the Apple ][ any longer - they just copied it. It was commonly believed by people in the software industry that any new game would sell two copies - one on the east coast and one on the west coast and everyone would then get copies from the myriad BBS systems. Needless to say, nobody was much interested in producing new games (or anything else) for the Apple ][. Console games (cartridges - much harder to copy) were the thing then, until the PC Jr. failed and triggered another mini-crash.

      Downloading software from a BBS in 1982 was difficult and time consuming. Downloading a song on the Internet is quick and painless. Downloading a movie is still not quick and painless for most of the Internet users, but it could get to be there.

      Where are we when the artists and music producers reach the conclusion that making a CD just isn't worthwhile anymore and that $100 concert tickets are the only way to go. Paid appearances. Sponsorships like Brittny Spears with Pepsi?. Make the music "scarce" again and keep it out of the hands of the "common people" so it is worth something again.

      That is already happening in China with like a 98% piracy rate. How long until it happens here if things continue as they are?

    24. Re:Well... by sejmeister · · Score: 2, Informative

      You have every right, if what I'm doing is to you or your property.

      I do a lot of fishing, catch and release. While catching fish from someone's pond does not hurt them or their fish, they have every right not to allow me to fish there.

      The point of the p2p argument is that regardless of what reason you try to back it up with, you are stealing other people's property. You can't steal the DVD from the store because you think it costs too much, and neither can you steal it on the internet.

      --
      http://sejje.net/
    25. Re:Well... by ae-valkyre · · Score: 1

      Hate to break it to you, but laws are built upon morals. All laws. Morals are the conception of right and wrong, therefore how could a law be free of that?

    26. Re:Well... by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      At the theater I work at, we're willing to give somebody a pass for a free movie if they come out and tell us the movie sucks. We've actually told people flat-out that a certain movie was terrible so they wouldn't waste their money on it. (My boss claimed it was the worst movie he had seen the whole year, although he admitted he hadn't seen _Gigli_ to compare it to.)

      We're at least *trying* to make it fair for our customers.

    27. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Actually, in a perfect society morals _would_ be laws. The ones we have now are what society thinks is right or wrong, for lack of consistency.

      Check out Kohleberg's Stages of Moral Development and see what I mean.

    28. Re:Well... by Zork+the+Almighty · · Score: 2

      Well prior to the whole Napster thing I was buying 10-15 cds a year. Since then, I've bought or been given 5 cds. I'll admit that my interest in the RIAA's music has waned somewhat, but the drop is basically out of spite. I own four DVD movies. Two were gifts, one I requested as a gift, and one is independent (plug) so it doesn't count. Also spite.

      --

      In Soviet America the banks rob you!
    29. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Where are we when the artists and music producers reach the conclusion that making a CD just isn't worthwhile anymore and that $100 concert tickets are the only way to go. Paid appearances. Sponsorships like Brittny Spears with Pepsi?. Make the music "scarce" again and keep it out of the hands of the "common people" so it is worth something again.

      Of course. Never mind that there's no shortage of amateur musicians who'll publish their stuff on the net for free while getting their living from a real job.

    30. Re:Well... by NanoGator · · Score: 1

      "We're at least *trying* to make it fair for our customers."

      I thank you and the theater you work for that. Wish I had something omre insightful to say but that's really all I'm thinking.

      I was thinking more about DVDs than theaters, but I did mention it, so I apologize if my post was disheartening to the theaters that understand the value of good service.

      I have a question: Does the info about people who complain about a movie ever make it back to those who make it? I ask because because I hate for the theater to pay for it. Their service isn't in the movie itself, but in the display of it. I guess in the case of a free ticket it doesn't bite the theater owner so much, but it saddens me if movie makers aren't made aware of what people think of their movie.

      --
      "Derp de derp."
    31. Re:Well... by DustMagnet · · Score: 1

      Thanks for saving me the effort. I don't understand why people have such a hard time understanding that copyright's didn't exists when Moses received The Ten Commandments or when Hammurabi first codified law. We have thousands of years of history and only for a few hundred has it been illegal to "steal" a non physical object.

      --
      'SBEMAIL!' is better than a goat!!
    32. Re:Well... by DustMagnet · · Score: 2, Informative
      The point of the p2p argument is that regardless of what reason you try to back it up with, you are stealing other people's property.

      But that's not stealing. Even the law doesn't call it stealing. It's not stealing. It's copyright violation. We were talking about law and ethics. I'd think you should at least understand what the law is. Once you understand it's not stealing, then we can talk about why we have copyright law and how it's been abused, but first, you need to understand that copyright violation isn't stealing. Never has been, never will be. That's important, because fixing the law isn't the same as legalizing theft.

      --
      'SBEMAIL!' is better than a goat!!
    33. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Funny.

      I never bought Apple ][ software back then for our Apple ][ -- there was NOWHERE to buy it! That, and we had no earthly idea what the hell copyright was back then (at least, no one I knew cared about it).

      However, in this age of easy downloads, I *do* buy my software.

      Anyhow, just to throw a completely contrary idea out there--so what if that happens? We're already developing plenty of Free software (as in freedom, but often cost as well) and many companies, such as IBM, are transitioning to a software-as-service business model.

      Would it be so terrible if we got rid of an artificial construct of "property" if it was found to better encourage innovation? Remember--the goal of copyright law is innovation, *NOT* profit! Profits are merely designed to be a *means* to get the innovation, not an end! If the innovation can be had without the potential for profit, the innovation should be the priority (even if, due to the influence of money, it probably won't be).

    34. Re:Well... by BitterOak · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Hate to break it to you, but laws are built upon morals.

      Actually, in America, laws are built on rights. We have a right to life, therefore laws against murder. We have a right to personal property, therefore laws against stealing, etc. etc. One's morality is an individual concept. People of differing religions, for example, would have different ideas of what is morally right and wrong. Trying to codify such morals into laws would lead to very little freedom for individual choice for the individual, and it is such freedom which America has traditionally championed.

      --
      If I can be modded down for being a troll, can I be modded up for being an orc, or a balrog?
    35. Re:Well... by Viceice · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I think what the grandparent was trying to get at was that laws ought to be free of bias.

      'Moral' and 'ethics' are very dirty words. They can be defined and abused anyway someone with an agenda wants.

      What is needed in the legal system is something like the seperation of church and state, but instead of theology, ideology is whats seperated. Ideology in this sense is like how the all the **AA's think that the world owes them everytime soembody hums a tune. It's stupid, and doesn't benefit society.

      In short, only laws that serve to benefit the whole of society, like speed laws and laws against murder, theft, etc should be passes and laws that serve only a small minority at the inconvinience of society at large ought to never see the light of day.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
    36. Re:Well... by Viceice · · Score: 1

      Where are we when the artists and music producers reach the conclusion that making a CD just isn't worthwhile anymore and that $100 concert tickets are the only way to go. Paid appearances. Sponsorships like Brittny Spears with Pepsi?. Make the music "scarce" again and keep it out of the hands of the "common people" so it is worth something again.

      I'd think we'd be better off if that were to happed. We could freely trade and air all the music we wanted and the artists we like would get paid more from fatter ticketsales instead of the $0.2 they get per CD right now.

      The only looser is the tupid **AA and their obsolete distribution channel and business model and thats the way i like it.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
    37. Re:Well... by back_pages · · Score: 4, Informative
      This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined.

      This is refuted in any Philosophy 101 course. Why is it illegal to drive without using your seatbelt? Is it wrong to not use your seatbelt? No, but it unfairly burdens the emergency response units in the community when some dumbass splatters his face on a tree because he didn't wear his seatbelt. Therefore, it is illegal to drive without using your seatbelt.

      It is legal to lie to my mother but it is unethical. Why is this? Because laws do not and should not codify what is ethical. You cannot enforce morality. As the poster to which you respond accurately stated, laws reflect what is necessary to keep society from falling apart.

      We can all lie to our mothers incessantly and have a functioning society, even though lying is unethical. If we all drove around without seatbelts, which certainly is not unethical, we would quickly send our emergency care services into chaos, therefore seat belt use is mandated by law.

      Anyway, any Philosophy 101 course will give the very same argument, and it will very likely use the examples of lying to your mother and wearing a seatbelt.

    38. Re:Well... by Nos. · · Score: 0, Troll

      True, breaking copyright and stealing are two different things. However, just because it is not stealing does not give people the right to do so. The way to change a law is NOT by breaking it.

    39. Re:Well... by arminw · · Score: 3, Insightful

      ...Actually, in America, laws are built on rights....

      Where do these rights come from? From Government? No! The founding fathers of this country knew that these rights were given to humans by their creator. Our country is founded on principles given in the Bible, which is the foundation of our Judeo/Christian culture. So our basic laws are founded on the morality and principles articulated in the scriptures. The basic law there is simply: Do unto others as you would have them do unto you"

      To translate this onto the subject of this discussion on the MPAA and copyright is this: If you have made a work of art, such as a film, would you like it if anyone just made copies and sold them? I think that profiting from another's work IS theft, but just making a copy for yourself to use or give to your friends on an individual basis is not theft since it does not result in a profit for the person making copies. Making a copy is NOT the same as stealing a physical object, since the owner still has the original.

      The argument that the creator of the work loses money because of such personal copying is unproven. On the other hand posting another's work for wholesale duplication is something that could reduce the reward the creator of that work might receive and is therefore immoral.

      Unlike music CDs, DVD's with full length movies on them are not really all that expensive. It is consideraby cheaper to buy a DVD than to take the whole family to a movie show these days. I generally rent the DVD first, and then if I feel I'd like to see that film again sometime, I'll go and buy a copy.

      Downloading a full movie, even over my fast connection, is still a hassle and the quality is not nearly as good as most commercial DVDs. If I did download a film, and the movie is on the hard drive, in order to watch it on our big TV, it still needs to be burned onto a DVD which is further work. I suspect that the MPAA is worried more than they need to be about this whole issue of downloading films, since it is not all that economically attractive to those who could afford to buy a DVD. Those downloaders that cannot afford a DVD represent no loss to the film makers.

      --
      All theory is gray
    40. Re:Well... by Caseyscrib · · Score: 1
      In short, only laws that serve to benefit the whole of society, like speed laws and laws against murder, theft, etc should be passes and laws that serve only a small minority at the inconvinience of society at large ought to never see the light of day.

      Should stores be required to provide handicap access to bathrooms, parking spaces, or other facilities? These things serve a minority of society but cost society as a whole a great deal of extra money.

    41. Re:Well... by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Why is it illegal to drive without using your seatbelt? Is it wrong to not use your seatbelt? No, but it unfairly burdens the emergency response units in the community when some dumbass splatters his face on a tree because he didn't wear his seatbelt.

      I think you just disproved your own point. Yes, it *is* imoral to not wear your seat belt for the reasons you've just stated (as well as others). :-) Perhaps you should have taken an intro to logic with that philosphy 101.

      I also think you have the argument backwards. Laws are not made to enforce morality, however, morality is used to create laws. In other words, we don't create laws for *everything* we consider immoral. But everything we create a law against should be because it *is* immoral (murder, theft, etc.).

      Also note the word 'should' and the relative nature of immoral (IOW I don't want to discuss the morality of existing laws - just whether morality should be used as a guide for laws).

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    42. Re:Well... by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      So you think the state should create laws arbitrarily and without regard to right and wrong? I think damned near everybody would have a problem with this.

      Laws are not created to enforce all right and all wrong. HOWEVER, things that are illegal are so because they are "wrong" are they not? In other words, all illegal activity is wrong, but not all wrong activity is illegal. You have the relationship backwards I think...

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    43. Re:Well... by Reziac · · Score: 1

      Having worked in the industry -- IMO, bad movies are to some degree intentional; they're used as money laundries. In my experience, around 80% of all film productions that get as far as principle photography are either never released in the first place, or are to all appearances deliberately designed to lose money (at least on paper) -- after all, film tends to have a, um, "flexible" budget. -- Consequently, no one in power really CARES what you think of their lousy movie. (Despite this, the people on the set behave as if each film will be the greatest ever, even when it's blatantly obvious that it's a loser.)

      Series TV, being shot on a fixed budget, doesn't seem to have this little monetary side function.

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    44. Re:Well... by DonGar · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?


      Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.


      Ah, but the problem is that the definition of those rights keeps changing. And not for the benifit of all parties involved. Copyright law in the US was intended to grant a temporary monopoly over an artists creations in order to give the artist an incentive to create. This seems fair and just to me.



      A reasonable analogy would be if a city allowed a private company to collect tolls on a road for five years in exchange for building the road. Reasonable. What's unreasonable is if after four years the company comes back to the city and bribes the city council into giving them another 5 years of tolls because not collecting tolls would hurt their profits.


      When the song "Happy Birthday" was written (1800's), the sisters that wrote it expected a maximum of 28 years worth of copyright protection. However, by the time those 28 years were up the rules were changed and the time was extended.


      However, the copyright on that song is still valid. Why does the company that now owns those rights deserve to continue collecting royalties? Why was the deal rewritten after the fact?


      And not only have Disney the MPAA and RIAA managed to use their money and influence to rewrite the terms of their contracts with the people of this country to extend the durations of their control, they have added all sorts of new wrinkles.


      Why should every blank cassette/VHS tape/blank CD/blank DVD sold have an extra tax added that's passed back to the RIAA or MPAA? How did they get that extra right?


      And now they are asking that every relevant piece of consumer electronics have extra 'features' added for their benifit. And will they PAY for these extra 'features'? No, they expect the electronics industry (well, it's customers) should pay to protect THEIR licenses.


      I do NOT like the term 'intellectual property.' It is nothing but very subtle propoganda that helps to convince people that information is no different from physical goods. By forgetting the real and powerful differences (information can be copied with no loss to the original) we will make our society poorer, even if we make a very few powerful people richer. Nobody can 'own' the rights, only 'hold' them. This change to the older terminology should help to remind us of what copy rights where originally intended for.... a brief period of control to reward those that create, not a mechanism to deprive civilization forever.


      End Of Rant

      --
      plus-good, double-plus-good
    45. Re:Well... by platypibri · · Score: 1

      Well, since I have had philosophy 101, I will say again, law is morality legislated. I cannot force you to see it that way, but it is fairly simple to see. I understand that in these last few decades, it has become fashionable to dispense with morality, or at least to be morally neutral, but I find that in practice, this is no practical solution. As for mum, I said that all law is morality legislated, not that all morality is or should be law. Fire that back at your 101 teacher, and he may pass you on to 201. You did know there were classes after 101, right?

      --
      Yeah, I guess I'm funny like that.
    46. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I got a warning ticket recently for parking on the correct side of the street but facing the wrong way. No penalty, but it said if I continued to do it, but I would be issued a citation for a parking violation. This was deep in a residential area and garners almost no through trafic. There is no danger in my parking as I did, but it is against the law.

      What ethics have I violated?

      Skibby

    47. Re:Well... by Rasta+Prefect · · Score: 1
      The issue isn't whether one user downloading one movie or song decimates the revenue of a large corporation. The issue is we are in danger of reaching a point like we did around 1982 where virtually nobody purchased software for the Apple ][ any longer - they just copied it.

      I'm not arguing against copyright. The assertion of the original poster was that violation of copyright was in some way inherently wrong in some way independent of economic impact. What you describe _is_ economic impact, and it's to prevent that sort of thing that copyright exists - but it's only wrong in it fails to encourage creativity in the societally agreed upon way, as opposed to say, being wrong the way stealing your car is wrong.

      --
      Why?
    48. Re:Well... by Free_Meson · · Score: 1
      Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy

      Whether an action actually has a deleterious economic impact on another party should determine whether we change the laws or their enforcement. I think this is stupid -- the government didn't change the law when people were selling seats in their apartments to watch Cubs games from across the street, and this is little different... The question of whether movie companies are being harmed is one that they haven't answered (and one that the RIAA failed to answer as well). All they've been able to show is that, if everyone who downloaded a song had bought their albums the record company would have made a lot of money. I don't understand why they don't see TV and Radio the same way -- once a song or movie is broadcast once, I'd think that anyone should be allowed to have a copy because they could have easily taped the broadcast. That alone tells me that this isn't about royalties or DVD or CD sales -- record execs aren't stupid enough to think that some pimply 12 year-old is going to buy 100,000 worth of CD's. This is about controling the content that reaches consumers, because the consumers who can afford to purchase music still choose to do so... they just choose much more wisely now because they have more information, and the RIAA is suffering relative to less mainstream and or independent labels...

      The distribution of low-quality copies of DVD's is an externality, though not necessarily a negative one, and is a necessary effect of the widespread digitization of information. In order to put the genie back in the bottle, the government would have to harm everyone, even the most scrupulous of consumers, a great deal relative to the minor gains that record or movie companies might make as a result...

      FYI, I have not downloaded a song in 5 years, and I've never downloaded a movie.
    49. Re:Well... by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      Does the info about people who complain about a movie ever make it back to those who make it?

      If one person walks out? Not normally. It would take a *lot* of walk-outs for us to mention something to the booking people, and it might or might not get from them to the studios.

      Otherwise, the biggest way the studios know what people think of a movie is the box-office numbers. Movies rely a lot on "viral marketing" -- that is, people saying, "oh yeah, The Village was really good!" Sure, you'll get a bunch of people who come on opening day without relying on that kind of feedback, but whether the movie performs well in the long run is really dependent on what people thought of it. If a movie is bad, you can almost always see it in the numbers, and if the people who book movies for our chain start to see a pattern (eg. Jackie Chan movies tank, or nobody watches horror flicks) we won't get them any more. If *enough* theaters don't want them, the studios will move on to more profitable movies (at least in theory). Money speaks louder than words, for better or worse.

      I was thinking more about DVDs than theaters, but I did mention it, so I apologize if my post was disheartening to the theaters that understand the value of good service.

      I wasn't offended -- I just wanted to mention that the refund policy depends on the theater. You've got a point, though, that I had never thought of before. You have a reasonable expectation that, if you buy a toaster, it will toast bread; you *aren't* necessarily able to expect that if you buy entertainment, it will entertain you. Some of that is endemic (Sturgeon's Law and all), but some of it is how the studios and theaters, especially the big chains, do business. From the perspective of this small-chain popcorn-slinger, it's always nice to exceed expecations. :)

    50. Re:Well... by benna · · Score: 1

      Law should be restricted to preventing someone from harming others. Alot of morals also fit into this catagory but not all. Murder is morally and legally wrong. However, smoking pot doesn't harm anybody but the one doing it, therefore it is none of the governments business to legislate this. Legislating morality just doesn't work.

      --
      "It is not how things are in the world that is mystical, but that it exists." -Ludwig Wittgenstein
    51. Re:Well... by Reverend+Joe · · Score: 1

      "Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy"

      haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha
      haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha
      haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha
      haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha haha

      You're funny.

    52. Re:Well... by McNally · · Score: 1
      So you think the state should create laws arbitrarily and without regard to right and wrong?
      Did I say that? I thought not..
      Laws are not created to enforce all right and all wrong. HOWEVER, things that are illegal are so because they are "wrong" are they not?
      Isn't that what we're discussing here? If so, it's kind of a shortcut to assume your conclusion. Is it morally wrong to sing a song without permission or use too much of another artist's work within your own?
      In other words, all illegal activity is wrong, but not all wrong activity is illegal. You have the relationship backwards I think...
      I doubt that many people will argue against a claim that there needs to be a considerable amount of correlation between what is immoral and what is illegal but legality and morality are really not the same thing and it's dangerous to conflate them as the upthread post to which I was responding did. This should be obvious to most Slashdot readers, as most of us hold differing opinions about what should be permitted than the currently empowered administration of moralists. Ashcroft appears to believe that law and morality should be more closely bound together and it's one of the things that many of us here object to.

      In the end I see morality as an individual matter and legality as a social one. If we can all agree on what's legal/illegal we can have a stable and reasonably free society without having to all share the same beliefs about what's moral/immoral. I happen to think that's an important goal. Given, based on your statements, that you probably disagree with me about many other things it doesn't seem likely we're going to agree completely about morality, does it? In light of that doesn't it seem like a good idea to you for morality and legality to remain separate so that there can be a societal code we can agree on?
    53. Re:Well... by gujo-odori · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Actually, that's not the case. Those rights are built on Judeo-Christian concepts of morals. Many, but not all, of our laws are built on those rights and morals. Greatly different cultures may have substantially different ideas of what is more and immoral, and their laws reflect that. Take a look at Islamic Sharia law for a good example of this.

      A poster a few replies down advances the idea that not all of our laws are based on ethics, and cites seatbelt laws as an example, with the justification for them being that it unfairly burdens the emergency response system. The argument seems to be that this is based on pragmatics rather than ethics, but we can also argue that it's based on ethics/morals, because another motivation of the seatbelt law is that it unfairly burdens the taxpayers standing behind the emergency response and emergency medical systems to have to care for someone who drives without a seatbelt and is thereby much more seriously injured than he would otherwise be in an accident. That is, it's immoral/unethical/unfair to put the burden of your carelessness on society as a whole. Another way to address the situation would be for emergency crews to arrive at the scene, find you weren't wearing your seatbelt, then just pack up and drive away. Or to rescue you and take you to the hospital, but to bill you and/or your family for the full cost of the rescue.

      Those measures are, of course, quite harsh and society would likely deem them unethical as well, so the compromise is to have mandatory seatbelt use laws and an enforcement mechanism for them (being fined if you are caught).

      The same poster does have a good argument for pragmatics in the case of it not being illegal to lie to your mother, even though society generally considers that to be unethical. There is no such law at least in part because it would be utterly unenforceable, and even if it were enforceable, it would so clog the court system as to cause it to break down and be unable to handle serious crimes. Thus, society sometimes pragmatically judges that something which is unetihical or immoral ought not to be illegal because the law would be utterly unenforceable.

    54. Re:Well... by anagama · · Score: 1
      • ALL law is ethics defined.
      There are many laws which have no basis in ethics. For example, I'd guess that somewhere is a law that says (in the US), red lights mean stop, green lights mean go. This is merely a matter of convention. It certainly wouldn't be immoral to define a violet light to mean "go", a green light to mean "stop", and a white light to mean "slow down".

      Beyond some very basic limitations, it is dangerous to build laws on ethics. Whose ethics? Budhists'? Christians'? Pagans'? Muslims'? Jews'? Louis Farrakahn's? Mr. Rogers'? Jim Jones'? Jimmy Carter's? Richard Butler's?
      --
      What changed under Obama? Nothing Good
    55. Re:Well... by Rick+and+Roll · · Score: 1
      Should stores be required to provide handicap access to bathrooms, parking spaces, or other facilities? These things serve a minority of society but cost society as a whole a great deal of extra money.

      Nah, we should just let 'em die. The needs of the many outweigh the needs of the few.

    56. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you smoke pot and this has an adverse effect on say *your* ability to drive. Now you drive down the road and fail to stop because your gimp brain is in slow motion and hit me from behind going 65.

      Now is it still none of the Governments business to legislate the use of pot?

    57. Re:Well... by Eivind · · Score: 2, Insightful
      Relevant! I'm a firm believer that if someone creates a work of art they should be able to charge whatever they want to people who want a reproduction or to view/listen to that art. Now art is defined pretty loosely here, especially considering some of the stuff that hits the theatres. If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right.

      Fine. But it's not quite that simple. Many people say, like you, that the creators gets control. An interesting question is, how much control ?

      Here's a few examples of things a copyrigth-owner migth want to control. I don't think anyone would say it'd be sensible to let him control all of these.

      • People who whistle a Beatles-song when walking down the street are publicly performing a copyrigthed work. A policeman witnessing such should stop you and ask for your license.
      • Rudolf the red nosed reindeer (and about a gazillion other songs) should no longer be sung in schools and kindergardens, unless fully paid up.
      • *certainly* these songs should not form part of the childrens repertoire on , say, a fundraising performance for a local charity.
      • People who buy a legal movie on their vacation in Japan should be prevented by law from watching this movie at home in the US.
      • The US supreme courts interpretation of the constitution is correct and reasonable when they say that the "for limited times" clause is satisfied aslong as there is *any* limit. A copyrigth-law that stipulates copyrigth lasting for 10^200 years is constitutional.
      • Some knowledge is just too dangerous. While it is, and remains, legal to make a website explaining how to, for example, make fertilizer bombs, synthesize drugs, kill efficiently with a knife or construct your own nuclear bomb, it should remain forbidden to write stuff like: "autorun (and thus DRM-driver-loading) in Windows can be disable by holding down the shift key."

      Copyrigth was supposed to be a /balance/.

      Currently it is anything but, and getting worse by the day.

    58. Re:Well... by Eivind · · Score: 1
      You are, at best, half-rigth.

      You are correct that we should not outlaw something solely because we consider it unethical or unmoral. But the oposite is also true; if society considers a certain action ethical and moral, then that society should not at the same time make that action illegal. (If you don't agree, can you provide an example of something that you consider ethical and moral which you nevertheless think should be (or remain) illegal ? )

    59. Re:Well... by orpx · · Score: 1

      Why is it illegal to drive without using your seatbelt? Is it wrong to not use your seatbelt? No, but it unfairly burdens the emergency response units in the community when some dumbass splatters his face on a tree because he didn't wear his seatbelt. Therefore, it is illegal to drive without using your seatbelt.

      Ha, I've always wondered why they hand out tickets for not wearing seatbelts and always thought it was BS extortion, and I still think it is. This just seems to me like another time where the law is being used carelessly and arrogantly. So what if this guy splatters his brains all over a 'tree'. It's the 'response team's job to cover such problems'. The mangled body would otherwise be trapped inside, and to the point of 'brains being on the tree', they would mostly be scattered on the street or limbs severed. This my friend, would ensure the passerbyer's know why it is important to wear your seatbelts and more importantly, not drive wrecklessly. This is just a small case. If a law as friviolous and stupid as needing to charge people, so they get the hint that they need to pay for everything and be a good consumer, whoops i mean, so they know what safety is and to wear their seatbelts. Now imagine. There are laws that are much more vital than this, and are arrogantly being enforced and used and are having a much greater psychological venue of irrational rational thinking, to the masses. Unfairly burden the 'Response Team'? This is not what is most unfair.

    60. Re:Well... by Eivind · · Score: 1
      By playing the example game you make it too easy on yourself though.

      As you demonstrated, it is easy to give an example of ethical, but ilegal action, and similarily easy to give an example of unethical but legal action.

      But it is similarily easy to find examples of law that are seemingly only supported by some peoples understanding of ethics and/or morals, and where it is very hard to show what harm would come to society where the law repealed.

      What harm would come to society if an adopted boy married the real daugther of his parents ? (i.e his law, but not biology "sister") It's still illegal everywhere that I know of.

      In which way would society be burdened if we made it legal for a doctor to give you a letal injection where you to a) clearly ask for it and b) be sane. ?

      Law is not created by some sterile theoretical concept. Law is created trough politics. This means any and all different interests, groups and reasons play a role. Saying that law is never created on the basis of ethics is just about equally stupid as saying that law is always created on the basis of ethics.

      These days, you get the impression that the biggest influence on new law is which interests has the most money, *that* is for sure no way to make law, but it's still how it happens.

    61. Re:Well... by newhoggy · · Score: 1
      The issue is we are in danger of reaching a point like we did around 1982 where virtually nobody purchased software for the Apple ][ any longer - they just copied it. It was commonly believed by people in the software industry that any new game would sell two copies - one on the east coast and one on the west coast and everyone would then get copies from the myriad BBS systems. Console games (cartridges - much harder to copy) were the thing then, until the PC Jr. failed and triggered another mini-crash.

      Which, by the way, demonstrates that a technical solution can be successful if done properly and also ignores that non-cartridge games today are also successful.

      That is already happening in China with like a 98% piracy rate.

      In other words, a country where piracy does not primarily occur over the internet!

    62. Re:Well... by Viceice · · Score: 1

      Well, in many places in the world, facilities for the disabled arn't required by law, yet many establishments provide them on their own to their disabled clientele.

      That said, I would rather see that business' do this on their own, rather then to pass a law and to set precident for bullshit laws.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
    63. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Copyright didn't apply to computer software in 1982. Sure, publishers put copyright notices on the boxes, title screens etc. but it didn't mean anything.

    64. Re:Well... by SlashDread · · Score: 1

      Ah,

      but all ethics origin from practicality...

      "/Dread"

    65. Re:Well... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Your post brings up several of the most important points about copyright in modern society, so I'd like to respond to what I believe are some of the common fallacies.

      I think that profiting from another's work IS theft, but just making a copy for yourself to use or give to your friends on an individual basis is not theft since it does not result in a profit for the person making copies. Making a copy is NOT the same as stealing a physical object, since the owner still has the original.

      This is true, of course, but you may have devalued the original, and thus you may have prevented the work's creator from making a profit, even though you have not done so yourself. Consider this: if everyone were allowed to make half a dozen copies of a new CD for themselves and their family/friends, any individual doing so would be relatively harmless to the distributor. However, the whole nation doing so would result in everyone getting a free copy of the CD within hours of its release via the snowball effect, with the creator making nothing but the profit from selling the first CD.

      If society were to allow this within its laws, then the charge for that first CD would have to go way up to reflect the difference to the content provider. That would make producing new content unrealistic for most current providers, and thus the supply of new content would dry up. Thus it is in society's interests to restrict copying in this way, and bingo! You just invented copyright, and explained why fair use does not extend to "just giving it to a couple of friends" or "just downloading a personal copy with Morpheus/Kazaa/whatever".

      The argument that the creator of the work loses money because of such personal copying is unproven.

      And rather conveniently, it can never be proven, since you can never have a 100% equivalent control group for the same material, and study the effects of the two scenarios in parallel. You could identify a correlation between the increase in on-line ripping of a type of product and a drop in the sales figures for that type, or some sort of trend over time, but you can never prove causation from correlation.

      I suspect that the MPAA is worried more than they need to be about this whole issue of downloading films, since it is not all that economically attractive to those who could afford to buy a DVD. Those downloaders that cannot afford a DVD represent no loss to the film makers.

      But since when did we have a right to have something for free because we could not afford to pay for it? Our economics work because in exchange for our labours, we receive credit that can be spent on goods and services of value to us. We must choose how to spend that credit wisely, because it is finite. If you rip stuff that you "wouldn't have bought anyway", then obviously it has value to you, but by not paying for it at the asking price, you are breaking your side of the bargain: others who do pay at the asking price are subsidising you, and you have extra credit to spend on other things that those who respected the system do not, which is more than you are entitled to. In any other context, feeding off society in this way would be regarded by most people as unethical, and I fail to see any difference in the case of copyright infringement.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    66. Re:Well... by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1
      ...it's only wrong in it fails to encourage creativity in the societally agreed upon way, as opposed to say, being wrong the way stealing your car is wrong.

      But the fact that you own your car is only a societal convention as well. Many cultures over history have not supported the concept of private ownership, and if you think about it, the natural default is "possession is 10/10ths of the law".

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    67. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And I , for example COULD get a big stick and beat you till you saw it my way, but I am ethicly, and legally prevented from doing so, much to our benefit.

      The problem with that thinking is what if in your society you are allowed to beat people with big sticks and is in fact encouraged by your religious leaders, government institutions, or even your parents and peers.

      Now you visit a society in which beating people with big sticks is frowned upon and considered "wrong". Does that make your values of right and wrong change? No. It just means your right and wrong is relative to the other societies right and wrong.

      However if you obey the laws of the other society while visiting them you won't go around beating people with a stick even though it is acceptable back in your homeland.

    68. Re:Well... by Disevidence · · Score: 1

      What the hell are you talking about? It is wrong to kill someone, yet you have state sanctioned murders (executions). It is wrong to take people's money away from them, yet you have taxes. Perhaps you should of taken Common Sense 101. Really, are you that stupid?

      --
      Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
    69. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Now is it still none of the Governments business to legislate the use of pot?

      No, it's the government's business to legislate driving while under the influence of any intoxicating substance.

    70. Re:Well... by schemanista · · Score: 1

      This my friend, would ensure the passerbyer's know why it is important to wear your seatbelts

      Exactly! That's why capital punishment has such an amazing deterrent value. Oh, wait a minute...

      I'd prefer people wear their seatbelts because an unrestrained passenger becomes a ~ 200lb kinetic energy weapon during sudden deceleration. Depending on where that person is sitting, he poses a threat to the other occupants and those of other cars if he's ejected from the vehicle.

      Of course, it would be wonderful if all drivers did the "right" thing and buckled up out of their own sense of self-preservation and of responsibility but the obvious correlation between seatbelt use and decreased fatality, as well as costs to insurance companies, the health care system and society incurred by accident "victims", ensured that legistlators would pass laws making seatbelt use mandatory.

      and more importantly, not drive wrecklessly.

      I always try to drive wrecklessly, which is why I always wear my seatbelt. ;o)
      --
      I saw that shot more than a few times back when Starbuck was a man. ~ lucabrasi999
    71. Re:Well... by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      It is wrong to kill someone

      Even if they are a direct threat to your life? Even if they have commited numerous murders themselves? Even if they are an enemy during war? Even if they have raped and killed a young girl? Are you prepared to argue (logically) that killing somebody is *always* wrong? There are counter arguments, and many are good ones. You're a moron to think that 'killing is wrong' is an accepted truth. Capital punishment is very much based on ethics.

      Taxes are a 'greater good' thing. The idea is that it is *good* for society for everyone to pool resources. This way the wealthy people help the poorer people, and we all benefit.

      If I *am* "that stupid" you must be a fucking moron.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    72. Re:Well... by fearofcarpet · · Score: 1
      Downloading software from a BBS in 1982 was difficult and time consuming. Downloading a song on the Internet is quick and painless. Downloading a movie is still not quick and painless for most of the Internet users, but it could get to be there.

      I see a commercial for a new movie that's in the theater. I say Hmmm, Id like to see that. I update my USENET headers or search for a torrent... By the time I'm done cooking dinner my movie is waiting for me to watch. I submit to you that downloading movies IS quick and painless!

      I would argue that if I could pay for that service, I certainly would... In fact, I pay for my USENET access and every indie-flick that distributes through the internet (they are rare, but indie music is more common). The problem here is that the MPAA doesn't want to have to invest in a new market because they see the end of their industry as it exists now. The RIAA is reluctantly going along, but it is like pulling teeth to get them to realize the DRM will never work and they will have to accept the existance of piracy much like dubbing CDs onto tapes. Granted downloading MP3s is easier, but there is a larger consumer base on the internet to offset that.

      Let's be realistic... What does "98% piracy rate" mean? A more relavent percentage is the percentage of US made movies/music/software that is the target of that 98% piracy rate. Why? Because US companies largely ignore China as a viable market specifically because they don't have all the anti-piracy laws the US has. Therefore, the easiest method to aquire software/movies/music is to pirate it. (now charging people for said pirated material is certainly a problem, I won't argue against that)

      I agree completely with the Apple ][ argment, but reach a different conclusion... That is people will aquire goods and services in the most convenvient way possible. If that turns out to be free, then they'll steal it. If you charge them for it, then most people will pay... The problem with piracy in the 80's was the that PCs were still really a niche market whereas today you can reasonably assume that every household has a computer. I don't think anyone is talking about walking away the multi-billion dollar game industry because of rampant piracy (which is far worse than any other in my opinion).

      The fundamentally free and unregulated nature of the internet will never foster laws that will make it less convenient to download movies that to go to the theater thus, when the dust settles, movies will be legally distributed over the internet because that is the most convenient way for consumers to consume the MPAA's product.

      --
      Actually, I wrote my thesis on life experience.
    73. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy"

      The other part of that question is how much money should our government use to help the media companies with their problem? Also how much privacy should we give up to help the media companies? Zero is too little, but providing absolute protection is definitly too much.

    74. Re:Well... by Bertie · · Score: 1

      Ideology in this sense is like how the all the **AA's think that the world owes them everytime soembody hums a tune.

      Does that include the GNAA?

    75. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't think you've fully thought that out though - where do those rights come from? Who gave you that right to life, or that right to personal property?

    76. Re:Well... by orpx · · Score: 1

      lol, :o), I dont drive wrecklessly, but my friend once commented, saying I drive precariously. Which pissed me off because it is no where true. Especially when this doofus takes more than half the road trying to take a left at a stop sign. Years of playing games have given me the ability to keep track of more moving objects and not be confused by all the traffic.

      I'd prefer people wear their seatbelts because an unrestrained passenger becomes a ~ 200lb kinetic energy weapon during sudden deceleration. Depending on where that person is sitting, he poses a threat to the other occupants and those of other cars if he's ejected from the vehicle.

      I'd be more worried about the ton of scrap coming my way.

    77. Re:Well... by Daniel_Staal · · Score: 1

      Yes, those opposites hold. The point I was trying to make is law should not be built on ethics. Which too many people try to do.

      I could probably come up with a contrived case to answer your last, but it would more show the limits of the lawmaking process then any other point. (That is, it would be some exception to the exception to a rarely used rule.)

      --
      'Sensible' is a curse word.
    78. Re:Well... by BranMan · · Score: 1

      I haven't taken any Philosophy courses, but your arguments don't ring true here. I also contend that ALL law is ethics codified. However, not all ethics are codified into law. So, yes, you can lie to your mother, it is unethical, and yes it is not unlawful.

      And, yes, some laws are made in error, or to serve special interests at the expense of the general public. Those laws are not based on ethics - and certainly are not required to 'keep society from falling apart'. But I digress.

      Seatbelts are not mandated by law in my state of NH either. We feel (and rightly so) that it is a useless waste of effort and legislation to do so - kind of like making lying to your mother illegal.

    79. Re:Well... by arminw · · Score: 1

      I was not talking about the LEGALITY of copying, but the MORALITY. The nature of so called intellectual property is NOT the same as physical property, yet the copyright holders have bought enough polititians to make laws that DO treat it the same.

      If I make a copy of a say a CD so I can play the music in my iPod, and another copy so my children can play it, so the original doesn't get messed up by a child, I do not consider that theft and in any way immoral, even if the greedy content owners have persuaded equally greedy polititians to make that illegal.

      If I make a copy of a song, so my friend can enjoy the music also, that may be illegal, but it is NOT immoral. Besides, and this has happened, he wanted to know where I got the music and after I told him, he went and bought himself a copy of the CD, something he would not likely have done if he did not enjoy the copy of the song I made.

      Ever since the invention of the player piano, content owners have fought new technology. Fighting this kind of progress is like trying to prevent the tide from coming in. When they finally realized that if you can't "lick" 'em, join 'em, they always made much more money than before.

      Good content, made available at fair prices and in a convenient, desireable format has always made lots of money for the creators, regardless of the technology involved and it always will. If the content creators would learn this lesson history lesson sooner rather than later, they, as well as the public they want to sell to would be better off, although some lawyers might be poorer. Rather than sue their customers, the content owners should make much more effort to nail those who copy their content in order to make a profit from other's work.

      --
      All theory is gray
    80. Re:Well... by swv3752 · · Score: 1

      Actually, by a higher order of reasoning, it is ethically wrong to not use your seatbelt, because it puts a greater burden on the health care services. It is also wrong to burden your loved ones with your severe injury or death when a minor precaution can greatly reduce the risk.

      While it is debatable on whether it is ethically permissible to lie, there are circumstances when it is less wrong to lie to your mother rather than tell the truth. It is better to give some excuse for not calling on her birthday rather than say you are an inconsiderate git that can't remember when her birthday is.

      --
      Just a Tuna in the Sea of Life
    81. Re:Well... by ultranova · · Score: 1

      This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined.

      This is refuted in any Philosophy 101 course. Why is it illegal to drive without using your seatbelt? Is it wrong to not use your seatbelt? No, but it unfairly burdens the emergency response units in the community when some dumbass splatters his face on a tree because he didn't wear his seatbelt. Therefore, it is illegal to drive without using your seatbelt.

      So, in your scenario, driving without seatbelts is illegal because it causes harm to others by needlessly using common resources and increasing the chance that they cannot get emergency services when they need them because they are all in use. Causing harm to others is not ethical; therefore, in your scenario, law follows ethics.

      It is legal to lie to my mother but it is unethical. Why is this? Because laws do not and should not codify what is ethical. You cannot enforce morality. As the poster to which you respond accurately stated, laws reflect what is necessary to keep society from falling apart.

      We can all lie to our mothers incessantly and have a functioning society, even though lying is unethical.

      This does not conflict with the statement "All law is ethics defined". That statement means that all things that the law forbids are also unethical. Your example only proves that the statement "all unethical things are forbidden by law" (or "Law is all ethics defined" or even "All law is all ethics defined" - such a difference from the placing of a single word :) is incorrect.

      Or to put it another way, illegal things are a subset of unethical things.

      If we all drove around without seatbelts, which certainly is not unethical, we would quickly send our emergency care services into chaos, therefore seat belt use is mandated by law.

      Which, of course, is not true. Not wearing seatbelt only makes a difference in the degree of injury you suffer; the ambulance / police will come investigate anyway. However, the accident rate won't suddenly increase just because people drive without seatbelts.

      Of course, the hospitals that take care of patients have a much larger job ahead of them in the seatbeltless world - or maybe not, after all, you also have a much better change to simply die outright without seatbelt.

      Anyway, any Philosophy 101 course will give the very same argument, and it will very likely use the examples of lying to your mother and wearing a seatbelt.

      Consider replacing the teacher :).

      --

      Forget magic. Any technology distinguishable from divine power is insufficiently advanced.

    82. Re:Well... by karmatic · · Score: 1

      You have every right, if what I'm doing is to you or your property.

      No, not really. Suppose you live next to me. There are any number of things you can do that will affect me or my property. The lights from your house are visible at night. You consume oxygen, and your car puts out exhaust. The pollen from your plants spreads. If you have sprinklers, some of the mist may go to my house. The various noises your make through the day (parking, garage, mowing, etc.) are all audible from my property.

      Now consider this: You shine a 3,000,000 candlepower high-intensity beam at my house every night. You set up an industrial factory next door, and produce vast amounts of toxic fumes. Your plants keep growing over to my property. You have really loud parties all night long.

      The activities in the second list are the same as in the first list, only taken further. The difference between the two is that the activities in the second list cause me harm, and I have a right to be concerned with them. The items in the first list do not cause me harm, and I should have no say in how you do them.

      Furthermore, nobody can "own" an idea. What you can "own" is a government-granted "temporary" monopoly on the distribution of copies. Copying is not stealing in the digital world, nor is it in the physical world.

      If I take your car, you are out one car. If I take a look at your car, and decide to copy your car by building my own, you still have the car. Is the manufacturer of your car out of a sale? Potentially. Is it wrong? No, it's called competition, and usually is considered to be healthy for the market.

      Unfortunatly for the RIAA, you have industries where the cost of development is high, and the cost of production is significantly lower. In any normal, non-IP industry, this is a difficult position to be in. If you want to survive as a company, you must figure out a way to make the money before others go in and copy it. This applies to any original idea, from pet rocks to the aforementioned car. It is the job of the company, not the government, to derive a profit.

      Perhaps the current system of mass-manufactured CDs from cookie-cutter artists will no longer work, as the cost of reproduction has gone down to almost zero. Perhaps they RIAA will need to start pre-selling CDs before release. Perhaps the answer really is DRM. I have no problem with whatever steps they take, as long as it doesn't involve buying legislators off.

      It's a free market. Innovate or die.

    83. Re:Well... by Geoff-with-a-G · · Score: 1

      This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined.

      No, it's not. It's about keeping the machine running. If people don't have property rights, the economy breaks down. We can observe that even in places where only the government gets to seize things at will. In general, the more firm a society's right to property, the stronger their economy (all other things being equal). We don't outlaw stealing because "stealing is bad". We outlaw it because if we allow it the machine breaks. If people are allowed to kill each other on a whim, the machine breaks down. If people can put muddy water in a bottle and call it Coca-Cola, the machine breaks down.

      The purpose of the law, as the grandparent poster said, is the keep society functioning, not to enforce what the majority thinks is good and bad. That's why the Constitution has so much stuff about "Congress shall make no law..." and why we have a Judiciary that can strike down laws which are unConsitutional. Unfortunately, regardless of its purpose, the law is still created by people, who are in turn accountable to voters, so if enough voters demand a law saying you're not allowed to do [X], that law may get passed anyway.

    84. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Where are we when the artists and music producers reach the conclusion that making a CD just isn't worthwhile anymore and that $100 concert tickets are the only way to go. Paid appearances. Sponsorships like Brittny Spears with Pepsi?. Make the music "scarce" again and keep it out of the hands of the "common people" so it is worth something again.

      First, concert tickets don't have to be "made" scarce artificially. There is real scarcity. Only so many people can fit into one of these pavilions at once, and that gives the tickets actual value. Recordings aren't like that. They are naturally abundant and cheap to copy--the farthest thing from "scarce" that there is. The direction the market seems to be moving in is that the songs will be commoditized, while the concert tickets will stay monopolies. Songs can be copied by anyone, but you need the original artist for a concert. There's not much you can do about it. Furthermore, I don't see why you want to. You get more choice, lower prices, and better music. The artists still get paid, can still get famous, and get rid of these leech-like record labels. What's wrong with that?

      "But wait," you cry! "The artist won't have any incentive to create! Those nasty pirates will steal the music from ALL of us!"

      History disagrees with you. Did Bach, Beethoven, or Mozart as incentive? Did the Beatles? Yes, weaker copyright means fewer boy bands and fewer Christina Aguileras, but that isn't such a loss. The best work is generally that done for love, not profit. And those bands that are good enough to do their art for profit (like the Beatles) won't need much help.

      Historically, copyright has been more of an incentive to distributors than creators. The cost (in infrastructure, labor, and materials) to produce an album and press 500,000 copies is huge, well beyond any band's resources. It takes a correspondingly huge concentration of capital to afford it. In fact, it's probably too big a concentration for the market to support. To stay in business, then, the record companies need either a subsidy or a monopoly. Copyright gives them both. (The artists' copyrights, actually: labels make them transfer the rights before publication.) This isn't a bad thing: under the old system, if they went out of business, we wouldn't get any music.

      But now the paradigm is changing. First, with home entertainment/production systems it became cheap to make the music; then the Internet made it cheap to distribute too. Copyright used to be a crutch, holding the music market up. Now, at least in its current, strong form, it's a hobble, dragging the market down.

      There's still one more objection: that copyright is a natural right, and that you have a moral obligation not to use a creator's work without permission. If you think this, I urge you, strongly: stop. This idea is dangerous. In its more extreme forms, it leads to attempts to "protect" IP through legislation, and then we get laws like the INDUCE Act. A country that values intellectual property over innovation will fall behind.

      Still, if it's a natural right, that wouldn't matter. We would have to protect it anyway. Unfortunately for that idea, copyright is inconsistent with the acknowledged right to real property. Think about it: say I buy a CD. Don't I own that CD? Can't I do what I want with it? With copyright, the answer is no. My rights to this CD are secondary to someone else's rights to the ideas contained on it. Even if "owning" ideas doesn't seem absurd, it can't easily coexist with owning property.

      Given all that, you might expect that I'd favor abolishing copyright completely. I don't. It can, in moderation and when used appropriately, be a stimulating boost to an economy. Even its inconsistency with the right to property is acceptable; I think that property, while a natural right, can come in second to the public good. However, we shouldn't be too att

    85. Re:Well... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if someone owns the copyright to a song should they be able to sue you for singing in the shower?

      After all, they didn't grant you permission.

    86. Re:Well... by wikdwarlock · · Score: 1

      If my Philosophy 101 prof handed me this "argument" as anything other than a demonstration of logical fallacies, I'd drop the course and demand a refund.

      --

      "I must not fear. Fear is the mind killer." -Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear
    87. Re:Well... by back_pages · · Score: 1
      I haven't taken any Philosophy courses, but your arguments don't ring true here.

      Ok, let me point out that

      I haven't taken any Philosophy courses

      pretty much addresses the problem that

      arguments don't ring true here.

      I also contend that ALL law is ethics codified.

      My hometown in Michigan has a law that no negroes are allowed within the city limits after dark. What ethic codifies that law? (It is obviously not enforced, by the way.)

      Exactly what is the ethical basis for property zoning laws? What is the ethical basis for the right to vote at 18 years of age, but witholding the privilege to drink alcohol until 21 years of age? What is the ethical basis that makes it perfectly legal to turn yourself into a neurotic misfit? Why is it legal to drop out of school without any good reason?

      Why is it legal to be racist? Legal to be sexist? Why is it legal to hate gay people for being gay? Why is it legal to hate in the first place? What is the ethical basis to permit lying except in (drumroll) situations where the function of society is at stake, such as in a courtroom or to the police?

      There is a word for governments that codify ethics: fascist. The Nazis did it, the Soviets did it, the Chinese did it, Mussolini did it, the North Vietnamese are doing it, the Taliban did it, blah blah all day long. It's a bad idea to use your ethics as a basis for your laws - someone will invariably decide that your laws are bad. If your laws = your ethics, then that guy is saying that your ethics are bad and that's invariably going to start a cultural rift that could possibly tear down your entire society. (Notice that North Korea is the only remaining government in my list.) If your laws are distinct from your code of ethics, they are able to be freely discussed, changed, and modified without implicitly attacking a person's culture and/or ethnicity.

      But once again, this is covered in basically any introductory Philosophy course, as well as the incredibly broad definitions of "ethics" that one would need to argue that seat belt laws grounded in ethical, not practical issues.

    88. Re:Well... by back_pages · · Score: 1
      Thought of another example.

      Dr. Jack Kevorkian is currently in jail for an act which was nothing except ethical yet illegal. Being from Michigan, I've seen far more than the national media coverage of the case. He did absolutely everything possible to document that what he was doing was, in the opinion of the people attempting suicide, entirely ethical (whether you or I agree with it seems moot) yet Kevorkian will be in prison for many years. He firmly believed that it is unethical to force ailing and elderly people to continue to live and suffer and is sitting in the State Penn for that belief.

      The laws are codified ethics indeed...

    89. Re:Well... by Disevidence · · Score: 1

      Bloody hell, your so stupid it hurts.

      Taxes are a prime example, and obviously you agree, of a laws being made for society, not for any ethical or moral reason. Thats already one counter-example to your flaky premise. Its not moral to take someone's money away from them, because they earned it. But it is good, society-wise, to get some money from people to pay for infrastructure.

      In self-defense, sure it can be argued that killing someone is the only way to stop them (and is ethical), though often there are better and easier ways. Wars are different, and you know it. In the field of battle, unfortunately some killing is justified. A lot of the execution that goes on behind the scenes isn't, and thus your argument is too vague for me to reply. But I applaud your construction of such a shit strawmen argument.

      "Even if they have raped and killed a young girl." So, after finding out he's guilty, were just going to kill him in cold blood. How is that ethical, irregardless of his past actions. I'm not saying he should be let off or any such nonsense, but killing someone in cold blood is ALWAYS wrong. It's might be a good outcome for society, in that someone dangerous is gone, but it is not "right", and never will be. What happens if he was wrongly convicted? Please, think a little for fucks sake.

      --
      Think nothing is impossible? Try slamming a revolving door.
    90. Re:Well... by BranMan · · Score: 1

      First off, shouting me down is not the way to convey an opinion.

      Law has to have some basis in ethics - how else is 'ignorance of the law is no excuse' supposed to work? If this is torn down by a philosophy 101 course, then so be it (though I might be arguing back and forth with the professor into the night). Laws should be based on the ethics of society, so they should be obvious - commonsense - and natural to uphold. Not all laws fall under this, though - more's the pity.

      Your law on negros and the city limit after dark was based on the assumption that negros were dangerous. Keeping that law on the books is a pretty poor statement about the state legislature by the way.

      Zoning laws? That's easy - people want to live in a place where other people live. Kids can play with each other, people can have each other over for dinner, etc. Zoning laws existed to codify the ethical stance that you shouldn't build a tannery in the middle of a housing development.

      Voting is supposed to be an intellectual activity. Drinking is not - think intelligence vs. wisdom. They develop at different rates, and that's where the cutoff was decided for each to be. Are you going to argue about drivers licenses next? Giving control of a 1/2 ton of steel and glass to an 8 year old? These impact the people around you and so need extra consideration.

      Neurotic misfit? Dropping out of school? Free will - these impact essentially yourself, so less rigorous standards (lesser ethics if you will). Hate is personal, what you do with it is your ethics (I'm remembering the quote "Ethics is what you do when you know no one is watching") Lying is personal - and something we do constantly. I am not arguing that it is ethical to lie - but only when it impacts others substantially is it codified into law. By the way, that one is also rooted in the 10 Commandments (ie religeon, ie. culture - they cannot be separated).

      Fascists codify ethics? Uh, I'd like to see some basis for that - sounds like another all night debate to me. I don't agree with the assumption that law needs to be separate from ethics to be able to be discussed and debated either.

      Finally, seat belt laws are some of the 'bad' ones in my book, ones that do not follow ethics and should not be. Remember, my state of NH does not have them (well, actually, for anyone over 16 - past that you can choose your own funeral, but before that, you need to be protected). But, indeed one could argue ethics for seatbelt laws (to play devil's advocate here) - it places an undue burden on everyone (healtcare) when people not wearing seatbelts get in accidents (life flight helicopers needed say, and $500,000 in reconstruction) vs. those wearing seatbelts (who only need ambulances, and $50,000 in reconstruction). And so it is unethical to not wear a seatbelt </devils advocate>.

      Once again, all laws should have a basis in ethics, todays laws don't all have that basis (which is unfortunate) but they should have.

    91. Re:Well... by back_pages · · Score: 1
      First off, shouting me down is not the way to convey an opinion.

      Sure it is - maybe not a good one according to your code of conduct, but it's perfectly legitimate. You can't let me drop out of school and then tell me how to behave! :)

      Your law on negros and the city limit after dark was based on the assumption that negros were dangerous. Keeping that law on the books is a pretty poor statement about the state legislature by the way.

      No, as a matter of fact, it's a statement that nobody has bothered to challenge the law. The law would be removed by one of two mechanisms - someone in a criminal trial challenging it or someone leading a campaign to introduce a bill to remove. Nobody cares enough about that dusty old law to do either.

      Voting is supposed to be an intellectual activity. Drinking is not - think intelligence vs. wisdom.

      That's fine, but here you have made a judgement about about drinking which you are enforcing on the public at large.

      Neurotic misfit? Dropping out of school? Free will - these impact essentially yourself, so less rigorous standards (lesser ethics if you will).

      And here you seem to support the ideals of libertarianism to some extent. Drinking and driving is a crime of itself - drinking by itself is something that "impacts essentially yourself", just as driving without a seat belt, dropping out of school, smoking cigarettes, shooting heroin, or hanging yourself. Some of those activities are illegal and some aren't. It would take a fool to suggest that any of them are "good for you".

      You can take two stances on this - the government knows what is "good for you" and makes the law or the government believes that you know what is good for you and grants you free will.

      In the former case, you have seat belt laws, social security witholding, mandatory public education, suicide is illegal, (and when government goes wacky) private ownership of business is evil (Soviets), associating with Jews is filthy (Nazis), being educated ruins society (Khmer Rouge), being gay is a sin (Christian right), being American is a sin (Islamic radicals), and so on. The alternative is closer to the libertarian stance that the individual knows what is right, and you can smoke cigarettes, buy lottery tickets, drive without a seatbelt, eat fast food every day, drop out of school, lie to your mother, commit adultery (a civil, but not criminal offense), sue people frivolously, hate people who are different than you, shoot heroin (not a crime by itself), be a crappy parent, watch Jerry Springer, and basically be a waste of a human.

      But honestly, pick one of those philosophies and tell me that our code of laws is based on it.

      Lying is personal - and something we do constantly. I am not arguing that it is ethical to lie - but only when it impacts others substantially is it codified into law. By the way, that one is also rooted in the 10 Commandments (ie religeon, ie. culture - they cannot be separated).

      No no, not at all. Lying is only against the law in court, to the police, and for certain legal proceedings (such as job applications and taxes.) Think about it - You're perfectly free to lie to your boss every day once you've been hired. You'll lose your job, but you won't go to jail (unless the act of lying broke some other law - you won't go to jail for lying to your boss.) You can lie to your wife, to your church/mosque/synagogue, to your teachers, to your friends, to you pet goldfish - you won't go to jail unless you break some OTHER law by lying. Being truthful IS a commandment of the Old Testament but lying is NOT a commandment of our legal system. There is a tiny fraction of situations where you legally cannot lie, the rest of the time you are free to do as you please.

      And yes, you can separate religion from law. I cite the United States as a prime example. I'm free to lust after my neighbor's wife - hell, if she wants it, I can rock her world all night long and leave h

    92. Re:Well... by platypibri · · Score: 1
      I'll take this one. Who cares about keeping the machine running? Take ethics out of law and you are left with "Might makes right". Now, I am a fairly giant man, with somewhat above average intellegence and martial skill. I'd do okay in this environment. At least 'till I got old. Things would be right or wrong simply because I, or others stronger and smarter than I, wish it. And who are you to question the very nature of it? We see this in the animal kingdom. It is perfectly natural and right.

      Only... it's not. And we know it's not. Not for us. So we form societies who try to define right and wrong as bet we can so that the whole of us can prosper. This process is always in flux, and is never quite right, but it is the best we can do morally. I'm sure you could find someone about my size to show you how much he can take from you by force if you need the point driven home. I am thankful with all my heart that I am an ethical person, and I do not behave thus.

      --
      Yeah, I guess I'm funny like that.
    93. Re:Well... by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Taxes are a prime example, and obviously you agree, of a laws being made for society, not for any ethical or moral reason.

      If I'm so stupid, why do I realize that "for the good of society" is a moral argument and you don't? Why must morality be based on an individual? Ever think of taking a philosophy or ethics course?

      Consider a life-raft that is full, with a man in the water. Should the people in the life raft try to save the man in the water they will capsize and all drown. If they don't save him, he will drown. They are faced with an *ethical decision* that effects the group.

      Also, I was not trying to argue the morality of capital punishment you schmuck, but THE FACT THAT THIS IS AN ETHICAL DECISION. Remember? The original argument was whether laws were ethically based? I know, you're slow, but I'll try to type slowly. This of *all* laws is most certainly based on ethics (both pro and con have strong ethical reasons for their side). But apparently you can't see beyond the fucking nose on your face.

      IHBT I fear, this ends now.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
    94. Re:Well... by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      "In order to put the genie back in the bottle, the government would have to harm everyone, even the most scrupulous of consumers"

      this sounds just like the copy protection found on Doom3, Farcry, Painkiller recently.

      Why are the people who actually understand what is going on, always in the minority?

  2. RIAA Math School by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    They must've gone to the RIAA School of Math.

  3. just love statistics by pvt_medic · · Score: 4, Insightful

    People wo think that statistics are the straight truth are idiots. This is just a further example of how one can easily manipulate numbers to prove a point. Simpel you take the number of downloaded movies, and divide by the number of people online, and you could create a stat that justifies this claim, or just look at subsection like china and be like everyone has pirated software on thier computer so therefore everyone must be pirating worldwide.

    --
    30% Troll, 50% Underrated, 10% Interesting
    Score:5, Troll
    1. Re:just love statistics by throwaway18 · · Score: 4, Informative

      The book "How to lie with statistics" by Darrell Huff was published fifty years ago and just as true today.

    2. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      94.3% of that book is true.

    3. Re:just love statistics by Monkelectric · · Score: 1

      "Statistics can be used to prove anything is true. 14% of all people know that." -- Homer

      --

      Religion is a gateway psychosis. -- Dave Foley

    4. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      ...and 12.2% of that book is false.

    5. Re:just love statistics by timmi · · Score: 2

      My mother's words of wisdom on this matter would be "Figures don't lie, but liars can figure"

    6. Re:just love statistics by bob65 · · Score: 1
      People wo think that statistics are the straight truth are idiots.

      What is that supposed to mean? Why aren't (true) statistics the straight truth? Wouldn't it be idiotic to *not* believe a statistical statement based on laws of logic?

      or just look at subsection like china and be like everyone has pirated software on thier computer so therefore everyone must be pirating worldwide.

      What does that have anything to do with whether or not statistics are the straight truth? If someone used the (very true) statistic of number of people with pirated software out of the exact people in the sample to simply make a statement like "9 out of 10 people in the world pirate software", that statement is a LIE (unless it happens to be true). It is *not* an example of how statistics are not the straight truth. Unless you want to disprove specific theories in the field of statistics, I would suggest not calling people idiots.

      With that said, people who think that lies are the straight, or misinterpret statistical statements, are idiots.

    7. Re:just love statistics by beebware · · Score: 1

      No, some statistics can be the truth. For example, I bet if I asked poeple "If you believe the moon is made out of cheese or if you were dead", you'll have a very high number of respondents agreeing that, yes, the moon is made out of cheese (especially if you remember that only living humans make good survey subjects).

    8. Re:just love statistics by goon+america · · Score: 1

      People wo think that statistics are the straight truth are idiots. This is just a further example of how one can easily manipulate numbers to prove a point.

      Nonsense. You can come up with statistics that appear to support a point, but note that this doesn't actually prove the point. Statistics can still be used to make valid and useful inferences, though it's true that if the source is sufficiently motivated, it can be used in ways that might mislead you if you don't apply any critical reasoning (note that the application of critical reasoning can also be suppressed by sufficient motivation).

    9. Re:just love statistics by Feztaa · · Score: 1

      Hmmmm... the version that I've heard goes "Figures can lie and liars can figure"

    10. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How's that possible?

    11. Re:just love statistics by ricochet81 · · Score: 1

      "There are three kinds of lies: lies, damn lies, and statistics." -Mark Twain (popularized in the US Benjamin Disraeli's statement)

      --
      Error: Id10t detected
    12. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Marijuana and /. don't work well together.

    13. Re:just love statistics by OverflowingBitBucket · · Score: 1

      Which is why the book is 6.5% better than other leading statistics books.

    14. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      All I know about Bush is I had a job when Clinton was president.

      Proving once again that a person that cannot tell the difference between a correlation and a relation does not an informed voter make.

    15. Re:just love statistics by nyseal · · Score: 1

      I believe that number should be 99.68%; just to be statistically correct.

      --
      [SIG] Remember Mattel handheld games?
    16. Re:just love statistics by parksie · · Score: 1

      Statistics are used much like a drunk uses a lamppost: for support, not illumination.
      - Vin Scully

    17. Re:just love statistics by sjames · · Score: 1

      How's that possible?

      Because 92percent of all statistics are made up :-)

    18. Re:just love statistics by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well come on! Forthty percent of people know that!!

    19. Re:just love statistics by bot24 · · Score: 1

      Those statistics are probably less than the real thing. Many ads could be called 'movies" now because they are animated and getting longer. I've downloaded movies, but they were less than five minutes long(with the exception of that Blender video that was Slashdotted) and they were all legal to download. You can imply stuff that isn't true and still kind of speak the truth.

    20. Re:just love statistics by tighr · · Score: 1

      67.8% of all statistics are made up on the spot.

    21. Re:just love statistics by lune+tns · · Score: 1

      Statistics are like bikinis - what they reveal is enticing. What they cover is vital. ~Aaron Levenstein

    22. Re:just love statistics by Eivind · · Score: 2, Interesting
      What is that supposed to mean? Why aren't (true) statistics the straight truth?

      The problem is with the definition of "true statistics". There are a few cases where relatively objective statistics are possible and common. But these are by far the minority, and are seldom the interesting issues.

      Let me give an example. Say, how big a part of GDP a government allocates to healthcare. Assume that all statistics are perfectly collected, there are no errors whatsoever in how the data are collected . A "true statistic" no ?

      http://www.globalis.no/indicator.cfm?IndicatorID=1 42&year=2001 Look at Germany. 0.8% less that ALL but 5 other countries, all the others being countries in the category "Afghanistan", "Nigeria" and so on.

      The real reason ?

      Let's compare to Norway. For a typical person in Norway, there's maybe 35% taxes. of those, the state gives out around 1/3rd, so 12% of your gross for healthcare.

      In Germany, there's instead maybe a 20% tax plus a MANDATORY (by law) "healthcare insurance" that costs something like 14% of your gross.

      End result, the statistics say that Germany pays only 0.8% of GDP for healthcare, only 1/8th that of Norway, while in REALITY the typical German pays around 15% (14% + 0.8%) of his gross for healthcare compared to 12% in Norway.

      What difference does it make if the subtraction from your salary is labeled "taxes" or "health-insurance" when in both cases you are required by law to pay it, and in both cases the money goes to pay for the very same thing ?

      This sort of thing is not the exception when it comes to gathering and using statistics, it's more the rule.

    23. Re:just love statistics by bob65 · · Score: 1
      The problem is with the definition of "true statistics". There are a few cases where relatively objective statistics are possible and common. But these are by far the minority, and are seldom the interesting issues. Let me give an example. Say, how big a part of GDP a government allocates to healthcare. Assume that all statistics are perfectly collected, there are no errors whatsoever in how the data are collected . A "true statistic" no ? http://www.globalis.no/indicator.cfm?IndicatorID=1 42&year=2001 Look at Germany. 0.8% less that ALL but 5 other countries, all the others being countries in the category "Afghanistan", "Nigeria" and so on. The real reason ? Let's compare to Norway. For a typical person in Norway, there's maybe 35% taxes. of those, the state gives out around 1/3rd, so 12% of your gross for healthcare. In Germany, there's instead maybe a 20% tax plus a MANDATORY (by law) "healthcare insurance" that costs something like 14% of your gross. End result, the statistics say that Germany pays only 0.8% of GDP for healthcare, only 1/8th that of Norway, while in REALITY the typical German pays around 15% (14% + 0.8%) of his gross for healthcare compared to 12% in Norway. What difference does it make if the subtraction from your salary is labeled "taxes" or "health-insurance" when in both cases you are required by law to pay it, and in both cases the money goes to pay for the very same thing ?

      I would argue, though, that this is an example of someone misinterpreting the statistic - there is still nothing wrong the statistic and (assuming the data is correct) the statistic is the straight truth.

      Comparing percentage of GDP allocated to healthcare between governments, though, is actually quite pointless, as you pointed out - it doesn't really tell you much due to things like "mandatory healthcare insurance". That is why I believe statistics (the numbers, not the field of statistics) have very limited use, and really don't tell you more than the results of a particular calculation performed on a particular data set. However, this does not make the statistics any less true, and I think it is perfectly reasonable to believe that "statistics are the straight truth".

    24. Re:just love statistics by Eivind · · Score: 1
      Question is, are you then saying something useful, or are you just playing with words for the fun of it ?

      One person says statistics often don't say what they seem to say, because there's a lot of background-info you need that isn't obvious from the numbers alone.

      You first seem to disagree with this, but then sorta turn around and say that allthough statistics is the straigth truth, and it's perfectly reasonable to believe that, statistics still have very limited use due to for example numbers from different countries seldom being comparable.

      So, the way I see it, in reality we agree; We agree that just reading the numbers, and concluding much from them, without knowing a lot about how they're collected, what they include and not, and so on, will often give a misleading picture.

      I don't quite agree with you by the way. It's not that hard to find examples of statistics, especially time-series that, when collected consistently give different numbers that are quite comparable and give a quite accurate picture of reality.

      The trick is just to figure out when that is.

  4. Dupe!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This was already covered here in our rights online

    1. Re:Dupe!! by siliconjunkie · · Score: 2, Funny

      Dammit. They covered it in Apple and Games and IT as well. That sure is a lot of dupes. I'm still trying to figure out what this has to do with Linux.

    2. Re:Dupe!! by Frankie70 · · Score: 1

      Dammit. They covered it in Apple and Games and IT as well. That sure is a lot of dupes. I'm still trying to figure out what this has to do with Linux

      Those are just ways for you to choose what colour you want to see the thread in.

      Pro-Choice, Always.

    3. Re:Dupe!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      and that sound you just heard was the joke going way over your head.

  5. OK, And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Interesting
    So what if one in four internet users has downloaded a movie? They're posting record profits, why are they complaining? Seriously!



    Somebody needs to slap them around and make them quit bitching.

    1. Re:OK, And? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 4, Insightful

      A bank can post record profits, but fraud against that bank is still wrong.

    2. Re:OK, And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Fraud against a bank involves an actual loss of money. Copyright infringement doesn't necessarily.

    3. Re:OK, And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      That's the most frustrating part. The entertainment IP cartels don't need to demonstrate damage, it's never been proven by disinterested third-party research, and it may well turn out to be a self-inflicted remedy, yet they'll stop at no restriction to rights and freedoms to control the 'product' they rightfully made artists sign away. Mine mine mine mine, they're like children with toys.

    4. Re:OK, And? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      A bank can post record profits, but fraud against that bank is still wrong.

      If the bank was committing fraud in the form of price fixing, or favoritism in home loans, or favoritism in business financing, then the "fraud" against the bank may not be fraud but may be perfectly legal exercision of higher authority rights. It's retroactive.

      The fact that we've had a bad administration for the last 150 years does not further validate immoral practices, nor does it invalidate moral practices.

      The only real question is "legality", and that's a load of hogwash.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    5. Re:OK, And? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      Oh... so, I can exact my own revenge on people who wrong me and as long as I justify it "morally", even if there were other, legitimate options, I'm perfectly in the right?

      What if I, willingly mind you, gave them the avenue to abuse me in the first place? Being that I continued to provide them with the ability to abuse me, am I still justified in taking my revenge?

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    6. Re:OK, And? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      If the bank was breaking price fixing rules (I dont see the problem in the other two, a bank is perfectly free to show favouritism in the loans it offers or the people or businesses it offers finance to) then the bank should be dealt with by the proper authority, its customers shouldnt storm the bank and help themselves to whats in its vault.

      I think your problem is with the authorities, not the bank. When a murderer gets a short sentance, you dont blame the criminal for the short sentance, you blame the judge who gave them that sentance. If a murderer isnt brought to justice, you dont blame the murderer, you blame the police for not doing their job. Wheres the difference? They may have committed a crime, but that gives you absolutely no right to carry out your own punitive measures against them.

    7. Re:OK, And? by maximilln · · Score: 1

      then the bank should be dealt with by the proper authority

      Interesting concept. What private attorney is going to risk the forclosure of his house so that he can take on a bank? You do understand my point, don't you?

      I think your problem is with the authorities, not the bank

      My problem, in this case, is with the authorities executing entrapment. It is widely known that nobody reads the license agreement on a DVD or a CD when they purchase the media. For all practical purposes the person has bought that movie and now owns it. Knowing the prevalence of nobody reading the legal jargon the media industry inserts a number of clauses which a vast majority of people are going to violate by default due to the perception of ownership. It is fraud on the part of the media vendors. The truth of sale has been misrepresented and the industry then uses the crop of criminals to exact additional profit at their leisure.

      I have a problem with fraud. I do not have a problem with authority.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    8. Re:OK, And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So an abused wife shouldn't be able to fight back since "she gave the husband the avenue to abuse her in the first place"?

      Fuck that. Abuse me or take advantage of me, and I'll abuse you right back.

    9. Re:OK, And? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "They may have committed a crime, but that gives you absolutely no right to carry out your own punitive measures against them."

      And why not? Simply because the law says so? Who says the law is in the right (morally speaking)? Lynch mobs were common in the old days when the law was powerless or apathetic to do something about a situation. And don't get me started on "rights", which are a big fucking joke anyways.

      The law is in the wrong more often than you or I would like it to be. I'm not about to bend over and take it in the ass simply because the law won't help me.

      It's a big world out there, and we live relatively short lives. I'm not going to lose sleep because some multi-billion dollar corp is losing a few sales here and there, and I'm sure as hell not going to play the victim for them.

    10. Re:OK, And? by Richard_at_work · · Score: 1

      Interesting concept. What private attorney is going to risk the forclosure of his house so that he can take on a bank? You do understand my point, don't you?

      I do understand your point, but my point was that since the law makers arent going to enforce the rules they themselves lay down, then your beef is with them, not the people getting away with it. Fraud is an offence, as is price fixing and cartels.

      You say that for all practical purposes a person has bought the DVD and now owns it, without giving regard to the legal text on the box. Im not certain about the US, but everywhere Ive been to, ignorance of the law is not a valid defence. What type of clauses were you thinking of, because we are talking here about very basic infringement of copyright law. The truth of the sale has not been misrepresented at all, tho the intelligence and knowledge of the purchaser may not extend to knowing that it is a crime to infringe on that copyright, but that is still not a valid defence.

      You dont put 'it is a crime to steal this item' on the DVD case, so why should you have to put 'it is a crime to copy this item' on the case either?

    11. Re:OK, And? by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Copyright infringement does involve an actual loss of money. This stuff htey're calling copyright infringement, regardless of what the courts say, is *not* copyright infringement.

      Copyright infringement is when I do something like sell a copy of hte movie and don't pay the royalty, if I have an agreement with the makers of the movie. If I don't have an agreement with the makers of the movie, then just selling a copy of the movie is enough to be infringing, even if I *do* pay them the royalty.

      But if I give away a copy of the movie, that's called "Fair Use", and is *not* copyright infringement. So I can buy a million blank dvds, burn a copy of Catwoman (provided I legally acquired my copy), go into the streets and just give one to everyone I see, and it's not copyright infringement. But if I ask so much as one cent for each copy, then it is copyright infringement.

      Cpoyright only protects the rights to commercially exploit a creative work. So I can't just take any given Doors song and stick it in a commercial for Big Macs. I have to license the song.

      But if I use any given Doors song as the soundtrack to a little slideshow I've made of my family on vacation and give it away, that's fine.

      What we're seeing is a method of making money by commercially exploiting copyright works going out of date and becoming obsolete, and the big monolithic companies that depend on that method flopping around trying to fight it.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    12. Re:OK, And? by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      Oh, so, in your example, she actively invited her husband to attack her and rewarded him for years for abusing her?

      Fuck no she shouldn't fight back after encouraging abuse for years.

      Oh wait, you were suggesting that by marrying him she gave him the ability to abuse her? Wrong.

      See, say you go into an $8 movie, and you don't like it. You've been taken advantage of. Say you keep doing it. Repeatedly. For years.

      Guess what?

      That's like the wife inviting abuse in some manner... then, rather than doing something about it, she CONTINUES to invite him to attack and beat her.

      That would be stupid.

      Just like all the people who steal music and movies and then try to justify it on the basis that they ACTIVELY ENCOURAGED THE INDUSTRIES TO ABUSE THEM BY REWARDING THE ABUSE FOR YEARS are stupid.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    13. Re:OK, And? by bit01 · · Score: 1

      A bank can post record profits, but fraud against that bank is still wrong.

      And the American revolution was wrong because they rebelled against duly constituted authority.

      Sometimes, the law is an ass and you've just gotta do what you've just gotta do.

      I'm not condoning bank fraud (troll comparison by the way) but IP law is so ridiculously unfair now that I have no problem with people ignoring it wholesale.

      M$ being paid $35,000,000,000 per year for software it largely wrote more than a decade ago and for which it didn't even write most of the complicated bits, the device drivers. RIAA is being paid $1,000,000's for songs that took a few hours to create. In both cases broken IP law is giving them monopoly/cartel advantages they're not earning.

      I want to see an economic and legal system that encourages creativity and a fair day's work for a fair day's pay. IP law now isn't and lawyers/politicians are asleep at the wheel.

      ---

      It's wrong that an intellectual property creator should not be rewarded for their work.
      It's equally wrong that an IP creator should be rewarded too many times for the one piece of work, for exactly the same reasons.
      Reform IP law and stop the M$/RIAA abuse.

    14. Re:OK, And? by Idarubicin · · Score: 1
      Interesting concept. What private attorney is going to risk the forclosure of his house so that he can take on a bank? You do understand my point, don't you?

      Actually no, I don't.

      In this instance the lawyer is afraid of...what? Not being permitted to buy DVDs? The MPAA barring him from theatres, or trying to confiscate his DVD collection? Oooh--worse: all kinds of publicity that will ensure his continued wealth and success.

      Frightening things, those.

      --
      ~Idarubicin
    15. Re:OK, And? by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      I disagree. Copyright infringement ALWAYS involves an actual loss of money. The argument "I wasn't going to pay for the things I stole, anyway" is kind of moot, especially when banks are insured against fraud and stores against theft. Nobody should ever lose actual money after fraud or theft -- but it's still a crime, because the criminal has obtained property they have no rights to. What's the value of the thing they stole? Well, it's much harder to judge. You can either say "The item is worth it's MSRP times the number of downloads" or you can say "the item is woth that much DIVIDED by the percentage of downloaders who might have bought the thing, actually."

      Since the latter statistic involves a percentage -- one that is completely arbitrary and untestable and therefore useless from a legal standpoint -- you set the value arbitrarily high, with full knowledge that the number is high. Judges know it's not REALLY a million dollar loss, and they prosecute with that knowledge. If Mitnick had robbed a bank for the losses software companies claim he caused, he'd still be in prison.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
  6. When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'? by iBran · · Score: 4, Insightful

    You don't trust sponsored "research", period.

  7. public domain movies by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    http://www.archive.org/movies/collection.php?colle ction=feature_films

  8. Sad... by keiferb · · Score: 2, Insightful

    It's sad that it's come to this, but that's perfectly normal behavior for a [corporation|industry|politician] these days. And unfortunately, the above always seem to believe each other over the truth. After all... if someone spent all that money to have a report written about something, then it -must- be true.

    Please shoot me.

    1. Re:Sad... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "Please shoot me."

      BANG

      You took the easy way out.

      The rest of us take the hard way out or let it slide.

  9. "Stop" trusting? by Chmcginn · · Score: 5, Insightful
    That assumes we ever trusted it to begin with...

    Okay, seriously, for the slightly less-paranoid... It's always a good idea to find out, at the very least,

    a.)Who payed for the research

    b.)Who they work for/own stock in/represent/want you to vote for.

    While most of the time, a research group is not going to make up numbers out of whole cloth, writing the questions in a way that could influence the result is bound to happen most of the time.

    --
    Have you been touched by his noodly appendage?
    1. Re:"Stop" trusting? by EpsCylonB · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Put more simply...

      "wheres the money ?"

      this question will help you solve most of the problems you come across in life.

    2. Re:"Stop" trusting? by maxpublic · · Score: 5, Interesting

      Let's not forget:

      c) what personal agenda they may or may not be pushing.

      Here's an example of c) in action. Back in the '80's a group of scientists used a very in-depth, well-funded study to 'prove' that women in their 20's had healthier babies than women in their teens, and therefore teen pregnancy was a Bad Thing(TM). Not for any 'moral' reason, mind you, but because it was clear that becoming pregnant as a teenager put your child at unnecessary risk, when you could wait until your 20's and avoid that risk.

      This research was so well-received by both the left and the right that it held for nearly two decades without being disputed. In fact, it wasn't disproven until last year.

      You see, it turns out that the researchers in this case had a strong interest in proving that teen pregnancy was a bad thing, because they personally thought that teen girls having sex was morally reprehensible. In order to cook their results they decided not to control for one very important factor: pre-natal care. That's right, they deliberately did not control for pre-natal care. It's a well-known fact that women in their twenties are far more likely to plan their pregnancies than women in their teens, and so tend to have much better pre-natal care, so this action wasn't accidental but deliberate.

      What happens when you control for pre-natal care? What happens is that you piss off a lot of morally conservative people, because controlling for pre-natal care shows that the healthiest babies in the world are born to women between the ages of *13 and 17*. Not exactly something you want to advertise if you're one of the folks screaming about the 'evils' of teen sex.

      Needless to say the study was blasted. Not the science of it, which was solid, but on 'moral' grounds, with people claiming it should never have been done in the first place.

      So you not only have to ask "who paid for the research" and "who do the researchers work for", but also "do they have a personal agenda they're trying to foist on others using pseudo-science"?

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    3. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Feztaa · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Wow, that's a great story. Do you happen to have any references?

    4. Re:"Stop" trusting? by snarkh · · Score: 1


      Assuming that your story is true, how do you know they neglected to normalize for pre-natal care intentionally?

    5. Re:"Stop" trusting? by maximilln · · Score: 0

      Not exactly something you want to advertise if you're one of the folks screaming about the 'evils' of teen sex.

      Egads Max! That sort of thing will land you in "poke me in the butt" prison!

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
    6. Re:"Stop" trusting? by maxpublic · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually yes. Unfortunately it isn't the original study, but a second which was done later during the same year. I cannot find a copy of the original study online.

      The second study was published in the August 1, 2001 edition of the American Journal of Epidemiology. The primary scientist of record is Dr. Ralitza V. Gueorguieva from Yale University.

      Here's an excerpt from the summary of this study, reported in an August 8, 2001 Yahoo news article:

      "The report notes that while children of teen moms are significantly more likely to have educational disabilities overall, they are no more likely to have problems when the mother's education, marital status, income and race are taken into account.

      In fact, these youngsters may be less likely to have physical handicaps and academic problems than children of older moms, the researchers report.

      ``Children of teenage mothers are at higher risk for disabilities in kindergarten, but this increased risk appears to be due not to a biological effect of the young age of the mother per se, but to the confounding influences of associated sociodemographic and/or environmental factors,'' according to Dr. Ralitza V. Gueorguieva from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues.

      To investigate whether young maternal age increased the risk of academic difficulties, the investigators examined the school records of more than 339,000 children who entered a kindergarten class in Florida between 1992 and 1994.

      Children of teenage mothers were significantly more likely to have lower IQ scores and more academic problems, the report indicates. But when social and economic factors were accounted for, teenage motherhood appeared to be protective in certain ways.

      For instance, children of mothers aged 11 to 17 had a significantly lower risk of academic problems and children of 18- and 19-year-old mothers also had a lower risk of learning disabilities. On the other hand, children whose mothers were age 36 or older were more likely to be physically impaired or have academic problems, when social and environmental factors were considered.

      According to the report, a mother's education had the greatest impact on a child's educational achievement. A mother's marital status, income and race also influenced the child's academic abilities.

      ``There is some evidence that a large number of children of teenage mothers show disabilities or academic problems not because of the effect of having a teenage mother per se but because of the confounding influences of other factors,'' Gueorguieva and colleagues write."

      Why do I call this the second study, supporting the first (which I can't find online)? Because:

      "The findings support previous research suggesting that some of the negative consequences of teen motherhood may be mediated by social and economic factors."

      The study here doesn't specifically address pre-natal care, whereas the original did. The authors of the original study had some trouble trying to account for a lack of control over prenatal care in the '80's study they disputed when it's been well known since the early 70's that prenatal care is one of THE most important factors in determining the health of a baby. You just don't 'forget' to account for prenatal care.

      Don't believe me? Type in "prenatal care" and "teen pregnancy" into Yahoo or Google and watch the web sites and papers pop up, all telling you just how vital prenatal care is and how critical it is to the health of your baby. A scientist doing research on the subject is about as likely to 'overlook' prenatal care as a mechanic looking to solve car trouble is going to miss the fact that the car has four flats.

      I wish I could find a link to the original study I was speaking of, but I can't, at least not in the 15 or so minutes I spent searching. I did find this, however, and this study was done just months after the one I was speaking of (which is why they refer to the study in their summary).

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Gross negligence is hardly an excuse.

    8. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Checking out this google search is very interesting... it provides this link page with the following abstract

      Teenage pregnancies have become a public health issue because of their observed negative effects on perinatal outcomes and long-term morbidity. The association of young maternal age and long-term morbidity is usually confounded, however, by the high prevalence of poverty, low level of education, and single marital status among teenage mothers. The authors assess the independent effect of teenage pregnancy on educational disabilities and educational problems in a total population of children who entered kindergarten in Florida in 1992-1994 and investigate how controlling for potentially confounding factors affects the relation between teenage pregnancies and poor outcome. When no other factors are taken into account, children of teenage mothers have significantly higher odds of placement in certain special education classes and significantly higher occurrence of milder education problems, but when maternal education, marital status, poverty level, and race are controlled, the detrimental effects disappear and even some protective effects are observed. Hence, the increased risk for educational problems and disabilities among children of teenage mothers is attributed not to the effect of young age but to the confounding influences of associated sociodemographic factors. In contrast to teen age, older maternal age has an adverse effect on a child's educational outcome regardless of whether other factors are controlled for or not.

      (emphisis added by me)
    9. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Reziac · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Good points about data being ignored if it doesn't fit the agenda. I'd guess that they also failed to control for substance abuse that can impact the fetus -- which is likely far higher among pregnant teens than among pregnant adults (if only because rebellious teens do such things, often without a thought for tomorrow).

      Back to the nominal topic -- recently I received a survey from a normally-reputable consumer survey company (I've been doing their surveys for 27+ years, so I'm very familiar with them) which essentially cataloged everything on my main computer. We were assured that the data collected would not deliberately contain any personally identifiable information. Well, the output is an XML file, so I gave it a look -- and yeah, it doesn't exactly say who you are, but crosschecking against Google would very likely produce positive IDs for a lot of respondents (and most definitely would for myself).

      I very much doubt that the survey company is aware of this, but it's obvious to me that the survey company did not design this survey -- it appears to be of **AA origin, given the types of filenames it recorded in the output file.

      Surveys can be screwed up in other ways, too, that can severely impact the data. Frex, a while back I took one regarding what browsers you prefer -- and when I got to the end, discovered that the SUBMIT function would only work in IE6. Erm, doesn't that kinda defeat the purpose??

      --
      ~REZ~ #43301. Who'd fake being me anyway?
    10. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Eivind · · Score: 1
      The example is good.

      It also illustrates that read the rigth way, the first study actually does say something useful, it only doesn't say what you'd think at first look.

      What it actually does say is that teens are *physically* able to have healthy children, but that they are typically *emotionally* not grown up enough to care properly about pre-natal care and suchlike.

      I actually think this is a pretty good reason to wait until 20ies with children. Not that I see the connection with sex. With todays contraceptives the risk of pregnancy is (in my opinion) acceptably low. And even though teenagers may not be able to take responsibility (before and after birth) for the well-being of a child, they are certainly capable of enjoying sex.

    11. Re:"Stop" trusting? by AK+Marc · · Score: 1

      What it actually does say is that teens are *physically* able to have healthy children, but that they are typically *emotionally* not grown up enough to care properly about pre-natal care and suchlike.

      I read it a completely different way. They are physically and emotionally ready, but they are shamed by society into denial. Since "teenage pregnancy" is so bad, they try to hide that fact. Asking the father or their parents for a little help getting to (or paying for) pre-natal care isn't an option because of fear of reprisal.

      If *society* was more mature, then there would be fewer problems with teen pregnancy.

    12. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      This appears to be the PubMed reference.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    13. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Auckerman · · Score: 1

      I just skimmed over Gueorguieva's references (read abstracts of recent citations) and didn't find anything that suggest that after accounting for factors outside of age (income, education, pre-natal), there may be a benifit to having children young. I think the closest to what you are talking about is this.

      --

      Burn Hollywood Burn
    14. Re:"Stop" trusting? by Eivind · · Score: 1
      That's probably *also* true, but it doesn't stop my point from also carrying weigth.

      It's probably true that teenage parents would do *better* than they do today if society surrounding them acted differently than todays society does.

      But it's probably still not a stretch to say that the typical teenager has less ability/will to think things trough to their logical conclusion and to act responsibly even when that means an inconvenience at the moment than does the typical 25 year old.

      I think it's quite probable, for example, that more teenage mothers would continue to smoke trough the pregnancy, even though information about the greatly increased risks is widely available, *EVEN* if society around the teenagers did not act with horror at their pregnancy like is today all too common.

      Biologically, it's quite likely a 16 year old is more fit to get healthy children than a 25 year old, and that is even more true if you compare to say a 30 year old. Still, I really do think it's reasonable to assume that increased maturity is more than enough to compensate for this in other ways.

  10. To be fair... by Aheinz1 · · Score: 5, Funny

    The MPAA did say "According to British intelligence..." before citing that statistic.

    1. Re:To be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Heh, did the CIA/NSA/FBI/anyone else in the USA blame the British intelligence services? They were blaming *your* intelligence servies! Share and share alike. :)
      You should feel safe in the knowledge that these fine, upstanding, responsible men and women are protecting our respective nations.

    2. Re:To be fair... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well in that case, at least something truthful has come from the film industry: Johnny English!

      I'm just waiting for the next one, Johnny English Vs The Evil Statistico!

  11. But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

    Catwoman was a flop! It must be those darn internet pirates!

    1. Re:But, but... by CountBrass · · Score: 4, Interesting

      Well to be fair, I bought a pirate copy of Catwoman in Hong Kong: my wife and watched and stopped half way through. What a pile of shit!

      We would have gone and wasted our cash seeing it in the cinema (and walking out half way through) so in a sense piracy did cost the picture makers. But it saved us from wasting our time on some shit.

      "I, Robot" now is the exact opposite. Having heard rumours etc about it we weren't going to see it. Having watched it and thoroughly enjoyed it on the pirate copy, again bought openly in a Hong Kong street market, we're planning to see it in the cinema. In that case piracy has had actually made the film maker's money!

      --
      Bad analogies are like waxing a monkey with a rainbow.
    2. Re:But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      " Catwoman was a flop! It must be those darn internet pirates!"

      Hey, we followed all the formulas. What other explanation can there be?

      -MPAA

    3. Re:But, but... by aussersterne · · Score: 4, Insightful

      The point being what so many Slashdot posters have said before:

      People hate buying shit.

      People love buying things they enjoy, because they want to see more of them made.

      Or, to put it another way, consumers aren't stupid, they understand the power of their own dollars. People are just as smart as (if not smarter than) the RIAA/MPAA bosses: they won't waste their cash until they know their cash won't be wasted.

      Solution to the problem: create a product that people WANT TO SUPPORT and that people WANT MORE OF and it will sell well FOR THOSE REASONS.

      Anything else is just attempted blackmail and theft from consumers' pockets.

      --
      STOP . AMERICA . NOW
    4. Re:But, but... by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      Stealing cars off the lot is also okay as long as you either take it back or buy it, right?

      Oh boy... here we go... "copyright infringement isn't steeaaaling".

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    5. Re:But, but... by initsix · · Score: 1

      Stealing cars off the lot is also okay as long as you either take it back or buy it, right?
      A more accurate analogy would be that you didn't buy said car because someone was able to give you an exact copy.

    6. Re:But, but... by mdielmann · · Score: 1

      And there's the crux of the argument. If something is so good, people will pay to have a high-grade copy for their personal collection and further enjoyment. The key word in the above statement, which the media creators well know, is good. This is clearly what scares them. If they could have free advertising (a major expense nowadays) for their product, and a fair expectation of consumer buy-in, why would they resist it. The only reasonable answer I've been able to find is that they want to sell us crap. Crap is always easier to make, no matter how hard we think they must try to ruin a good concept. But if everyone can know it's crap, they lose even on the smaller amount they spend to produce that crap. Hence, every effort is made to hide the fact that the product is crap, such as the advertising for Toys and Gigli. If we can view the product before purchasing it (and this is especially true for movies, where the initial sale is behind closed doors) we may not pay for the subpar material that is produced, raising the bar, and the effort, for the media creators.

      And who really likes it when they are told that their job just got harder, with probably the same payout?

      --
      Sure I'm paranoid, but am I paranoid enough?
    7. Re:But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, in the case of purchasing a car, you get the opportunity to test it and determine if you like it before you purchase it.

      Which is exactly what this fellow has accomplished via the Hong Kong markets.

    8. Re:But, but... by Facekhan · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Perhaps movie studios should in addition to the previews which especially with the bad movies, tend to show the 5 minutes of good stuff only. Why not let people download say the first 15 minutes of a movie for free and then people can decide whether they want to pay to see the rest of it.

    9. Re:But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... Which is why I'm starting a porn store.

    10. Re:But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that's a flawed analogy: When you "steal" a copy of a movie or whatever, the person you got it from still has theirs. Not so with cars.

      People seem to forget that fundamental difference between physical objects and information.

    11. Re:But, but... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      Oh boy... here we go... "copyright infringement isn't steeaaaling".

      If you're smart enough to realize this, then why did you waste everyone's time trolling?

    12. Re:But, but... by the_mad_poster · · Score: 1

      If you don't know what you're buying... don't buy it.

      Tough concept for stupid slashbots and children to digest, I know.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    13. Re:But, but... by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      that's a flawed analogy: When you "steal" a copy of a movie or whatever, the person you got it from still has theirs. Not so with cars.

      People seem to forget that fundamental difference between physical objects and information.

      They don't forget it. They just ignore it in the interest of promoting their particular brand of rhetoric. Their argument basically boils down to the fact that getting something you are supposed to pay for without paying for it is illegal, and therefore it must be wrong. Never mind that there are plenty of laws harmful both to individuals and society as a whole on the books, and that assorted laws have been struck down on that basis, on the basis of unconstitutionality, and for several other reasons in the past.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
    14. Re:But, but... by the_mad_poster · · Score: 2, Insightful

      You lose!

      You lose, because you're not smart enough to realize that things that don't have a physical presence (well, not a physical presence in the sense most people are used to), can have value.

      What you fail to understand is the basic economic principle that ideas have value. Since a song is just someone's idea put into practice, the song has value. If you increase the number of copies of that song in circulation, but you don't increase the amount of money that is being paid to the artist*, then you are lowering the overall value of the idea. Simple math, basic principle. You can argue that ideas should be free because they can't be easily contained physically, but you'd have to be stupid to do that, as you'd have no basis for charging people for everything from music to movies to software and beyond.

      Since you are destroying that value while gaining something of theirs, you are, in fact, depriving the artists* of something, which is theft. You lose.

      * Don't give me shit about the artists not getting the money. That's not anyone's fault but the person who inked their name on the contract.

      --
      Alito: A vote for Alito is a punch in the eye to put that bitch back in her place!
    15. Re:But, but... by podwich · · Score: 0

      Bingo!! I recently went and saw a concert by a small band I like. I ended up buying CDs and DVDs and stuff I wouldn't normally buy at a concert but I wanted to support the band (even though I could have easily copied the CDs from someone else). It's quite interesting how the idea of spending money to support something you like works.

    16. Re:But, but... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      perhaps because then they'd focus their budget on the first 15 minutes?

    17. Re:But, but... by mOdQuArK! · · Score: 1
      You lose, because you're not smart enough to realize that things that don't have a physical presence (well, not a physical presence in the sense most people are used to), can have value.

      I don't "lose" diddly-squat. Apparently your mind is not flexible enough to understand anything outside of your tiny little world view. These particular "things" only have a value because unnatural laws have been passed to enforce restrictions on their use. These unnatural laws were passed as part of a social experiment by the Founders to improve the availability of public domain creative works, a social experiment which is quite obviously showing signs of failure. In the absence of those unnatural laws, the "value" of those things would be priced properly according to normal supply & demand dynamics.

      What you fail to understand is the basic economic principle that ideas have value. Since a song is just someone's idea put into practice, the song has value.

      "Songs having value" isn't even remotely near an "economic principle". The only reason they have value is because some laws give them artificially-inflated value. In the absence of such laws, songs have no inherent value, other than what someone would pay to hear a performance.

      Since you are destroying that value while gaining something of theirs, you are, in fact, depriving the artists* of something, which is theft.

      Complete fantasy. By copying something, I do not deprive the artist of anything. The so-called value which is being destroyed is just imaginary - the equivalent of me getting a law passed saying that everyone has to pay me money whenever they see the color mauve. With your logic, I would be complaining that people who aren't paying me are "destroying the value of the color mauve", and are thus stealing from me, even though I am not doing any work to deserve getting paid for.

      People should get compensation for providing a real good or service. Anything else is greed.

  12. Who else to trust? by glpierce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    If you're not going to trust 'sponsored' research, you've got no one to trust. All research is funded by someone, and that someone always has something to gain or lose (why else pay for it?). Who would pay for studies of internet movie downloading, aside from movie studios and internet corporations? What's important is to look at the studies from the opposing sides so that you can draw a line down the middle or test each against each other.

    --
    G
    1. Re:Who else to trust? by BlueCup · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I've gotta disagree with you... there are I believe some organizations that aren't swayed by their fundings... I worked at the Gallup Organization for several years, and we spent hundreds of thousands of dollars every year paying people to make sure our questions were free from bias... yes, there is always the risk of the people delivering the survey having a bias, but, they're typically weeded out before they can make a difference, and they cancel each other out (people delivering opposite biases) Surveys paid for by "Bank of America" to find out who the best bank is are much more likely to be biased than surveys payed for by CNN to find out which bank is the best... sometimes all a particular party has to gain from is presenting the most accurate statistics, and sometimes the most to gain comes from lying... I see nothing wrong with paying close attention to who's paying for the survey, and deciding based on those factors, what they have to gain or lose...

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    2. Re:Who else to trust? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      "All research is funded by someone, and that someone always has something to gain or lose (why else pay for it?)"

      Apparently they don't have Universities where you live, or use the term 'research' in its old form to mean impartial investigation.

    3. Re:Who else to trust? by glpierce · · Score: 1

      "Apparently they don't have Universities where you live"

      I happen to be a university researcher myself. I was referring to the types of surveys and studies that call a product 'good' or better than another.

      --
      G
    4. Re:Who else to trust? by chimpo13 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I've taken part in plenty of consumer surveys. It's a quick way to earn some cash. If I answer truthfully I'm usually not chosen. I think lying goes into both sides. You say Gallup weeds out questions to make them unbiased, and the 20+ surveys I've taken work that way, but the people taking the surveys are chosen according to sponsors.

      One examples: "We'll offer you $60 to show up and take the 45 minute survey. What radion stations do you listen to?" If I answer KDVS, the local college station they say, "Sorry, that doesn't qualify. Do you ever listen to one of the "major" area stations?" and they tell you an acceptable answer. That one gets the money, and people learn to answer questions in a way that gets you money.

      You don't drink Pabst, you drink Budweiser. You don't ride a 1968 Monkey Wards (Benelli) motorcycle, you drive a 1998 Honda Accord. You don't subscribe to Giant Robot, it's Sports Illustrated. I know lots of people that answer these surveys the same way.

    5. Re:Who else to trust? by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      This is true, for groups like "Tammage Market Research" but not for all polling organizations. In the time I worked for Gallup, none of our polls that could be shown to anyone paid the person taking it, and typically, had only a couple of qualifier questions (are you 18 years old?) for example. This, I believe, cut down on the bias enough to be something people could trust.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    6. Re:Who else to trust? by glpierce · · Score: 1

      Telephone surveys are implicitly biased because most people won't participate. The subgroup being surveyed is "people willing to take part in telephone surveys at the time we called them," which is quite different from the general population. The same holds for street surveys, internet surveys, etc..

      --
      G
    7. Re:Who else to trust? by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      Is there a difference between "market research" and "polling"? The main outfit that I've answered questions for the last 10 years is "market research".

      On the phone, they only ask a few questions, but there's typically a way they WANT you to answer them. New Coke, Clear Pepsi and caffeinated water are probably the result of "market research" groups in the 20-40 age range picking random answers that are acceptable. "They screw us, we screw them", is hopefully how that works.

    8. Re:Who else to trust? by BlueCup · · Score: 1

      On the phone, they only ask a few questions, but there's typically a way they WANT you to answer them.

      Right, I'm not refuting the fact that there are companies that are paid to get the answers they want. However, I wouldn't say that they're all bad. Companies like "The Associated Press" and the "Gallup Organization" the ones with long standing reputations at being accurate, (for the most part) need to get the correct answers, rather than "paid for" answers, or they become worthless. These are companies that exist and are paid for because they can find a true representation of the public (albeit a more and more biased one now due to the more proficient use of cell phones and negativity towards telemarketers.) All I'm saying is that not every polling organization is out to create marketable lies... some survive on marketing the truth, and as soon as they fail to do that, their profits crumble.

      --
      WANNAWIKI Wannawiki WannaWiki WANNAWIKI!
    9. Re:Who else to trust? by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 0

      I got called up for a political survey recently. They asked me 'If the election were held today, who would you vote for?"

      I answered "Well, I'm not really sure. If it were held today, it'd have to be Ralph Nader, but I might change my mind before the actual election day."

      She said "So you're going to vote for Nader and help them re-elect Bush?"

      I said "Quite possibly, if Kerry turns out to be the fascist I think he is. I already know Bush is a fascist. To be honest, I'd prefer to vote with a bullet at this point."

      "Vote with a bullet? What does that mean?"

      "Revolution, because the system is broke."

      "So you're going to stick with Nader?"

      "Yep."

      "That's going to influence my survey."

      "Yep."

      "Sure you don't want to change your mind?"

      "I'm sure."

      'nuff said?

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    10. Re:Who else to trust? by sjames · · Score: 1

      However, this isn't research at all. For it to be research, they would need to publish their raw data, methodology (includeing selection method), and analysis.

      If I feel a need for that sort of research, I'll just pull it out of MYASS (not goatse.cx, I promise)

    11. Re:Who else to trust? by chimpo13 · · Score: 1

      I answer those questions with Bush. Personally, I don't like his decisions, but I like how polarizing he is. I think the USA deserves 4 more years of him, plus the added horrors of getting Jeb Bush into office. It's my "shit or get off the pot" view. If he can't draw the public into doing anything for themselves, then we really do deserve our elected officials.

      I enjoyed your Rusty story, by the way. Do google ads pay? Are they worth having your personal site look like it's hosted by geocities?

    12. Re:Who else to trust? by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1

      This reminds me of the McDonald's advertising about their french fries, which were "preferred 2 to 1" over other places' fries. When you read the fine print, it revealed that it did not mean "preferred" as in by taste testing, but rather by sales volume. More fries sold my McDonald's must mean they're preferred, huh? I'm sure it had nothing to with McD being on every corner and in every mall food court, did it?

      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
  13. Umm.. by __Maad__ · · Score: 0, Redundant

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"

    Who says we ever started ?

    --
    -- Maciek
    1. Re:Umm.. by wo1verin3 · · Score: 1

      agreed... I always took these things with a grain of salt...

  14. Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by jsprat · · Score: 4, Interesting
    I recently saw an old copy of Popular Mechanics from around 1950 (or so). The back page was an ad that said "4 out of 5 doctors who smoke smoke Winston".

    Wow, after research like that, I'd better take up smoking Winstons!

    1. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by FlutterVertigo(gmail · · Score: 1

      How about when they said, "...refreshing tast..." ?

      And let's not forget when Fred & Barney (Flintstones) used to advertise cigarettes prime time...

    2. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What's wrong with that statement? It may have been true that 4 out of 5 doctors that smoked smoked Winston. That doesn't mean 4 out of 5 doctors total smoke them, or that 4 out of 5 doctors recommend you smoke them.

    3. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by jsprat · · Score: 4, Insightful
      That doesn't mean 4 out of 5 doctors total smoke them, or that 4 out of 5 doctors recommend you smoke them.

      But that is the ad's intent. The point is not about the truth of the research, it's about the presentation. What do "doctors" who smoke have to do with the best/healthiest/coolest brand of cigarettes? Nothing really, but the connection Winston was trying to make is so obvious I can't believe you missed it - if doctors smoke them, they must be the right brand to smoke.


      Nothing is wrong with the statement in itself. The research may have been repeatable and the methodology may be sound. Hell, they may have surveyed every doctor on the planet! None of that matters, because the way the statistic is used is the problem. It is intentionally misleading to a casual reader in order to promote Winston's best interests.

    4. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by ricochet81 · · Score: 1

      could you scan it in for us all to see?

      --
      Error: Id10t detected
    5. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by jsprat · · Score: 1
      You can see a copy here. The ad on the left is the one I saw.

      Looks like I misremembered. It was Camels (not Winston) and it was "More Doctors" (not "3 out of 4")

    6. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by TimTheFoolMan · · Score: 2, Funny

      And 4 out of 5 doctors with boat payments recommend unnecessary surgery!

      Tim

    7. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 1

      Camels and Winston are made by the same people. ;)

      What about Choosy moms choose GIF?

      Or something like that.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    8. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by digital+bath · · Score: 1

      4 out of 5 moms choose JPEG, actually.

      --
      find / -name "*.sig" | xargs rm
    9. Re:Tobacco sponsored research did it for me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's always 4 out of 5 or 9 out of 10. Why? Because when you ask your Doctor and he tells you something different he can be the one oddball.

  15. Perhaps they averaged? by ayeco · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Maybe they took the number of movies downloaded and divided by the number of internet users? Wait, no, the stat would then be 'about every Internet user has downloaded 10 movies.'

    (didn't rtfa)

  16. When did I stop? by gnat_x · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"

    About the time I understood what the term 'corporate interests' meant.

    the scientific method does not apply to business ventures.

  17. Movie Quality by Bruha · · Score: 3, Insightful

    For the average person the time to download a movie in the US on our abysmal brodband lines you could probably make up the cost of the movie by just being at work.

    Along with half movies, bogus titles, viruses, poor quality, people that let you download and kill it after a few minutes it's just not worth it.

    Mp3's were popular to download even on dialup because it took minutes to download vs hours or even days to obtain a movie.

    As SBC and Verizon deploy FTTH/P then you'll see the rehtoric cranked up as it would then take a 15Mbit line a few minutes to get a whole movie.

    Even so, the MPAA needs to get a clue. I can count more than 20 movies this year I have gone to see that I considered afterwards good enough for video. With the exception of the Last Samurai, iRobot, and a few others I feel ripped off. They need to quit previewing all the good parts in the movies and begin to come up with quality work.

    1. Re:Movie Quality by Pharmboy · · Score: 1

      Along with half movies, bogus titles, viruses, poor quality, people that let you download and kill it after a few minutes it's just not worth it.

      Ever hear of using bittorrent for P2P? If you're gonna pira^H^H^Hreview before you buy, at least do it right.

      --
      Tequila: It's not just for breakfast anymore!
    2. Re:Movie Quality by Fred+IV · · Score: 1

      For the average person the time to download a movie in the US on our abysmal brodband lines you could probably make up the cost of the movie by just being at work.

      Along with half movies, bogus titles, viruses, poor quality, people that let you download and kill it after a few minutes it's just not worth it.

      Sure it is. Add movie(s) to queue, go to work, come home, watch movie(s). I have no idea why time is a concern in an age where broadband is so cheap. Plan in advance a little, go do something worthwhile while you PC brings down your content.

      Use handy reference sites like VCD Quality to avoid bogus titles and poor quality. Get a virus scanner and use a little common sense about what you download. Get out of whatever p2p ghetto you're stuck in where people are consistently killing your downloads. Use PAR files to fix broken files. Downloading movies isn't as polished as using Napster back in the day or iTunes now, but it isn't rocket science either.

    3. Re:Movie Quality by log0n · · Score: 1

      Most modern moviegoers are a simple lot that don't have the capability to enjoy a good movie. Hollywood releases a lot of crap because that's what most people like and in turn will bring back the most money.

      People who complain about a lack of quality work are the root of the problem. You complain, yet you still go, or you pirate it under the guise that 'at least the studio isn't getting my buck on their crap'. Make a stand, stop watching the movies you can predict will suck. I've seen exactly 1 'blockbuster' summer flick this year - The Village (great movie). I haven't watched (or subscribed to) cable TV for the last 7-8 months and my life hasn't been better. I've read more in the last 6 months than probably through all of high school and college.

      People, start using your brains again. It's hard to go against what's cool and what's expected, but it makes you a better person for trying it.

    4. Re:Movie Quality by log0n · · Score: 1

      oh, forgot..

      $.02, FWIW, YMMV, etc etc

    5. Re:Movie Quality by anakuran · · Score: 1

      Most modern moviegoers are a simple lot that don't have the capability to enjoy a good movie. Hollywood releases a lot of crap because that's what most people like and in turn will bring back the most money.

      And how else should a business be run? I agree, it would be nice if Hollywood only released "good" movies, but then they wouldn't be making any money would they? The fact of the matter is, people enjoy overblown special effects, guns, and explosions. It's exciting. And while that doesn't always mean an intellectually thrilling film, it does mean more money for those involved in making the movie.

    6. Re:Movie Quality by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      I haven't watched (or subscribed to) cable TV for the last 7-8 months and my life hasn't been better.

      Wait. Why should I stop watching TV if my life isn't going to get any better for doing it?

      Oh, wait. You mean "my life has never been better [than the last 7-8 months]", in other words, your life now is better than at any other point in your history. I get it.

      Language matters. Words mean something. Diction counts.
    7. Re:Movie Quality by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Hell yeah! For my whole marriage I've been telling my wife the TV is a waste of time. Then one day, sitting there with hundreds of channels, she just got sick of it. The kids didn't know what to do without the TV on, they had forgotten how to play. And she couldn't find anything worthwhile to watch.

      So she unplugged the tv, took it outside and stuck it in the dumpster (not quite as dramatic as me throwing a TV in the dumpster from a third story balcony, but still nice to see). She hasn't watched TV in two years and she's happy about it. (I, on the other hand, haven't watched TV in something like 6+ years, so she's seeing a lot more of me now than ever before)

      The main problem with TV, I think, isn't necessarily the shitty content. It's the excessive compulsive viewing that causes trouble. When you watch TV, you sit in one place (generally), and stimulation is poured into you. You keep your eyes open and you listen, and you don't do anything else. So there's no effort involved while the stuff just gets poured into you. Since there's no effort involved, there's very little benefit derived. The real benefit comes when you think about it later, or you talk it over with people. But if you're watching it all the time, there isn't any time to go derive any real benefit from watching! So you keep getting this stuff poured into you. Eventually it displaces whatever individuality you had until your entire identity is defined by the TV shows you watch and no longer exists independent of the TV.

      Lucky you.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
    8. Re:Movie Quality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The transmission of dat^H^H^Haudio-visual material over the internet is patented, I hope you are paying the royalties.

  18. Errors by GISGEOLOGYGEEK · · Score: 4, Funny

    In a somewhat fitting coincidence ...

    When I followed one of the links that advertises the survey results, the page loaded with javascript errors ... but of course I saw in the status bar:

    "done ... but with errors in the page"

    I didn't realize that the IE javascript engine could also filter for misleading biased survey scams.

    --
    George Bush + Linux = "I will not let information get in the way of the fight against Windows"
  19. I would think... by GillBates0 · · Score: 3, Interesting
    The MPAA's summary of the survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.

    claims like this would work against them. They should be trying to convince the public that they're only against this "band" of pirates which is trying to harm the innocent population and ofcourse CHILDREN by their misdeeds.

    By claiming that 1 in 4 internet users have committed a "crime", they'll (hopefully) make the Avg Joe realize that the "filthy" pirates are actually the next door Avg Smith or even the beautiful chick across the street being chased down and convicted in court.

    --
    An Indian-American Hindu committed to non-violent thought/speech/action alarmed by the global explosion of radical Islam
    1. Re:I would think... by 0racle · · Score: 1

      Your joking right?

      --
      "I use a Mac because I'm just better than you are."
    2. Re:I would think... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I do believe that they are going for the effect that 25% of people pirate. Since it is such a ramput problem, WE the (RIAA, MPAA, ECT) must make governments protect us from such a evil type of people before the whole country geos down the shitter and look a quater of your pop is already such evil people better hurry and just pass the laws we give you; no need to read/research them.

    3. Re:I would think... by maximilln · · Score: 1

      By claiming that 1 in 4 internet users have committed a "crime", they'll (hopefully) make the Avg Joe realize that the "filthy" pirates are actually the next door Avg Smith or even the beautiful chick across the street being chased down and convicted in court.

      We wish... now back to rounding up the 40% of the population which admits to smoking grass on a regular basis.

      --
      +++ATHZ 99:5:80
  20. About 41% of all statistics are made up. by ayeco · · Score: 4, Funny

    About 41% of all statistics are made up.

    1. Re:About 41% of all statistics are made up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ...but this statistic is among the remaining 59%. Honest!

    2. Re:About 41% of all statistics are made up. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But only 15% of these statistics are checked.

  21. 1 in 4 by LS · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Perhaps they are referring to video files in general. I could believe the statistic in that case. Still misrepresentation though...

    --
    There is a fine line between being a cultivated citizen and being someone else's crop. - A. J. Patrick Liszkie
    1. Re:1 in 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Don't make excuses for them - they wrote something that is literally wrong, deliberately misleading and is the result of maliciousness not stupidity.

      You should be outraged, not equivocal about it :)

      Where's your Slashdot spirit?!

    2. Re:1 in 4 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There obviously counting all those 15 sec porn videos.

  22. Vinge... by kzinti · · Score: 1

    Maybe we should just adopt Vernor Vinge's nickname "The Net of a Million Lies" and make it the official motto of the Internet.

  23. Because internet users NEVER lie. by almostmanda · · Score: 5, Interesting

    In order to stay "qualified" for these surveys and, in the end, get paid, many users will answer "yes" to every question that may lead to more questions. Internet surveys CAN be useful for market research purposes, but only when the respondents are confident that their answers won't effect their compensation rate.
    If a survey will pay you $10 if you're a beekeeper and answer beekeeping questions, many people will claim to be beekeepers. Who's stopping them?

  24. Ignorance? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Interesting

    It's up to individuals to know enough about statistics in order to spot con jobs, much a kin to people knowing something about cars before taking theirs to a mechanic.

    In both cases people are simply too lazy to care to learn.

  25. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 1

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  26. MPAA math by Saeger · · Score: 4, Funny
    'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.'

    Maybe the MPAA is trying RIAA-style FUD-math?

    They didn't really mean that 1 in 4 people had downloaded a 700MB divx/xvid movie, but that since more users have broadband now, these "super-users" can rightly be counted as 24X normal users. :)

    --

    --
    Power to the Peaceful
  27. skewed by randallschleufer · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Surveys can easily be skewed, you just have to know how to ask the questions. If I asked my mother if she has ever downloaded a movie off the internet, she would respond "Yes"... because she considers all those little movieclips, and streaming media to be "Movies". In that respect, it would be very easy to conceive that 1 in 4 people have downloaded a movie off the internet.

    1. Re:skewed by sjames · · Score: 1

      Question 5: Have you ever had a headache or downloaded a movie?

  28. Yes, and... by Maxite · · Score: 2, Funny

    3 out of 4 people make up 75% of the population.

    --
    Ah, you found me!
    1. Re:Yes, and... by MrDomino · · Score: 5, Funny

      Further, a rather disturbing study has revealed that nearly 50% of all high school students will graduate in the bottom half of their class.

    2. Re:Yes, and... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In one of W. Edwards Deming's books ("Out of the crisis"), he quoted a headline in a Madison (Wisc.) newspaper. It was about teachers' salaries, and it said HALF STILL BELOW THE MEDIAN.

  29. Wait a minute. by MrDomino · · Score: 5, Funny

    You mean to tell me that if a study on movie piracy is paid for by the people who lose money from movie piracy, it's not going to be unbiased?

    Yeah, right. Next, you'll be telling me that classes on copyright law sponsored by the RIAA are one-sided.

  30. News Flash - Research Supports Sponsor's Platform by amalcon · · Score: 1

    MPAA research has been shown to SUPPORT the MPAA platform that piracy is hurting them!

    Of course, this sponsored research definitely not done with any results in mind. It would also have definitely been released even if doing so was seen as counterproductive to the sponsor.

    All kidding aside, we honestly can't trust surveys done by anything less than a multinational non-profit group anymore.

    --
    -Amalcon
  31. All sponsored research is not bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Sponsored research is not automatically bad.... there are a number of areas where interest is not widespread beyond the industry players in that industry, so they are the only ones who will foot the bill.

    Plus, there can be biased research that is not funded by insiders.... that simply is not a way to distinguish the good from the bad.

    What is really proper, is to demand that all surveys 1) release the entire raw data set, 2) release the entire question sample, and 3) all other information so it can be replicated and peer reviewed.

    This is standard fare in other industries, and most legitimate survey takers already do it.

    The better test to detect bogus research, is not to ask who paid for it, but to ask if they are complying with the above criteria.

    1. Re:All sponsored research is not bad by vsprintf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Sponsored research is not automatically bad.... there are a number of areas where interest is not widespread beyond the industry players in that industry, so they are the only ones who will foot the bill.

      Sure, sort of like the IT industry, where the only *studies* done are done at the behest of the ITAA. Surprisingly, every study *released* says exactly what the industry wants Congress to hear. These are the same studies that claimed the US faced a huge shortage of IT workers while they were being laid off enmasse.

      What is really proper, is to demand that all surveys 1) release the entire raw data set, 2) release the entire question sample, and 3) all other information so it can be replicated and peer reviewed.

      Studies done for the ITAA generally only have corporate executives as respondents, and the CxOs know which side of their bread is buttered. Ask them the same questions again, and you'll get the same canned answers. You really need to consider the people being surveyed.

      The better test to detect bogus research, is not to ask who paid for it, but to ask if they are complying with the above criteria.

      Any *published* study done by/for industry is going to say exactly what they want, otherwise it will never see the light of day. A better test to detect bogus research would be to ask industry if they have any studies that have not been published - but then you'd have to trust their honesty.

    2. Re:All sponsored research is not bad by sacrilicious · · Score: 1
      Sponsored research is not automatically bad.... there are a number of areas where interest is not widespread beyond the industry players in that industry, so they are the only ones who will foot the bill.

      And their being the only ones who will foot the bill makes the results trustable how?

      --
      - First they ignore you, then they laugh at you, then ???, then profit.
    3. Re:All sponsored research is not bad by sparrow_hawk · · Score: 1

      If the industry wants the data for itself, I suspect the results will be relatively accurate. If the industry wants the data so it can persuade others, the results will be highly questionable.

      In theory, at least, you don't want your studies lying to you -- lying to the public, or Congress, or some other impressionable body is another matter.

    4. Re:All sponsored research is not bad by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      you don't want your studies lying to you -- lying to the public, or Congress, or some other impressionable body is another matter.

      Precisely. I'm hard-pressed to think of a situation where both of the following are true:

      • A corporation wants data that is pertinent to the business of the corporation, and
      • The corporation stands to gain nothing by either spinning the data a particular way, falsifying the data outright, or selectively suppressing certain results.
  32. Offtopic by strike2867 · · Score: 0, Offtopic

    But Since when did Sourcforge.net start supporting things like this. I understand that this is a private webpage on their network, but it's still annoying.

    --

    Vote for new mod!!! Score:-2,Imbecile
    1. Re:Offtopic by sqrt(2) · · Score: 1

      It's a joke about how out of touch and crazy the RIAA has become.

      --
      If you build it, nerds will come. Soylentnews.org
  33. I never trusted sponsored research... by canwaf · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I'm fairly young, and learned in school sponsored research by the Tabaco Companies saying smoking is good for you way back when.

    And I always love that 95.43% of statistics are made up on the spot, 64.29% of statistics are distorted to bring about a baised conclusion, and 139.75% of both these types of statistics just don't add up.

    1. Re:I never trusted sponsored research... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      And I'm fairly old; the behavior of the tobacco companies' pet scientists is what caused my skepticism.

  34. Just remember... by NetFiber · · Score: 1, Funny

    that 82% of all statistics are lies.

  35. MPAA lawsuits are vulnerable to protests by Cryofan · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I assume that everyone knows that the MPAA and movie studios are planning on starting to sue movie uploaders/downloaders starting in about 1 month (they were on 60 minutes a few days ago with a lot of propaganda).

    All we have to do to stop these lawsuits by the RIAA is organize to protest the lawsuits. Unlike the music business, much of the movie business is vulnerable to protests and grassroots activism. THis is because a lot of the money from movies is derived from box office receipts at the multiplex cinemas, which pack in thousands of people each day. Thus, their main revenue source is quite concentrated. A few well-placed protest signs will lose them money every day. Typically, these multiplexes are on a freeway offramp. Two or three good signs placed strategically with a good message will cost them money.

    See the freeway blogger at http://www.freewayblogger.com for more ideas on this technique....

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:MPAA lawsuits are vulnerable to protests by Richard_at_work · · Score: 2

      Why should the MPAA refrain from suing Movie uploaders? I really dont see the problem with them protecting their investment and property.

      Oh, Ok I forget, this is slashdot. Its OK to infringe on the RIAAs or the MPAAs copyright, but theres hell to pay for people infringing the copyright of software under the GPL.

  36. Not everyone knows this by FunWithHeadlines · · Score: 3, Insightful
    People in general love to think in general while avoiding the specifics. For example, everyone will agree that "nobody's perfect," but if you point out a specific mistake they made they get all defensive on you. Same thing with these misleading research studies. Everyone has at least a dim understanding that statistics can lie, but every time a shiny new study comes out they think, "Ooooh, shiny!"

    I blame the media more than the education system. Yes, it would be nice if we could get people to get out of the school system with the ability to cut through rhetoric better than they do, but let's fully blame the media here. Just as on /. we have all come to realize how often studies are distorted by sponsorship money, journalists must know this too. They have been exposed to too many examples of this not to know to check for who sponsored the study, etc. So why don't the news articles point out the flaws in the studies? If they did that, people reading them would be fortified in their knowledge.

    Of course, I can think of several reasons why journalists don't do this most of the time: Lack of time before deadline to do the research / laziness / the need to keep the sponsors of those studies happy so that they will cooperate with the journalists next time, and so on. Still, it is disheartening.

  37. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by SpaceLifeForm · · Score: 3, Informative
    Apparently true for some courts.

    From here:

    Upholding a lower court decision issued in April of 2003, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled P2P technology is legal even if the software itself is used for illegal purposes.

    "The technology has numerous other uses, significantly reducing the distribution costs of public domain and permissively shared art and speech, as well as reducing the centralized control of that distribution," Judge Sidney R. Thomas wrote in a unanimous opinion.

    The three-judge panel acknowledged that copyright violations do occur on the decentralized P2P networks, but the companies owning and distributing the enabling software cannot be held liable for the infringements.

    --
    You are being MICROattacked, from various angles, in a SOFT manner.
  38. i like the stat by protocol420 · · Score: 5, Interesting

    hey, if 1 in 4 people have illegally downloaded music, thats a nice voting demographic for some politician. i should run on a pro-p2p pro-tech platform. who's with me!

    --
    www.gaian-mind.org - eco-punk/crust coop and collective | www.anarchistfederation.org - so cal anarchist federation
    1. Re:i like the stat by spencer1 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      All the downloaders are too young to vote.

    2. Re:i like the stat by Xofer+D · · Score: 2, Interesting
      On the one hand, you're right of course. This should be a huge motivation for political change! When the people don't approve of a law, shouldn't that law be considered for the scrap heap?

      On the other hand, you're assuming that the USA is a democracy, which it isn't; decisions are not made to please the majority of the population. To see this, consider speed limits (which far more than 50% of the US population that I have observed do not follow). When the way in which your country is being governed does not represent the wishes of the goverened people (or as an approximation, the majority of said people), your country is not a democracy. I'm not sure, but it looks to me like in the USA each dollar gets a vote rather than each person.

      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
    3. Re:i like the stat by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      hey, if 1 in 4 people have illegally downloaded music, thats a nice voting demographic for some politician. i should run on a pro-p2p pro-tech platform. who's with me!

      Well, "protocol420", I assume you intend to legalise it. Which will no doubt get you some more votes (including mine).

    4. Re:i like the stat by Trinition · · Score: 1

      You've jumped the gun a bit. Just because 50% of the people you've observed hav violated the speed limit doesn't mean they think it's a bad law. Do you think robbers all think stealing shoudl be legal? Do you think murderes all believe it shoudl be legal to murder?

      I'll give you a sample. I've sped before. And I've been ticketed for it. Yet I don't think repealing speed limits or increasing them significantly would do any good. IN fact, it would scare me to see most of the morons out there driving at ever-increaing velocities.

      Not all who violate the law think it is a bad law.

    5. Re:i like the stat by Xofer+D · · Score: 1
      You're completely correct, I did make that assumption. That's a decent-sized hole in my argument! However, if you agree that the law represents a moral requirement (ie, it's a good law), then surely you must also feel that your actions are immoral. It seems to me that most people who think about that sort of thing don't want to be immoral.

      I think that it is a reasonable simplification to claim that most of the people who speed claim that speed limits are too low, at least as a form of rationalization of their otherwise immoral behaviour. Far more than 50% of the population near me seems to speed; it appears likely to me that at least 50%+1 of the population believes speed limits to be "bad law".

      --
      The Signal/Noise ratio can be improved in two ways. Remaining silent is the OTHER way.
  39. I'll believe a study... by Short+Circuit · · Score: 4, Insightful

    ...when it was funded and published by a company it harms.

    Of course, we'll later learn it was just to bolster a less obvious plan.

    1. Re:I'll believe a study... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      ...when it was funded and published by a company it harms. Of course, we'll later learn it was just to bolster a less obvious plan.

      Very true, and well-put. Your entry just made my collection of quotes. :) Thanks.

    2. Re:I'll believe a study... by dasmegabyte · · Score: 1

      Of course, when such a study surfaces -- and they often do, independent testing agencies are NOT all the unethical, money hungry fill-in-the-blanks sociologist paint them to be -- it won't be promoted. They'll sit on the study and never release it, as it their right.

      Anyhow, if your choice is biased statistics or biased anecdotes as offered by Slashdot ("I always buy the movies I download or movie t-shirts and therefore everybody does it"), pick the statistics. You can argue with dumb numbers. You can't argue with dumb people.

      --
      Hey freaks: now you're ju
  40. Tough one... :-p by Jugalator · · Score: 0, Redundant

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"

    When I heard about the sponsors of said research?

    --
    Beware: In C++, your friends can see your privates!
  41. Trusting Sponsored research? by grasshoppa · · Score: 0, Redundant

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    I never do. It's all crap. Seriously, from a bussiness perspective, would successful research companies be successful if they always reported the bitter truth to the companies that pay for the research?

    --
    Mod me down with all of your hatred and your journey towards the dark side will be complete!
  42. Excellent point by Lifewish · · Score: 1

    I think of science as a body of knowledge that is replicable and open and thus doesn't rely on trusting any one person or group to be telling the truth. FOSS works on the same principle - I know there's no trojans in it cos there are enough people looking over the source code that any malicious program would get noticed very quickly.

    Research which relies on accepting someone else's word isn't scientific, let alone trustworthy. I wish the reporters who gamely swallow these dodgy stats would get wise to this :(

    --
    For the love of God, please learn to spell "ridiculous"!!!
  43. slashcode-friendly link by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 2, Informative
  44. I look at file sharing like this: by lifebouy · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Way back in the good ol days, Congress decided Americans didn't need to drink alcohol anymore and forbade it. Actually changed the Constitution! Did that stop it from happening? No. Eventually, they amended the Constitution again to repeal their stupidity. The American people had spoken. They were going to have their booze no matter what the govornment decided was best for them.
    Now, we have a similar situation. The People either do not care about patent and/or copyright violations, or are actively against them. The only people who advocate our current patent and copyright catastrophies are those trying to make a quick buck. (I throw both patents and copyrights out there, because those running linux kernels right now who read slashdot know there are patent violations in the kernel, yet are using it anyway, and I'd say 99% of us will continue to do so until they pry the keyboards from our cold dead fingers, no matter who thinks they own it. And for copyrights, go ahead and delete all that porn on your harddrives, because odds are very good you do not own the rights to have it. No? Didn't think so. Same goes for most music, ebooks, whatever.)
    The point is, the People have spoken on this issue. They have said, "Copyrights and patents have the sole purpose of protecting the little guy from the big guy. Not the big guy from the next big guy and not the big guy from the little guy. It's purpose is not to help big companies enforce a monopoly on consumers."
    Any politician who advocates persecution of fileswapping or using patents by the people(that's the purpose of having a patent system at all) does not deserve his office. Don't vote for them. Because they are not listening to what the People are saying.

    --
    Drop me a line at:
    Key ID: 0x54D1D809
    1. Re:I look at file sharing like this: by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      "The people" don't have rights. Individuals have rights. You cannot do good things for "the people" while simultaneously fucking the individual up the ass.

      Yes, the current copyright scheme is evil. But advocating two brands of law - one for "the people", whoever the hell they are - and one for folks that you personally don't happen to like, is even more despicable.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:I look at file sharing like this: by lifebouy · · Score: 1

      Yes, I agree. By "The People," I mean the individual persons who make up this country. I'm not against any other "folks." I am against anything not "folks" ,such as corporations, and only where those corporations are attempting to restrict the freedom of "The People" for material/influential gain. Yes, some individuals fall into that category, such as those who build billion dollar software corporations on the backs of the other pioneering individuals who wrote and distributed their software freely because it was The Right Thing To Do. But I am saying I am against them selling their freedom and the freedom of others to make a buck, not against them personally.

      --
      Drop me a line at:
      Key ID: 0x54D1D809
  45. Statistics.. by mesmartyoudumb · · Score: 3, Funny

    97.35124% of all statistics are made up, including this one.

    On a serious note, 49% of Americans use dial-up. Do you think they'd even consider downloading a movie?

    I say we all "sponsor a dial-up user", for ever movie they don't download, we download 2!

    --
    "Comedy's a dead art form. Now tragedy, that's funny."
    1. Re:Statistics.. by PitaBred · · Score: 2, Insightful

      49% of Americans, or 49% of American Internet users? It's a big, big difference ;)
      Same kinda thing we're yelling at the MPAA/RIAA/whoever about.

    2. Re:Statistics.. by drinkypoo · · Score: 1

      Well the actual answer is that about 25% of americans use dialup, because about half of 'em use dialup (the aforementioned 49%) and about half of 'em are online, total. Assuming the statistic were correct that would mean that about half of the broadband users out there had downloaded a movie at some point, because very few dialup users would manage to do so, given the size of the average movie - from 700MB up to 4.7GB or so.

      --
      "You're right," Fisheye says. "I should have set it on 'whip' or 'chop.'"
  46. I admit it. by 3dr · · Score: 3, Funny


    I was the one. I downloaded a movie from the internet.

    It was a harried time, and temptation was great. In a weak moment, I succumbed.

    I downloaded Michael Moore's "Farenheit 9/11".

    1. Re:I admit it. by vsprintf · · Score: 1, Funny

      Don't worry, poor taste is not a punishable offense. :)

    2. Re:I admit it. by antiMStroll · · Score: 1

      Ironic, I just finished watching an excerpt from a Michael Moore interview where he supports your right and encourages you to download and watch his movies for free, provided you don't try to re-sell or otherwise profit from his works (and by 'profit' he doesn't mean the twisted form 'saved money' so often heard here as a defense of IP prosecution.) His reasoning? He makes films to make people think, the more who hear and consider his view the better.

    3. Re:I admit it. by mrdogi · · Score: 0, Redundant
      I downloaded Michael Moore's "Farenheit 9/11".

      In $deity's name WHY?!?

    4. Re:I admit it. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Er, because he wanted to watch something for a couple of hours that would give him a good laugh?
      You damn fool.

    5. Re:I admit it. by fuzza · · Score: 1

      Er, I think that was the parent's point :)

      --
      Can't find examples of evolution? No matter, neither could Dawkins
  47. Shock therapy not used in movie downloading study by foobsr · · Score: 3, Informative
    --
    TaijiQuan (Huang, 5 loosenings)
  48. Trusting sponsored research by thephotoman · · Score: 2, Informative

    Well, in some fields, especially science, sponsored research is frequently the only research we can get. However, marketing research should usually be taken with a grain of salt. Same thing goes with usage/common practice research when people are wanting to hunt down everybody participating in a certain action, such as downloading movies.

    But 1 in 4 internet users download movies? Are we counting freely-distributed porn films or not? If so, that number is a lot higher. If not, it's a really low number.

    --
    Haec merda tauri est. Ceterum censeo Carthaginem esse delendam.
    1. Re:Trusting sponsored research by gilroy · · Score: 1
      Blockquoth the poster:

      Well, in some fields, especially science, sponsored research is frequently the only research we can get.

      First, that's not particularly true. Ever heard of DOE? NSF? NIH? For all the libertarians out there, one use government has is to conduct unbiased research. Can it be slanted? Yes. Is it, generally? No -- because there's no margin in it.

      Second, in science -- unlike, say, product placement or psuedo-social legality studies -- there's a vibrant adverserial community who will review, validate, and/or shred your conclusions if they're poorly based. Science has no particular truth detector, but it's got a well-function BS detector. Sometimes it gets overwhelmed and sometimes radical new ideas don't get the play they deserve -- but the system is pretty good at self-correction.

      In fact, I would expect that this MPAA study is eventually contradicted by a solidly-based, actually valid study. Alas it won't get the kind of press this did.
    2. Re:Trusting sponsored research by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Interesting

      No -- because there's no margin in it.

      You certainly don't have a clue. The margin for those living off of government grants is a) reputation, and b) *the ability to get future grants*. It can be very dangerous to do a study which contradicts government policy; it might be impossible from that point on to get any funding at all.

      My wife is a scientist, living off of government grants. I have an insider's view on the process (not to mention my own time with government) and it isn't the clean, unbiased pursuit of science that you seem to claim.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  49. Viewing Atom Films makes you a criminal by micron · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I really enjoyed the idea that the MPAA took this survey as 25% of all internet users download movies. As the article points out, it never dawned on them that you can LEGALLY download movies all over the place. Given, these are not your Hollywood blockbusters, but they are still movies that are being downloaded.

    1. Re:Viewing Atom Films makes you a criminal by Prof.Phreak · · Score: 1

      or... you could be downloading foreign films.

      --

      "If anything can go wrong, it will." - Murphy

  50. Flops and Sardine Cans by Hypharse · · Score: 5, Insightful
    "When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"
    The second it became sponsored by someone out for a profit and not for the knowledge. The MPAA is sure not winning fans and have learned from the RIAA the art of looking in the wrong direction. LOTR dvd sales alone are probably enough for a profit and everyone knows the incredible amounts of money it made at the box office. Then you realize that typically LOTR fans are geeks, and tend to be the ones that WOULD download a movie on the internet. This should lead to the conclusion that piracy doesn't mean much even if it IS as prevalent as they want you to think (even though it isn't). And what the hell is with the ads AT the movie theaters telling the people who BOUGHT A FREAKING TICKET TO THE MOVIE that it's wrong to pirate.

    Instead what they like to do is include the stats for the amount of geeks downloading LOTR, then combine it with the box office busts like Catwoman and say "See! People aren't seeing movies because they can just download it." They conveniently forget the fact that watching your cat lick herself while taking a piss in the litter box is more entertaining than watching Catwoman. Hopefully someone in congress will wise up to the RIAA and MPAA games and give them a swift kick in the caboose.

    1. Re:Flops and Sardine Cans by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful
      LOTR dvd sales alone are probably enough for a profit and everyone knows the incredible amounts of money it made at the box office. Then you realize that typically LOTR fans are geeks, and tend to be the ones that WOULD download a movie on the internet. This should lead to the conclusion that piracy doesn't mean much even if it IS as prevalent as they want you to think (even though it isn't). And what the hell is with the ads AT the movie theaters telling the people who BOUGHT A FREAKING TICKET TO THE MOVIE that it's wrong to pirate.

      The thing is, for the LOTR trilogy I bought a ticket to each movie, I bought the extended edition of each movie, and I downloaded a copy of each movie (before the DVD was out).

      Yet according to the MPAA I'm harming them because I downloaded the movie. Yeah, great, then give me back the $200+ I've spent on LOTR so far and we'll call it even.

      Yes, I know what I did was illegal. I know I shouldn't have downloaded those DiVXs. But where was the actual harm.

  51. Study Certification Agency by celeritas_2 · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Someone should start a company that does independant verification of such studies and statistics. It could be payed for with a flat rate for everybody who wants to certify the clear-and-accurateness of their study and be rated with gold stars on the company's report card. Sort of like what the BBB does but just to clear up all of this Microsoft, (R&M)PAA, SCO, etc. 'independant study' business can be somewhat legitimized.

    --
    -- Checking emails and kicking cheats `till the day I die.
  52. It's all about the power, dude by Cryofan · · Score: 1

    I have no problem with using the law to protect property, as long as it is the property of the little guy that is being protected. As far as I am concerned, rich people and corporations do not need or deserve the same degree of protection from the law.

    Just my ever humble opinion.....

    --
    eat shiat and bark at the moon
    1. Re:It's all about the power, dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yea because when the rich need protection they buy it but you know what us poor Jeo's do. We rebel and kill and blow shit up.

    2. Re:It's all about the power, dude by pinkocommie · · Score: 1

      Everyone deserves the same protection, the problem being all people (and corporations) are equal but some are more equal then others ;). The average joe can't influence the law while mega corps and the like actually write the law, thats where the difference lies. As long as that bias remains, the opposite will deem to be fair play as well

    3. Re:It's all about the power, dude by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      rich people...do not need or deserve the same degree of protection from the law

      Ah, yes. In the land of the free, where being rich is a punishable offense...at least in the minds of little socialist idiots who aren't themselves rich, and are jealous of those who are.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    4. Re:It's all about the power, dude by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

      Nothing wrong with socialism.. Unless you're a rich, in-power type of person who doesn't like the idea of being equal with others.

    5. Re:It's all about the power, dude by kryptkpr · · Score: 1

      In the land of the free, where being rich is a punishable offense

      Yes, it should be punishable, but no more then a business holding a monopoly is punished and for much the same reason: to ensure fair competition.

      Here's the problem: [in the United states] the top 1% own 38.1% of the wealth in the country. [snip] Ninety percent of the country owns a mere 29.1%.

      90% of the country owns only 29% of the wealth. Once you have a lot of money, it becomes easier and easier to make more of it... and people have a tendency to get greedy when lots of money is involved, and start to do unethical things.

      I agree with the grandparent poster, the rich do not deserve the same protections as the little guy, because the little guy doesn't have the power that the rich have. Too bad it's never happening, the little guy cannot afford to buy the laws necessary to level the playing field..

      --
      DJ kRYPT's Free MP3s!
    6. Re:It's all about the power, dude by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      and people have a tendency to get greedy when lots of money is involved, and start to do unethical things.

      You aren't talking about punishing people for breaking the law. You're talking about punishing them *just for being rich*.

      Call it socialism, call it equality, call it anything you like - it's still just petty, jealous revenge by petty, jealous people. Your ideal society is nothing more than a dictatorship enforced by the majority against the minority *for being successful*.

      I sure wouldn't want to live in the hell-hole you'd turn this country into.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    7. Re:It's all about the power, dude by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Nothing wrong with socialism.. Unless you're a rich, in-power type of person who doesn't like the idea of being equal with others.

      And your idea of 'equality' is to forcibly steal the property of those who are successful simply because you aren't. We have a word for that: thief.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  53. Symbiotic relationship by Anita+Coney · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The press and sponsored researchers have a symbiotic relationship. The press avoids printing the truth, because the truth is generally boring. That's why the press loves "studies" that tend to show something unbelievable, e.g., 1 in 4 internet users have downloaded a movie.

    And it goes without saying that sponsored researchers exist solely to issue press releases.

    As long as there is a press, there will be sponsored research, and vice versa.

    --
    If someone says he and his monkey have nothing to hide, they almost certainly do.
  54. damn! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    DAMN i wish i had a few hundred moderation points to vote 9/10'ths of the posts on this thread as redundant!

    ok already! we know you never ever ever were gullible enough to believe sponsored research, and we know that you in fact have fallen for it many times without knowing or that you won't admit to.

    post something original already!

  55. I hear second hand smoke is not so bad. by nanojath · · Score: 1

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    good grief, you're saying you once trusted sponsored research?

    --

    It Is the Nature of Information to Transgress Artificial Boundaries

  56. Re:I've downloaded movies. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    > i felt guilty about downloading it so much so that i bought the dvd anyway and sold it on ebay

    roflmao

  57. Yes, consumers are trustworthy by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    We all no there is no illegal movie swapping online. This is just some right wing conspiracy to prop up a failing business model. What, people should pay for movies?

  58. Thats hard to believe considering... by ricochet81 · · Score: 2, Informative
    --
    Error: Id10t detected
  59. I downloaded a movie by TwistedSpring · · Score: 1

    I've downloaded a movie. It was an MPEG of a chimp scratching it's ass and falling off a branch. I sure hope the MPAA don't come round my house to bust my bollocks, because that would be intolerable. I also downloaded one boatload of pornographic movie files this past few years. I hope the MPAA doesn't make me pay for those, because they were free.

    Gee, I must be one of the four!

  60. Lies, Damed lies and then Statistics by JohnnyGTO · · Score: 0

    Its bad enough someone would believe statistics, but sponsered statistics, you'd have to be a moron.

    --
    Si vis pacem, para bellum! For evil to succeed good men need only do nothing!
  61. /. is king of misinformation by geekee · · Score: 0, Troll

    rather tha posting a story like this, they prefer to champion nothing stories that advance the editors' agenda.

    --
    Vote for Pedro
  62. Accuracy is no longer enforced by mabu · · Score: 5, Insightful

    In-a-nutshell, the last 10-15 years has shown a trend in advertisers and corporate interests to be more and more bold about asserting hyperbole as fact.

    This is most obvious when you watch tv commercials. Ten or more years ago, a "dramatization" would more accurately reflect reality: a cleaning solution or drug visually-demonstrated to eradicate dirt or infection would always leave a few traces behind in the animation. Now, every demonstration of every product shows 100% success. Just yesterday I saw a commercial during the Olympics showing an American pickup truck towing a tractor trailer loaded with a half-dozen vehicles. Completely ludicrous and impossible, but they get away with it with a fleeing "dramatization" tag, knowing full well most peoples' attention spans skip over the fine print. And speaking of fine print, they slap the tiniest disclaimers on advertisements for the shortest periods of time - virtually impossible to read. Who enforces this stuff and why aren't they doing their job?

    Nobody seems to care so corporations become more and more cavalier and bold about misrepresenting reality and misleading the populace.

    Advertising has always been the art of lying, but in this new dawn of consumerism, corporate interests have the mantra that they don't have to spew anything that's accurate, factual or close to reality if they have the power and resources to repeat their misleading message in perpetuity - that act in itself, according to them, affirms the integrity of their claims. See: GW Bush, MPAA, RIA, SCO, etc.

    Now maybe at some point we'll reach critical mass with this BS, and the public will begin to trust nobody? Perhaps in another ten years substance and truth will be popular again? Who knows.

    I suggest rather than spit into the wind of corporate america by trying to refute the never-ending stream of inaccurate propaganda, we jump on the bandwagon and hasten the eventual flashpoint of total media & corporate cynacism.

    Everyone here should come up with at least one completely ridiculous "fact" or "figure" and do their best to propagate it. Maybe if enough of us pee into the already polluted river of corporate communication we can get the public to begin to seek more pure sources?

    1. Re:Accuracy is no longer enforced by SendBot · · Score: 1

      Alternatively, the enlightened populous could maintain accurate information through a communal reporting/moderation system. Just let the truth be its own excitement and make it more accessible than television.

      Free Speech Radio News gets pretty good coverage:
      http://www.fsrn.org/

      Although I gotta say you make an eloquent argument for pushing corporate media overboard.

    2. Re:Accuracy is no longer enforced by nothings · · Score: 1

      Don't forget that Nike attempted to claim the right to lie in its "non-commercial" speech. (The Supreme Court rejected Nike's initial appeal, and then Nike settled--for a tiny amount--so hard to say what the outcome has been.)

    3. Re:Accuracy is no longer enforced by aynrandfan · · Score: 1

      Everyone here should come up with at least one completely ridiculous "fact" or "figure" and do their best to propagate it. Maybe if enough of us pee into the already polluted river of corporate communication we can get the public to begin to seek more pure sources?

      Ayn Rand said something to the extent that if you want to expose a fraud, comply with it literally.

      --

      ----

      "Ours was a free culture. It is becoming much less so."-Lawrence Lessig

    4. Re:Accuracy is no longer enforced by mabu · · Score: 1

      I think you've got a good point too.

      It occurred to me the other day, that the upper-level institutions, be it government or corporate America or whatnot, are becoming so progressively more-removed from the mainstream that they've lost the ability to objectively qualify the needs of their constitutients/market. These entities are so heavily surrounded with "yes-men" they can no longer get accurate information, whether we're talking about a corporate audit or the Cabinet. Polls and research are conducted and if the results aren't what they want, the results are dismissed.

      The Nielsen method of rating media is a great example of a check-and-balance system that has become corrupt. The same thing with pollsters, or CPA firms.

      At some point, some new system will rise from the ashes of these corrupt institutions to shed some light on reality. Attendance at the Olympics is 30% below what was anticipated; corporations overstate their profits; networks cancel TV shows the public loves and introduce stuff that nobody watches; Clear Channel shoves crappy music down the populace's throat. All these companies seem to have lost touch. Even the media - which of course, have come up with a new word to describe the process, called "group think", which is a nice way of saying "We're all collectively sticking our heads up our asses and patting each other on the back."

      It makes you wonder, if, for example, polls say Bush is going to get ~50% of the popular vote, and he ends up with 30%, how will the media react? Will they acknowledge that they have lost touch or will their pride force them to seek out some scandalous explanation for why they were so off base?

      An open-source document-verification/moderation-type system could offer a lot of value in these scenarios. Some in government and corporate America seem to realize this, with their interest in things like current event markets, epinions, etc.

    5. Re:Accuracy is no longer enforced by sexylicious · · Score: 1

      Don't get shocked. My cousin peed on an electric fence once. I'd imagine peeing into "the already polluted river of corporate communication" would have similar effects.

  63. Whadaya mean, "Junk Research"? by NerveGas · · Score: 1

    It's actually a lot higher than one in four people. Of those who responded to my survey, a full 100% of people had downloaded movies from the Internet.

    The fact that I only asked one person doesn't make it "junk research" at all, honest!

    steve

    --
    Oh, you're not stuck, you're just unable to let go of the onion rings.
  64. What about the twinkie by Facekhan · · Score: 4, Funny

    Lets say that this Twinkie represents the normal amount of junk research, junk science, and FUD produced by special interest groups and picked up by the media. Judging from this morning's sample it would be a Twinkie thirty-five feet long, weighing approximately six hundred pounds.

    1. Re:What about the twinkie by geminidomino · · Score: 2, Funny

      That's a big twinkie...

  65. That seems a bit binary to me by Infonaut · · Score: 3, Insightful
    The thrust of your comment seems to be that nobody on the side of "The People" could in all good conscience advocate adherence to current patent and copyright laws. I'm strongly on the side of intellectual property reform, but there are many reasons why reasonable people disagree about intellectual property laws.

    For example, I have written the Representative and Senators who represent me in Congress, advocating for a reform of intellectual property laws so that big companies like Disney can't steamroll anyone who attempts to impose a more rational system. But I also happen to live in California, where a huge slice of the population makes its living off of intellectual property in one way or another. The movie, music, and computer industries all depend on intellectual property for their survival.

    The reaction from my representatives in Congress has been a fairly uniform, "We want to respond to new technologies in a way that allows for innovation but respects intellectual property laws." Basically they are concerned that if IP laws are messed with, the bread and butter for their constituents will vanish. It's about them wanting to stay in office, but it's also about them looking out for the economic interests of California.

    You can say what you want about people wanting to make a quick buck, but as a small business owner I can categorically say that business is very difficult. It's never easy, and there is always someone ready to take over your market and eat your lunch if you're not careful. That's the nature of free enterprise. When you're in business, you seek every legal advantage you can get, because if you don't, you might not survive. Copyrights and patents do not "have the sole purpose of protecting the little guy from the big guy," or "the big guy from the little guy." They are intended to encourage innovation and spur the economy, while providing for long-term benefits to society.

    It seems to me that the goal of all who would like to see the current imbalances in copyright and patent law redressed should be to show Congress and the people at large how current laws favor powerful, entrenched, and (this is vitally important) non-innovative players in the market. We need to show how if we do not change our IP laws, we will collectively be at an economic disadvantage because we have squelched innovation.

    If you want to take on big, vested interests, you need to beat them at their own game. You need to show legislators and regular people (I get nervous any time anyone uses the term "The People" because it implies that in a country as large and diverse as the United States somehow there are only two camps - the forces of Evil, and The People) that it makes economic sense to reform intellectual property laws.

    p.s. - "Back in the good 'ol days" (1920), the Prohibition Act came into being after more than 27 years of concerted grassroots political effort. Congress didn't just up and decide to enact Prohibition.

    --
    Read the EFF's Fair Use FAQ
    1. Re:That seems a bit binary to me by maxpublic · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Back in the good 'ol days" (1920), the Prohibition Act came into being after more than 27 years of concerted grassroots political effort. Congress didn't just up and decide to enact Prohibition.

      And it proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that grass roots activism can be just as fucked in the head as bought-and-paid-for lawmaking.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
    2. Re:That seems a bit binary to me by lifebouy · · Score: 1

      The thrust of your comment seems to be that nobody on the side of "The People" could in all good conscience advocate adherence to current patent and copyright laws. I'm strongly on the side of intellectual property reform, but there are many reasons why reasonable people disagree about intellectual property laws.

      Personally, that is exactly what I believe. No person who is on the side of "The People" could advocate either the patent system or copyright laws in their current form. The bottom line is, they do not work for the people. IMHO. I don't think our opinions are opposed to each other at all, and I am not trying to bait you. But I do feel that any politician who strives to increase the tyranny of big business whatsoever, and particularly by removing and restricting the freedom of the people they are being paid to represent, ought not to be able to sleep at night. The bottom line is that the govornment doesn't get elected by businesses. Even though businesses are generally considered a legal entity(another issue I have issue with), no "business entity" has the right to vote. When "Microsoft" goes into a voting booth and casts a ballot, we as a nation are done. Therefore, no politition should consider the desires of big business when it comes to these kinds of issues, unless it's an issue that does not concern individual people at all. Nothing comes to mind.

      Anytime a decision is made about such issues, it should be considered in the following light: Anyone who trades freedom for security deserves neither. That's a paraphrase, from Thomas Jefferson I believe, but that was the gist of it. Whether 10 jobs are at stake or 10,000 does not matter. People will find other jobs. Companies will adjust to new paradigms, or go under. That is the nature of free enterprise. You can't just go around nilly willy restricting the freedom this great nation is based upon just because a few people

      might lose their jobs. There's always work. If not, move. There's always work somewhere. Always. If one business fails, more will emerge in its place. Most of the things I can think of which are wrong with this country revolve around laws which restrict our freedom, often for the sake of buisiness. For example, seat belts. Not wearing a seatbelt endangers noone but yourself. It should be your right to take that risk, the same as if you hang glide or jump from a plane. Yet, because insurance companies desired it, now, in the U.S. of all places, the police spend their time rounding up the troublemakers who refuse to have their personal freedom restricted. Another example: why on earth should I need a license to cut a dog's hair? I can see making doctors be licensed, since what they do affects a person's life. But dog grooming? I consider that an infringement on my liberty. I have no desire to take up that profession, but if I did, there should be no licensing involved.
      We must all keep vigil to ensure our freedom. Whether you work at Redhat or IBM or Microsoft, you cannot lose sight of the necessity of preserving freedom, especially when it becomes easy to be blinded by the lure of the dollar. Many cry out, how will programmers make a living without IP? I say, musicians should be paid to sing. Not paid for recording something and then living off the sales for 40 years. A programmer should be paid to program. When someone has a need, they should hire a programmer to fill it. When the job is done, that program should be released into the public domain. As long as there are new processors and devices, there will be a need for people to code it. Now, an artist gets paid for his art. It's tangible. It's a piece of canvas. But where it is digital, such as graphic artists, they should get paid for the act of creation, but not continually forever on account of half a day's button-clicking. Once it's done, it's done. Look at the porn industry one more time. It's the cornerstone of internet industry, yet more porn gets copied than anything else I know of. The industry is not suf

      --
      Drop me a line at:
      Key ID: 0x54D1D809
  66. Some people say... by Texas+Rose+on+Lava+L · · Score: 1

    Some people say that one in four internet users has downloaded a movie.

    1. Re:Some people say... by fucksl4shd0t · · Score: 2, Interesting

      You know, it's great fun to point out how the statistics are a lie, but what if they are true?

      In a land with a government that rules by the people and for the people, is it really a good idea to condemn 1/4 of your population? At what point does the will of the people enter into the equation? Whether it's right or wrong is irrelevant, but whether it's the will of the people or not is the key question.

      So, if the statistics are lie, then great, the MPAA is wrong.

      If they're the truth, then the MPAA is still wrong.

      --
      Like what I said? You might like my music
  67. Missing the Point by AdrianG · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The remark about "trusting sponsored 'research'" misses the point. Real scientists use good methodology to help them keep their bias from influencing the outcome of research. The problem which often comes up in research that is funded to prove a point is that the methodology is bad, and anyone with a good science background should be pointing out that methodology is what matters.

    Of course there is some chance that researchers who are out to prove a specific position might fabricate data, but I don't think this is the biggest part of the problem surrounding biased research.

    Bias and reputation of the researchers and sponsors are grounds for suspicion; But, to really impeach a study, you must either demonstrate that the methodology is bad or that the data are fabricated. Science is not a popularity contest.

    The article does talk about the problems with the methods used in the study, but the SlashDot quote referencing the article seems to be about the fact that the research is "sponsored" by a bad company. In science, it takes more than that to show a study to be unsound.

    Adrian

    1. Re:Missing the Point by maxpublic · · Score: 1

      Science is not a popularity contest.

      Except that this isn't science. It's marketing masquerading as science.

      Max

      --
      My god carries a hammer. Your god died nailed to a tree. Any questions?
  68. Statistics are valuable. by SatanicPuppy · · Score: 1

    But sponsored research is always suspect. I am so tired of corporate/government sponsored bad science being presented to the world as literal truth, because for every well informed skeptic, there are a million believing sheep.

    --
    ad logicam Claiming a proposition is false because it was presented as the conclusion of a fallacious argument.
  69. After all by commodoresloat · · Score: 1

    with Halle Berry crawling around in tight PVC, how could it go wrong? There's no other explanation but piracy.

  70. When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'? by pjdepasq · · Score: 4, Interesting

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    When I started doing it.

    Actually, as I started my Ph.D., someone I knew completed his. At the party we held after his defense, he said something that has stuck with me:

    I can't help but keep thinking two things:
    • I have a low opinion of research, and
    • I can't believe they bought this crap (as in signed off on his dissertation).
    True story.
  71. old news by ph4s3 · · Score: 1

    This crap came out in July and so did El Reg's response via Ashlee Vance. Why is it important what this guy said a month later, particularly when it mimics what was said last month in response to the "research?"

  72. I'm really starting to hate this stuff by dJCL · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I pay for my movies, my friends pay for their movies, we see dozens of them each year. We all have huge, non-copied, DVD and VHS collections, usually purchased first hand.

    Yet, when I walk into the movie theater tonight(leaving in about 10min here), I will see, amonth the previews, a commercial asking me to stop movie piracy! I'm being told to stop stealing movies after I paid $9(plus a ~500% markup on the food) to see one!

    That's just stupid and insulting. I don't pay to go get insulted... therefore it makes me just want to hop online and watch the movie without the insults.

    Anyway...

    --
    On Arrakis: early worm gets the bird. Magister mundi sum!
    1. Re:I'm really starting to hate this stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      So you're saying "They called me a thief! I'm insulted! In fact, I'm so insulted, I'm going to steal their goods!"

      ~~~

    2. Re:I'm really starting to hate this stuff by dJCL · · Score: 1

      More of a: "They called me a thief, I'm insulted enough to want to get them back for the insult... therefore I'm considering it" type of thing. If they keep it up, they will get to the point of downright annoyance and I tend to either deal with annoyances or route around them.

      It's more annoying then the car comercials before the movie, but they are getting worse too... I only want preview to figure out what might be good to see in the future. I paid for the movie, not for a car commercial with a 2 story high kid saying "zoom zoom", a cell phone commercial with 3 story tall flying pigs(that I personally hate) and commercials for a drugstore's selection of "the perfect christmas gift" that I would only buy for my enimies, if even. I don't mind slide shows before the video, they are not as "in your face" and I can ignore them.

      Having prices go up, and then getting unrelated ad's was annoying enough, but then insulting me... adding things to this list will drive me out of the theater....

      anyways... enough of this rant of mine, thank you for listening...

      --
      On Arrakis: early worm gets the bird. Magister mundi sum!
    3. Re:I'm really starting to hate this stuff by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Fair enough. BTW, I have gone to less movies in no small part because of the commercials. The anti-piracy stuff, though, is comic relieve to me. Peace :).

      ~~~

    4. Re:I'm really starting to hate this stuff by silicon+not+in+the+v · · Score: 1
      That's just stupid and insulting. I don't pay to go get insulted... therefore it makes me just want to hop online and watch the movie without the insults.
      Or, it could make you just show up 10 minutes later so you skip all those comercials and insulting piracy ads. How about it? That's pretty much what I've started doing, and you don't miss any of the movie.
      --
      We may experience some slight turbulence and then...explode. -Capt. Mal Reynolds
    5. Re:I'm really starting to hate this stuff by Some_Llama · · Score: 1

      I hate, i mean i HATE the fact of having to pay 10+ dollars for the movie and then having to watch their ads and anti-piracy crap... but for popular movies who can get a good seat unless you get there early, esp if you go with your wife or children (getting seats together...)

  73. It's not really the media or education by Sycraft-fu · · Score: 1

    It's simply how humans operate. We like being right, we like to think that our views are the correct ones. Thus we tend to point out things that support our views, and dismiss those that do not.

    It doesn't even really matter who funded the study, private researchers often have hidden agendas. More frequently, however, they just screw up their methods. It's HARD to design a good experiment with humans in it since humans know they are being experimented on and alter their behaviour because of it.

    So, really, there's not a lot that can be done. It's not new that people latch on to things they support and ignore those they don't.

  74. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by Benedick · · Score: 1
    Research is always sponsered. Think about it. The people doing the research have to eat. The forms, computers, whatever, cost money and that money has to come from somewhere. Yes, colleges do research and that appears unsponsered but somebody's paying somewhere.

    What this means is not that you shouldn't trust any reasearch but that you should always look behind the research. Even if it's supposedly independant research, look at who's doing the research and what their agenda is.

    Of course, what's really important is to look at the how of the research. Look for good scientific basis (things like double-blind studies, statistically significant sample sizes, no self-selecting groups, etc.) for the research.

    I find that I have to trust sponsered research...but only once I understand how it was done and by whom.

  75. "When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?" by nusratt · · Score: 1

    Ummm . . . the first time I heard of it?

  76. Non-scientific counting method by SilentChris · · Score: 1

    *Looks at family* 5 kids, 1 mom. 3 of us have downloaded movies over the internet. That statistic, at least for me, is quite low.

    Think about it. The way it's phrased, if you've *ever* downloaded a movie, even part of one, *anytime* in your life, you'd be counted.

  77. That's not the best idea by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Interesting

    You don't trust sponsored "research", period.

    I agree with another response to your post. Someone has to pay for research, and sometimes an impartial study just isn't feasible because impartial people have no stake or interest in the outcome.

    For instance, I'm personally in a group that has a particular interest in reducing the amount of light pollution that's produced by populated areas. There's little or no existing interest outside of our own group. About the only way we'd be able to get the attention of city planners and legislators is to produce our own study about the positive effects that more efficient and lower levels of lighting might have on safety and crime and so on, counter-intuitive to most people.

    If such a study was simply thrown out by others on the grounds that we might be biased, it'd be extremely frustrating. If everyone took that approach, it would be difficult for anyone to argue anything. It would make much more sense and be more productive if people would simply argue with us based on the objective information that we provide with the study, and if necessary point out any flaws in our methodology.

    This way we can either prove to people that we're right, accept that we're wrong, or go back and improve our methodology for another attempt. Perhaps it would be decided that the results we've presented aren't even important enough to warrant a change, but at least everyone knows where they stand based on honest, objective information.

    You should accept research on its merits based on the information presented. If relevant information is missing, or if what's available shows that a sponsor is hiding or manipulating information to skew the results, then point it out and treat it accordingly. But please don't simply throw it out because it supports the view of whomever sponsored it.

  78. Sponsored research? by BCW2 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If we were told who the sponsor of any poll is, I bet the majority on /. could give the results within 5 points.

    Before a single question was asked!

    --
    Professional Politicians are not the solution, they ARE the problem.
  79. Ob. Dilbert by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    And 40% of peoples' sick days are concentrated on Mondays and Fridays.

  80. what is a "movie?" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If a poll asked me if I downloaded a movie, I would say yes. However, I would be referring to a online class movie, not an MPAA movie.

  81. I call BS by grolschie · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Connection speed:
    I think at least one in four internet users use dial-up. At least. So to download a movie would take at least 50 hours on a good connection.

    Demographics
    So one in four is using Kazaa, BitTorrent, or similar, and knows about divx/xvid codecs, etc? Grandma on jetstream? It appears that a larger proportion of users don't even know not to open dodgy email attachments, or how to patch their OS, let alone find, download and play a movie.

    1. Re:I call BS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The thing is they find the movie , but they bring back a bunch of malware along.

      People are still downloading executables in kazaa, and when "It doesn't work", they just try the next file.

  82. Fifty Percent of all statistics by Atroxodisse · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...are made up. Come on, someone had to say it.

    --
    Read my short stories - You won't regret it.
  83. No Trust Lost by Thedalek · · Score: 1

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    Isn't this about like asking someone "Have you stopped beating your wife?"

    Okay, in the interests of good logic, yes, I admit that the person you ask could have actually been beating his wife at some point. I would point out that it is similarly likely that such a person trusted sponsored research.

    --
    Happiness is relative, Based upon the way we live.
  84. 37 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds by bagofbeans · · Score: 2, Interesting

    If you read the Yahoo page at http://yahoo.pcworld.com/yahoo/article/0,aid,11579 3,00.asp then you will see the statistic is "The research reveals 37 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds have downloaded a full-length motion picture from the Internet."

    Also "24 percent of respondents reported that they had downloaded a movie online".

    The 24% includes perfectly free-to-download stuff shorts like http://pocketmovies.net/ and http://www.archive.org/movies/prelinger.php

    The 37%, being 'full length' is presumably meant to imply Hollywood releases, but can still include public domain stuff like the Prelinger material linked above, which includes full length movies.

    It does piss me off that the MPA tries to associate every movie download as being of their copyrighted property; that's not so.

  85. why would the MPAA lie about that? by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    wouldnt a statistic of "one in four" people having downloaded a movie illegally merely discredit the MPAA and warn legislators that they need to wise up and make sure that laws make sense? Any time 25% of the population is guilty of something, it's time to re-think your definition of a crime.

    So why would the MPAA lie about this? To purposely make themselves look less credible?

    --
    -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  86. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Maybe you should get some friends whith morals?

  87. Hmmm by tkrotchko · · Score: 2, Informative

    "Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy"

    Isn't the whole justification for copyrights that its good for the economy?

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Hmmm by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      Nope, the justifcation for copyrights has nothing to do with economics. It's purely an academic consideration.

      Copyright exists to encourage creativity.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    2. Re:Hmmm by mlyle · · Score: 1

      Nope, the justifcation for copyrights has nothing to do with economics. It's purely an academic consideration.

      Copyright exists to promote progress in the arts and sciences, yes, via an economic incentive-- exclusive rights to those who create for a limited time.

    3. Re:Hmmm by Atzanteol · · Score: 1

      Copyright exists to encourage creativity.

      ...By giving the copyright holder an economic (monetary) advantage.

      --
      "Ignorance more frequently begets confidence than does knowledge"

      - Charles Darwin
  88. Well put, but you're missing one point by Simonetta · · Score: 1

    Well put, but you're missing one point...

    That point is that Hollywood really isn't profitable anymore. Movies are made by studios that are mostly owned by very large shell corporations who see movies as primarily an advertising medium for the products made by the other companies of the conglamerate. Movies don't make much money anymore. Some individual titles do, but on the whole, the production costs and promotion costs of films is rising faster that the box office. Every year sees bigger and bigger box office returns, but the overall profit margin is stagnant and the core audience that goes to films is shrinking slightly each year. This is unusual considering the movies are primarily oriented towards young people and the number of young people (especially outside the USA, Japan, and Europe) is growing quite a bit every year.

    If movies budgets could be brought under control, and if it could be proven that movies actually increase consumption of the other products of the conglomerate that owns the studio, then it is possible that movie admissions might be given away in the future as a loss-leader to encourage consumption.

    The real danger to the conglomerates that own the studios is that the MPAA will actually be successful in driving people out of the habit of consuming entertainment products, regardless of how much that they are actually paying or not paying for the opportunity to do so. If the MPAA convinces enough people that they will go to prison for watching downloaded movies, then the conglomerate loses the ability to use movies as a product-placement advertising medium. And new effective advertising mediums are getting increasing difficult to come by.

    Eventually the conglomerates that own the movie studios will tell the MPAA to back off. The MPAA is a dinosaur anyway from the era when movie studios were still individual businesses that depended on box office receipts for their existence.

  89. Somebody should tell the MPAA... by kgbspy · · Score: 1

    ...that the movie of the penguin tripping the other penguin doesn't count.

    --
    ~
    ~
    ~
    -- INSERT --
  90. Re:1 in 4 - Hmmm... by ronobot · · Score: 1

    Perhaps they are referring to video files in general.

    Hmmm... What kinds of video files could 1 in 4 internet users possibly be downloading?

  91. When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'? by Illbay · · Score: 1

    The first time I read that the TOC of MS Windows was "half" that of Linux.

    --
    Any technology distinguishable from magic is insufficiently advanced.
  92. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by linatux · · Score: 0

    Sponsored Research is fine - Sponsored Results is not. Me - I just wish I had the bandwidth to download a movie.

  93. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by darnok · · Score: 1

    The first time I realised such a thing existed was when I read a report saying 'A is better than B', when only the day before I'd read 'B is better than A'. I compared the two reports and found they had been produced by the same company. I'm fairly sure 'A' was Microsoft, but I can't remember who 'B' was...

    I mean, "research" tends to make *me* think "scientific basis", "objective", etc. Until then, I'd thought there was a clear distinction between research and marketing, but not from that point on.

    From that point on, the first thing I check in any research is who produced it. To one extent, that's a positive thing - certain research companies (e.g. AdTI) definitely have a "brand presence" in my mind, and I now know their reports are worth reading for the humor alone.

  94. More to the point by tkrotchko · · Score: 2, Interesting

    you can go to the Apple site and download trailers from upcoming big-time movie releases. My daughter does this all the time to see if a movie will be worth going to see.

    Depending on the way they ask the question, this might have gotten her lumped in with people downloading movies, because she did technically download part of a movie.

    The thing was that it was (a) Not the whole movie (b) entirely legal.

    Now lets say 10% of all teens do this...Might that inflate the stats just a bit?

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
  95. Basic movie business lesson by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Most movies suck.

    You must pay before seeing it. Even if it sucks.

    So even bad movies generate some revenue to offset the expenses.

    If people could see movies for free, they wouldn't buy them. Except for maybe a small percentage.

    They even try to shut down reviewers. If they could, they would get us to sign an NDA when we watch a movie.

    If you doubt this, how many movies have you seen that you would watch a second time?

    Derek

  96. Because... by tkrotchko · · Score: 1

    Because its the lie that is repeated often enough and becomes the truth.

    You float a statistic out there. Then another, then another, and pretty soon, get a couple of columnists to repeate it and its then accepted as "fact".

    And of course, when Hollywood goes to the FCC and congress, they can let them know it is generally accepted that 1 in 4 people download movies illegally.

    Congress will have to do something, of course, because its their job to make sure encumbent companies keep their shareholders happy. And they're all against evil pirates. Never mind that if they accept those "facts" it means half the people who voted for them are "pirates".

    --
    You were mistaken. Which is odd, since memory shouldn't be a problem for you
    1. Re:Because... by Lord+Bitman · · Score: 1

      just wondering here.. why "never mind" half the people who voted for them are now labeled "pirates"? (and given the voter turnout, could be all of the people who voted for them and THEN some ;))

      --
      -- 'The' Lord and Master Bitman On High, Master Of All
  97. Bah. What a crock by EvilStein · · Score: 1

    1 in 4?

    Ok, out of those people that DID download a movie..
    1)How many of them actually got the WHOLE movie
    2)How many went to see the real movie in theatres/buy the DVD
    3)How many thought they were getting something cool, but got YET ANOTHER flippin' copy of "Little Nicky" instead?

    Gotta wonder..hmm

    1. Re:Bah. What a crock by Mr.+No+Skills · · Score: 1

      They're counting "Jib Jab".

      --
      Sleep is for the Weak
  98. Thanks for playing. by ITR81 · · Score: 1
    I'm guessing this 1 out 4 people must be coming from broadband users not dialup people like me.

    If this is broadband users then I would say the MPAA survey is correct, because almost everyone I know with a broadband connection has at one time DL a movie or atleast attempted to do so.

    Now for the folks that complain about movie costs. Well first it's more likely your theaters not the MPAA. I mean hell around here you still can see movies for around $6-7 bucks which isn't much when comparing to the movie megaplex's which charge around $10 a head BS. So stop bitching and go see your homegrown theaters and drive-in's...because if you don't support them they will dry up and become another damn movie megaplex.

    Now for the person calling this survey 'crap'. Why didn't he use a word of intelligence...as in it was filled with erroneous data, but he didn't came out sounding like a babbling teenager that probably DL's movies.

    If you wanna watch movies for free go get a job as a projectionist or get a friend that can get you in for free.

  99. I stopped trusting sponsored research by HazE_nMe · · Score: 3, Interesting

    ever since the Regan administration faked a commercial that showed a brainscan of a normal adult and a brainscan of a Cannabis user. The commercial showed a lively colored brainscan for the normal adult, and the one for the Cannabis user was all dull and dark. As it turns out, the brainscan of the supposed Cannabis user was actually from a patient who was comatose. There have been other "studies" regarding MDMA and it's affects on the brain that have recently been uncovered as bogus misinformation from the federal government. I don't use MDMA, but I for one would rather be told the truth about "drugs" and be allowed to make up my own mind as to whether I want to use it or not.

  100. Backfire by tonyray · · Score: 1

    This type of claim can backfire on them. People are more likely to ignore a law if they think everyone else is ignoring it.

    The MPAA might be better off saying the number of people downloading movies illegally is small and due to thier campaign it is getting smaller. Then people would be more inclined to think downloading movies wasn't the "cool" thing to do because the number of people downloading them was shrinking.

  101. When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'? by Cbs228 · · Score: 1

    As soon as I heard about the Appeal to Unqualified Authority fallacy.

    --
    At our school, we don't earn a degree when we graduate—we earn pi/180 radians
  102. MPAA=Outdated Business Model by rlsthree · · Score: 1

    Look at the success of iTunes, PPV, etc. If the movie industry released movies online, for a reasonable price it would reduce the number of illegally downloaded movies (and they could cash in). Arguements about legality, and suing 12 yr olds will not get rid of piracy.

    --
    Nunchucks don't kill people NINJAS kill people
  103. It's an average by drix · · Score: 2, Interesting

    [T]he survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.'

    That's really not that hard to believe, considering they're talking about an average. The average human being is (roughly) 1/2 male and 1/2 female. All it takes for this "hard-to-believe assertion" to be true is for one user in a hundred to have downloaded 400 movies, something which I wholeheartedly believe from firsthand experience.

    --

    I think there is a world market for maybe five personal web logs.
  104. ehh by robpoe · · Score: 1

    Whether or not the one in four thing is true, doesn't it show the shortsightedness of Hollyweird? While they infight with themselves on why or not to let us watch movies over the 'net, we, the end user have to wait like cattle and sheep to see it THEIR way. "Ok, come on now, pay us $10 for a ticket, pay $10 for a pop and popcorn, then get the hell out." "No, you cannot watch it on Pay Per View at the same time it comes out at BlockRaper^h^h^h^h^hBuster, no you cannot put the DVD onto your laptop hard drive so you can watch it on the road without worrying about the original, no you're just a thief we cannot trust you with it." Give me a break.. Give us a good, high quality download, at a decent price that DOESN'T expire, that we can play in a STANDARDS based player. It's not like I should have to pay the DVD price to download it from you. And I sure the hell aint gunna watch it streamed.. The people who pirate it aint gunna buy it anyway - it'll be out there ONE way or ANOTHER..Why not be involved with the distribution instead of fighting it.

    --
    = Grow a brain...
  105. Nice figure by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting
    The MPAA's summary of the survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.'

    I guess they must be counting every type of 'movie' in existance on the internet. As if I remember last week's stories correctly, 49% of internet users in the U.S. are still on dialup. Or are we supposed pick between the notion that half of all broadband user have downloaded a movie or one in four dialup users have?

  106. You mentioned freedom? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    it is such freedom which America has traditionally championed.

    Are you kidding?! you can go to war and die for your country (meaning for the rich and the famous who will never go to war) meanwhile you are banned a damned beer.

    You can get death penalty meanwhile you cannot see violent/erotic (do not even mention porn) movies.

    Oh! yes, sorry, you, cowboys, can still carry guns! and are not allowed to watch Janet Jackson boob on TV (that is so dangerous for the naive American youth)

    BTW, the laws above look pretty much sponsored by radical catholic conservatives... but still, perhaps ethics is not involved and I am totally wrong...

    Hey! I love this "freedom" of yours

  107. Then why are DVD sales up? by johannesg · · Score: 1

    See title. DVD sales, at least where I live (Netherlands), are way up, according to a recent article in the paper.

    1. Re:Then why are DVD sales up? by MadKeithV · · Score: 1

      Simply put: If I can walk up to the bargain bin in the Free Record shop and get about 5 DVDs that I'd love to see for 12-15Euro apiece, while every goddamn CD in the shop is around 20Euro, I decide to get me some movies instead of some music.

      Hmm, I just had some other ideas:
      Movies get shown a lot, in their entirity, on TV, a while after they've been out. Most of the DVDs I buy are movies I've already seen, and want to see again. Full albums don't get played on mainstream TV or on the radio. Most of the time, getting a full SONG is a challenge, because they chop, shorten, radio edited, "videofy" it until it in no way resembles anything on the actual CD. I don't listen to radio these days, unless it's to specialised channels - classical music station for driving, because I hardly know any classical music, and those channels repeat a lot less.
      Imagine if movies on regular TV were like songs on regular radio... You get the same three movies 15 times a day for 5 months until the "next big thing" arrives for another 5 months...

  108. Screw that by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Hey MPAA,

    I got a stat for you.
    I dl nearly 100 movies.
    How's that.

    F! the MPAA

  109. Trusting sponsored research?!?! by gujo-odori · · Score: 2, Insightful

    When did I stop trusting sponsored research?

    This sounds like a "When did you stop beating your wife?' question. I've never trusted sponsored research, where "sponsored" is defined as "paid for by a private company which stands to benefit from the findings of said research" and "research" is not used in the sense of basic research, but the sense of "market research" or "opinion poll." Such "sponsored research" is tainted by the very fact of who sponsors it.

    After all, when was the last time you saw "sponsored research" that found the sponsor's product/solution to be a pile of crap compared to a competing one?

    Coming up with such a result would be the best way to ensure that:

    1) It would be suppressed and buried forever in the sponsor's biggest and most secret safe, or just destroyed outright;

    2) You'd never again be used for research by that sponsor, even if your findings were true and accurate. They weren't sponsoring you to find the truth, they were sponsoring you to find that their product or solution was the best, and you were expected to choose/manipulate data and load questions such that the desired conclusion would be "proven."

    Sponsored research should more properly be called an extended press release.

  110. Trusting company paid information by zoeblade · · Score: 2, Interesting

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    Ooh, I know this one! Is it when Dr. Nancy Olivieri tested a drug on patients only to find out it may actually be hamful? After the doctor decided to tell the patients the risks, a gag order was issued by the company funding the experiment.

  111. Wow, that's the dumbest thing I've ever heard by fluxrad · · Score: 1

    Please mod the parent down. An amendment is not solely passed by act of Congress. The above author has no idea what he's talking about, be it filesharing or prohibition.

    Anti-piracy laws are passed because corporations want them to be and because the American public largely doesn't give a damn about copyright law. Seriously.

    --
    "It is seldom that liberty of any kind is lost all at once." -David Hume
  112. There's this neat concept by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    called "Civil Disobience". Look it up.

    1. Re:There's this neat concept by DustMagnet · · Score: 1
      Using a P2P to illegally share music is not "Civil Disobience". If you really want to use "Civil Disobedience" to change the government, you should be handing out material that is illegal under the lastest copyright extension act on a street corner in public, not hiding on P2P networks.

      Secretly violating a law does nothing to change.

      --
      'SBEMAIL!' is better than a goat!!
  113. Hang on by pjt33 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    If the study said that 1 in 4 Internet users have downloaded a film, you can't make any conclusions about the proportion of American Internet users who've done so.

  114. Define "movie" by PeteDotNu · · Score: 1

    At my most cynical, I can almost hear the chaps at the MPAA saying "Animated GIFS? Why, they're like little movies!"

    --
    My other processor is big-endian.
  115. Stats lie by gilesjuk · · Score: 1

    Statistics are always used to bolster a case, but there's always more to it than meets the eye. You can't simply summarise the activities of a group of people by using one figure (a total percentage) to represent their behaviour.

    First you need to see how their expenditure on films has progressed over time, has it decreased as a result of downloading. Then you need to see how often they have downloaded. Plus it's useful to see how this affected the company in question. So for instance if the people in question downloaded a film such as the Godfather, then the case that downloads hurts the further production of films is a weak one since that film broke even decades ago.

  116. What Bugs me by Deliveranc3 · · Score: 1

    What bugs me isn't the actions of the MPAA

    Or the stastic fabricators.

    It's the poster and all the others on slashdot who seem to think that someone can express an unbiased opinion.

    I rarely say "Well I think..." you know why because it's implied that what I say is an oppinion held by me.

    EVERY statement should be taken in context, especially if you think it might be a "Cold hard fact." which will lead you to other conclusions or to re-examine prior beliefs.

    Please stop saying, "I think..." and maybe people will start to figure out... it's implicit.

  117. Its official... by cbailster · · Score: 1

    ...100% of people who wrote this reply don't trust the MPAA or anything they say

  118. You're both saying the same thing by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You're both saying the same things. Just define ethics before starting to discuss it, or you'll be lost arguing about two different definitions.

    What's the difference between ethics and "getting people to live together in harmony"?

    As we witness daily, laws are not always based on an ideal goal like that, but for more control and power for a few old Men in power.

    Btw, both ethics and laws can become corrupt. It depends Whose laws and ethics it is. Everything is subjective and relative in this world, and we should always remember that and don't accept others' "Absolute Truth". That is only used by people who want power and influence Over Others, which is the worst people to actually have it.

    (Actually there actually IS an Absolute Truth, but it doesn't contradict an Individual/Group Truth as well, it includes every Truth consciousness can dream of..)

    1. Re:You're both saying the same thing by Vindicator9000 · · Score: 1
      (Actually there actually IS an Absolute Truth, but it doesn't contradict an Individual/Group Truth as well, it includes every Truth consciousness can dream of..)


      What if my individual Truth is that my personal concept of Truth is the only one that is true, and that it is true for all people? Would your hypothetical Absolute Truth(tm) contradict that?

      For example, say that I believe that the teachings of Jim Jones are Absolute Truth, and the teachings of Jim Jones include that ONLY the teachings of Jim Jones are Truth, and that no other truths exist in alternate dimensions or anything. Aside from the high probability that I'd be dead, how can both I and say, a Moslem be correct at the same time? How can your Absolute Truth reconcile both sets of incompatible beliefs?

      I'm sorry, it seems like you're saying that absolute truth is that X and !X are both true at the same time. If the two are all-encompassing and contradictory statements, I can't see how this is possible.

      Please answer, I'm curious.

  119. LOTR didn't discriminate against non-US users by meldir · · Score: 1

    At least LOTR came out in cinemas all over the world at the same time. Most films come out in Europe a year later than in the US, and in Asia sometimes three years later.

    Of course, real fans will always go to the movie (*and* attempt to download it to see it even before official release). But the LOTR movies were seen by a lot of people who hadn't even read the books, and these are the people that, in Europe and Asia, wouldn't have gone if they had had to wait for years and they're friends (the real fans) had long ago got a DVD and shown it to them.

    Regio encoding is evil (like export subsidies, international trade restrictions etc.), and completely unnecessary if you release something worldwide simultaneously. If movies as big as LOTR and all the Bond movies can do it, it should be possible, right?

  120. Because more people have DVD players? by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

    See title. :-)

    DVD is a relatively new technology. I only bought my first player 18 months ago. Since then, I've bought about 10 films and a similar number of "complete series" box sets of my favourite shows. I have no problem with this, because I'm paying 2-3x what it would cost me to rent the film from my local Blockbuster, or considerably less than that for the box sets, and I'm only getting the content I want, without advertising thrown in every ten minutes, etc.

    I've never ripped any similar content from the 'net, because I don't agree with it ethically; I know that one of those shows nearly went bust and almost didn't make the final series because of those cash worries. That may not be an issue for Britney or the latest Arnie film, and those are easy targets for people trying to justify ripping content on-line, but most artists/worksdon't get the luxury of mass distribution that those guys have, and do suffer a noticeable adverse effect if they're widely ripped.

    --
    If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
  121. That would be "never have" by CrimsonAvenger · · Score: 1
    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"

    I don't trust any research where the result agrees with the agenda of the people who paid for it. Left or Right doesn't matter.

    It's amazing how little research comes out with a "We were quite surprised by the result of this one" or equivalent. It could mean that our researchers are so close to the ultimate truths of the universe/society/whatever that it's just cleaning up the details. More likely it means that they are saying what they are paid to say (even when they are not paid overtly, if the lads paying the bills have an agenda....).

    Especially when there are studies with results on both sides of an issue - then you can pretty much count on each of them agreeing with the people who paid for them.

    --

    "I do not agree with what you say, but I will defend to the death your right to say it"
  122. Re:When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Back when I was doing reasearch I found out after not being able to produce the 'expected' results that my boss was personally displeased with me because he had planned to present the results of my work at a conference overseas and that I probably had ruined his junket. Of course he had not bothered to tell me about this beforehand nor had he told me that he was being paid as a 'consultant'. Shortly thereafter I left academia for good. He soon was promoted to the head of a larger institution in a bigger city.

  123. reliability of news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Oh, com'on! Everyone knows 81.76 % of the data is made up!!

  124. WHO BENEFITS? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Put more simply...

    "wheres the money ?"

    this question will help you solve most of the problems you come across in life.


    Or more generally : WHO BENEFITS?? (Sometimes quoted in latin, the saying is so old.)

  125. I downloaded a movie, too by Scorchio · · Score: 1

    I downloaded a movie, too, but it was a proper, full length, made-for-cinema film.

    I'll admit it. I've done it.

    It's not being released in the cinema in the US, so I can't go to see it. I could import the DVD, but the region code prevents me from watching it.

    So what am I to do? The only thing I can do is not watch it. So, seeing as I can't watch it anyway, the copyright holders are losing nothing if I do watch it. And this twisted little piece of logic helps me feel a little bit less guilty while watching.

    If they do release it here, I'll go see it on the big screen, or buy the dvd. It's got to be better than the mid-res mpeg files I have at the moment.

  126. Utter bullshit by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    many Native American cultures had no sense of possesion, and therefore, NOTHING could be stolen.

    Utter bullshit.

  127. Who the anti-piracy ads are for by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's disappointing to buy a cinema ticket and see an advert against piracy. But the ad is for the CAMmers and CINE-ers watching the same reel, so that they can be left in no doubt as to the legality or otherwise of their action. Anyway, if the MPAA didn't promulgate the anti-piracy message in the few places where it mattered (at the point of use, ie the theatres, and in the courts), it really *would* be useless, and *then* we Slashdotters would let them have it. They just can't win.

  128. Actually that is true by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I hate to admit it. But I download movies all the time. All those dancing baby, jesus, and gecko. And who could ever forget the monkey smelling its own finger after the finger went to where no man has gone before.

  129. All society? by wikdwarlock · · Score: 1

    "only laws that serve to benefit the whole of society, like speed laws and laws against murder, theft, etc should be passes [sic]"

    What about those members of society who'd like to have stuff w/o paying or working much for it? Or those that want to kill their neighbor because he plays polka music too loudly on the weekends? These desires aren't moral, as defined by our society, and that's why they're illegal. In a civil society, individuals sacrifice certain rights so that those who cannot use those rights responsibly are unable to degrade society through negligence, apathy, or malice.

    I challenge you, or anyone, to present one law that benefits all of society, or one law that isn't founded on morals.

    --

    "I must not fear. Fear is the mind killer." -Bene Gesserit Litany Against Fear
    1. Re:All society? by Viceice · · Score: 1

      I think protection by law against being killed by others pretty much benefits everybody.

      Survival isn't a moral trait; it's an instinct that all living creatures have. Like I said, moral is a dirty word.

      --
      Sometimes I wish I was a plumber, then I'd know how to deal with other people's shit.
  130. Who Pays by rtb61 · · Score: 1
    It does matter how much it costs society. If it negatively affects the majority and is not productive to society why should the majority pay for it or pay for it's enforcement. After all it is just entertainment and much of the time it is of dubious or even negative value to society.

    When the copyright laws were extended they stole that content from the general public (creative content can only be created with the support of a society to fund it). Do I support stealing the content (turn about is fair play), of course, but legally via changes to and reducing the length copyright laws (it will happen, it is just a matter of how long it takes).

    --
    Chaos - everything, everywhere, everywhen
  131. and what part of FAIR USE don't you understand? by alizard · · Score: 1
    Maybe google is your friend. However, since it probably isn't, try clicking here.

    The moderators who marked your astroturf "informative" should quit. I found your post via metamod... and marked your "Informative" rating "unfair", since "Stupid" and "Astroturf" are unavailable.