U.S. High Level Anti-Piracy Post Created
Vicissidude wrote to mention a CNN/Money article, announcing that President Bush has created a new senior-level position to fight global intellectual-property piracy From the article: "Bush has tapped Chris Israel, currently deputy chief of staff for Gutierrez, to head up the administration's anti-piracy efforts. China -- where 90 percent of music and movies are pirate copies -- will be a chief priority, Gutierrez said."
Drug trafficking is a major problem around the world. We believe that it is costing U.S. businesses and citizens about $250 billion in tax dollars and wages," some random talking head told Reuters in an interview with reporters and editors.
The party currently running the country, tapped the resources of a random individual that is currently an up-in-coming member of the political party, to head up the administration's anti-drug efforts. A random South American Country, along with Afghanistan -- where 90 percent of cocaine and heroine originate-- will be a chief priority, this random government official said.
"Frankly, our goal is to reduce (South America and Afghanistan's drug trade) to zero," he said. This government official declined to specify a timetable, but acknowledged it could be a lengthy effort which will waste just as much tax money and resources as the users did before it while actually not eliminating anything.
He got a personal glimpse of rampant drug harvesting during visits earlier this month, when he was offered the chance to buy drugs and sell them to his own citizens, an aide said.
The United States will closely monitor a long list of anti-drug pledges these two countries made after the US government offered them huge aid packages at this month's high-level Joint Commission on Drug Trade meeting, including a promise to increase criminal prosecutions, he said.
Sounds awfully familiar doesn't it? Why do the rest of the American public sit there and refuse to acknowledge that this Anti-Piracy bullshit is nothing but a rehashed attempt to increase protections for Big Business under the guise of protecting *our* interests?
BTW - When are we going to start standing up against "lengthy wars" that have no real returns? Does no one remember that hundreds of billions of dollars have been wasted on this unending war?
Sad.
They will send China this email:
Dear China,
Please stop your copyright infringement, or we'll send another email. It's just not nice.
Thanks,
United States
Can't we just declare a war on piracy and get it over with?
If you don't know what AltaVista is (was), get off my lawn.
Going against the main source - chinese counterfeit - will do a world of good when you think of the current efforts (read: *IAA lawsuits). Too bad we had to wait for the Gov'ment to get involved since it will now become a masive sluash fund for politicians to draw cash from the people as it inneficiently tries to "do something about piracy".
I never spellcheck and I freely admit it. Save your karma for more worthwhile "lol erorrs" replies
The only thing the US should be doing to reduce piracy abroad is -possibly- sanctioning them - but since the US would be dead in the water in several ways (DEBT!) without China, they can't even do that.
They have this new post for fighting piracy, that's all great and stuff, but howcome the biggest antipiracy news concerns torrentsites and so forth? Those sites are not earning with the piracy, and because of that, are not the biggest pirating people anyhow.
People who sell pirated products (movies games and all other stuff that can be pirated) have MUCH more motivation to do their "job" and in my mind, de facto are MUCH more to blame about this whole piracy problem.
Of course, without the releasing groups there wouldn't be pirated goods for the sites or the sellers either... But still, the sellers are the biggest culprits in here...
Or then I am totally wrong, again. Would be the first time tho. To be wrong again.
-Is the meaning of life vanity, or is vanity the meaning of life?
You can really buy a lot of government with your money these days!
I don't know the meaning of the word 'don't' - J
... they staffed the post with a pirate's mortal enemy: a ninja.
A guy walks into a bar... well, I forgot the joke, but the punchline is that he's an alcoholic.
Hans Bwix you're busting my baws here! I told you we don't have any piwated pwogwams!
I believe the threat of Chinese nukes should take priority over whether or not Xi Chuan has an illegal copy of Windows Vista. Let the software companies handle the software and let the President worry over oil.. I mean world peace.
Please don't mod funny, it's not.
/. spaztech
So corporations get a 'czar' to protect their civil interests. Great! When do we get a Civil Liberties/Privacy czar to protect ours?
Bueller?.....Bueller?....Bueller?....
- Despite popular opinion, I am not perfect.
I never get it....the past two presidents have both tried Marijuana and/or cocaine -- you'd think they'd both know that neither is worth the billions of dollars spent annually to stop the inflow. Actually, like the PATRIOT act, US drug law is aimed at getting around personal property and privacy rights of US citizens. Think I'm kidding? Take a drive through south Georgia with $20,000 cash in your car -- and get pulled over for somthing innocuous like speeding. Chances are if you are some fat, white bumpkin, the deputy will ask to search your car. If you say no, they will become suspicious and get a warrant. If you agree, they will find the money and automatically assume it is profits from illegal drug activity, unless you can prove otherwise. Once confiscated, you have to prove the source of the money before what's left (yes, what's left) will be returned. Also, these laws are passed at a time when we have more folks incarcerated for consensual crimes than in any other point in the history of the republic. Let freedom ring. Yeah, whatever.
Bush came to slashdot and made a post declaring a war on pirates?
I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
The guy tapped to take up the post is a public policy executive at, where else, Time Warner. I will refrain from sarcasm, because it'll just make me look snotty, but this guy is being set up for a conflict of interests. He won't be doing independent analysis of piracy problems; he'll be a high-level executive mouthpiece for the media conglomerates.
I love the tagline, the "keeping-the-bread-buttered" department.
Now pay attention, all of you who never had a civics class:
The President is the Chief of the Executive Branch of the government.
The Executive Branch of the government is there to enforce the laws created by the Legislative Branch (aka Congress) provided that they are consistent with the Constitution, as dictated by the Judicial Branch (Supreme Court).
This is like your local Police department appointing a "Drug Czar" or a "Gang Violence Prevention Czar" or "Soccer Moms must die" Czar. All of these (except the last) are valid positions - the department, faced with particular challenges which require specific expertise, creates a subdepartment to deal with them specifically.
19 year olds living in their basement running warez sites might disagree, but that doesn't make it untrue or shady, or worthy of the old tinfoil hat.
I want to delete my account but Slashdot doesn't allow it.
Terrorism still on the rise, poverty, famine and disease running rampant through large parts of the world, growing unrest in an ever increasingly militant Middle East.... what does the US govt. come up with in these troubled times?
That's right, they bend over and take large cash injections up the rear from the corrupt media industry and spend YOUR OWN money launching lawsuits against you. Ho ho ho ho ho.
And I just adore the extreme arrogance of a US political post being created to fight *global* IP infringement. So will they be enforcing other countries laws in other countries, or will it be US law? Either way is just.... wow... too arrogant for words.
Seriously you guys, get off your damn asses and find a government that will work for the voters instead of working for the people who bribe them the most.
China holds close to $700 billion of US govt. debt in T-bills
Originally, the purpose of this buying behaviour was to manipulate the fluctuation of the yuan, which until yesterday was pegged to the dollar. The unintended effect was that the US government started to spend like drunken sailors, financing all sorts of things with deficit spending. With the yuan now floating in relation to a basket of currencies instead of pegged to the dollar, the impetus to continue buying dollars to manipulate the yuan is greatly weakened.
Generally, when you owe a bank a lot of money, you don't run into the bank screaming about how evil they are, piss on the rug, and then set some trash cans on fire. It tends to make the bankers rather unwilling to keep underwriting your debt.
"Why don't you interface with my ass...by biting it!" -Bender B. Rodriguez
Ok, so one of the points of conservatism is that they are for 'Big Business', and against 'big government' and that 'big business' should govern itself. This includes the companies creating their own anti-piracy software.
So where is the justification that government needs to step in and help MSFT (who just posted record profits) fight against piracy? What is the government going to do? Put in sanctions against China? That would cause further damage to other industries (e.g. Steel).
Maybe the Fed's should call up Balmer and say "Steve, with $36B in revenues... surely you can solve your own problems without involving our tax dollars.
Back in the 19th Century, the U.S. was the pirate harboring nation. The U.S. didn't recognize foreign copyrights until 1891.
After this there will be a Patent Policy Czar for Europe to make "suggestions" to the EU. Soon there will be a cabinet-level agency, the Department of Intellectual Property. When energy prices really start to take off and the economy starts to tank, the pols in DC will claim that "intellectual property" makes up a large chunk of what the country exports, and deserves the greatest "protections" available.
"Intellectual property" is not real property.
The War on Piracy will be as successful as the War on Terrorism and the War on Drugs (not to mention the War on Poverty and previously, the War on Rum). This means that we can start to see big money for the pirates, as well as turf wars and violence. Yay! Thanks, Mr. Bush!
The initial stage of the anti-piracy campaign will be broken down into several simple goals:
If that doesn't stop piracy, nothing will. Er, I guess nothing will... nevermind.
Are they going after guys selling DVDs in swap meets and street corners? How many can they catch? If they do start, it is only going to make bootlegs more expensive, and this leads to more competition, and since illicit money is at stake, illicit means are going to be used to protect market share. I wonder where we've seen this happen before, hmmm?
They can't shut down the servers in China, and they can't stop the Chinese from infringing (hell, they can't even stop Americans really).
So, other than posturing, what is this going to accomplish?
I guess they slap each other on the ass for coming up with a "solution."
insert inflammatory anti-microsoft comment here
China -- where 90 percent of music and movies are pirate copies....
I was in China last month attending one of the biggest audio-visual trade shows.
90 percent of music and movies sold in China and India are way overpriced for the public. For example a DVD costs between $9-$11.
As long as the price remains high piracy will happen...doesnt matter if it is Guiterez or his mother-in-law is the US Anti-Piracy Police Chief.
A few weeks back I was dealing with a top Indian VCD/DVD distributor in Bombay. Later I saw films from his label at the nearest roadside shack selling for Rs.50-100 ($1-$2) with the same label/cover/inlay card/logo/details as the ones available in regular stores. Later I realised it is the same guy who distributes to both the regular stores and the 'pirate'.
This business practice makes sense for the distributor...he makes a profit whether he is selling to a regular store or 'pirate' (a slimmer margin when he sells to the 'pirate'). And we all know the material cost for producing a DVD.
I also heard both original DVDs and duplicates are made in the same factory...which is real socialism.
Tat Tvam Asi
Isn't the mean annual income in China under $2000? Where do they plan to find this huge untapped market? Given an income of this amount, I think $1 is a pretty fair price for copyright protections. Perhaps the cartels should lower their prices.
I've known several people who carry that kind of cash around with them on a daily basis.
For example, a family friend of ours typically carries around $50,000 cash with him, or within a few minutes of where he is at. He will often buy cars from people, and pulling out a huge wad of cash will generally get someone excited, and more likely to think about the cash than the deal they are making when selling something. He would also sometimes hang around the municipal airport, and watch for frustrated pilots who were having basic problems with their planes. He'd start talking to them, and get them to the point where they'd say something like "I should just sell this POS.". Then, he'd whip out his wad of cash, and make an offer, which the pilot would often times accept without really thinking about it. He'd take the plane, make the minor repairs, then turn around and resell it for a nice profit.
Besides, if someone wants to carry that amount of cash around on them, it isn't anyone's business except their own. You don't need a reason.
Lie, Cheat, and Steal?
are you serious?????
dude, can we get a recount on those Florida and Ohio votes?
dude, can we let independent coders analyze algorithms in the new voting machines?
dude, what's really good with those WEAPONS OF MASS DESTRUCTION??????
are you fucking serious?
And isn't being an anonymous coward akin to wearing a hood with eyeholes cut out? can you even stand behind your statements? Loser.
Lol... and its interesting that you associate my "proposed mass election fraud" with democrats, since I don't have any party affiliation. lol.
un burrito me trampeó.
The creation of an office to combat piracy is hardly going to be pointless or ineffective, necessarily. It just depends on what they are going after and how they go about it.
There are some important differences between a Drug War and a Piracy War. The one thing that the Drug War has done is drive up the street price of drugs. Now, for a drug interdiction effort, that's not necessarily going to be anything special, and may even increase violence because addicts are going to get increasingly desperate to get their fix no matter what the cost. Therefore you have to attack the demand problem, not supply.
Piracy, on the other hand, relies on keeping its prices cheap to function because there is a legal alternative method to obtain their goods. No one is going to buy a pirated copy of media which may lack features and is definitely illegal unless the price savings is compelling. Right now, the price IS compelling and that's why it is a problem. However, every percent that you narrow the price gap by making it more expensive to produce, and every obstacle you raise is going to cause more and more customers to the legal channels as they reach their tolerance for dealing with unlicensed vendors. Attacking supply and transport of pirated goods, therefore, can be very effective.
A US office in charge of this effort can have a significant effect on piracy if they gain the power to provide certain targetted incentives and cooperation to their counterpart bureaucracies in target countries like China. No invasions, secret agents, or dramatic moves are required. You simply need people who know the chokepoints for the piracy and then what screws to turn to squeeze those points. The way to get this knowledge is to employ knowledgable specialists, and to do that you will need a specialist organization.
Now they have the organization, it remains to be seen if the government can actually do the rest.
I'm no fan of the *AA's, but I think that running a full-on commercial business based on other people's work is shitty. While it's true that greed in a Media company's upper management will siphon some of any extra money from removing piracy, it won't siphon all of it. That remaining extra money can be used to take risks on movies or artists that are less formulaic, but potentially much more rewarding. Some filesharing can help new artists, but taken to an industrial extreme, can ultimately limit how far they can go if the money that could be risked on them is instead being collected by pirates. As sucky as the system is today, the recording industry reinvests a lot of money to bring out new music. The piracy business contributes nothing back to either artists or studios.
...but that rug really pulled the room together.
Will this office also go after violations of GPL and other open-source licenses?
Computers are useless. They can only give you answers.
-- Pablo Picasso
According to TFA, President Bush is very interested in stopping software, music, and movie piracy in China -- and is creating a new senior position to target global piracy and counterfeiting, which costs US companies billions.
At least for me, I am very interested in affordable health care, less pollution, better school systems, adequate road and highway infrastructure, and the ability to find a decent job that pays a decent wage. Too bad I don't have enough money to buy me some gov'ment! I guess the rest of these things will just have to take care of themselves somehow.
Homer no function beer well without.
What's the point of creating a government department to fight international piracy that only has jurisdiction in the United States?
The only pirates they can go after are American citizens.
When the IP theft czar gets done, the pirates will only be able to steal IP from the offshored factories.
The thing is, that is where all the pirates are probably getting stolen IP from now.
Ever read up on the Chevrolet Spark and the Cherry QQ? Those two cars look alike. They are both sold in China and the latter was made from plans stolen right out of the plant that makes the former.
If Bush wants to stop intellectual property piracy then he needs to stop allowing that stuff to be offshored.
Otherwise it is all a simple matter of paying off the plant management staff, what with their pennies-on-the-US-dollar salary, to cough up an email of the blueprints.
And if you think anyone will be able to do anything about it, ask Cisco what they were able to do when their routers were pirated by Huawei Corp. Cisco abandoned the lawsuit because
a) Huawai is funded by China's government;
and b) Cisco's factories are in China, which could be shut down at any time.
Read more at http://in.tech.yahoo.com/031001/137/2858q.html
You may not think offshoring is a problem but as long as it persists, IP piracy will dip for a while as the US clamps down, and then IP piracy will centralize itself in China, with the help of the Chinese government, and IP piracy will go back to its usual blazing pace.
And the US will not sanction China because corporations depend on them to produce those cheap routers and DVD players.
--- Grow a pair, liberals... stop letting the Republicans bully you!