15-Year-Old Scams YouTube
SurturZ writes "A fifteen year old from Perth, Australia, posed as an employee of the Australian Broadcasting Commission, demanding that YouTube remove hundreds of video clips of 'The Chasers War on Everything.' The amusing part is that The Chaser is a comedy company well known to perpetrate exactly this sort of prank."
I can see why you think that part is interesting, then again, it's a public service company so any policy other than "get our content out there on as many platforms as possible" would be absurd. It's the tax payers who pay for it, thus everything produced under the ABC banner should be (and is it seems) public domain by definition. On a sidenote: As I said, any other policy would be absurd. Sweden's SVT currently is absurd.
Don't be crazy anymore!
"You mean they lie about whether they're authorised to act on behalf of copyright holders _under penalty of perjury_?"
And why would an Australian minor care about penalty of perjury of a US court?
Or have you missed the part where this points out the silliness of DMCA requests from international interests?
That's simply because the commercial television media here doesn't have much as of a budget for news and tends to take everything in the press releases on trust.
Not only is it brilliant, but in essence it is a form of automated civil disobedience.
Interesting idea. Illegal as hell, but very interesting.
The higher the technology, the sharper that two-edged sword.
The head of the comedy department didn't fly off the handle saying we're suing the kid. The police didn't show up at his door to take them away in hand cuffs. There response was "Everyone does dumb stuff when they're 15." What happened to that attitude in America?
- Joe
Exactly. I wouldn't want to be caught writing such a program, but if it became widely spread it could certainly influence media conglomerates like Google and MySpace to use their weight to get these laws changed...
Or what if it specifically didn't target certain types of videos/songs? A Christian organization could write a virus that would send take down requests for Islamic, Jewish, and Atheistic files, for example. Likewise, Sony could include it in their next root kit and have all of their competitors' fan sites and music video uploads removed.
SWM seeks new sig for a brief fling
or if he ends up on a list that guarantees that he can never get a visa.
I'm confused... why would he care if he can't get a visa to visit a country he probably has no interest in visiting?
http://blog.nexusuk.org
To say he scammed them seems a bit harsh. He didn't do this for any personal gain, which is implied when you call it a scam. It was silly and he shouldn't have done it, but it wasn't as serious as a scam. No harm done, except maybe a little time lost and some advertisment money. On the other hand, Youtube has learned a lesson.
Gotta point out that if the legal copyright owner gives permission for free use of its material, it's got nothing to do with "piracy."
It actually creeps me out a little whenever I see "pirating" used as a general term for "downloading something for free." That's only true if all media is locked up and restricted... and we're not there quite yet.
I should buy some cement.