MPAA Boss Makes Case for ISP Content Filtering
creaton writes "At the annual UBS Global & Media Communications Conference yesterday, MPAA boss Dan Glickman banged on the copyright filtering drum during a 45-minute speech. Glickman called piracy the MPAA's #1 issue and told the audience that it cost the studios $6 billion annually. His solution: technology, especially in the form of ISP filtering. 'The ISP community is going to be at the forefront of this in the future because they have everything to lose and nothing to gain by not seeing that the content is being properly protected ... and I think that's a great opportunity.' AT&T has already said it plans to filter content, but others may be more reluctant to go along, notes Ars Technica: 'ISPs that are concerned with being, well, ISPs aren't likely to see many benefits from installing some sort of industrial-strength packet-sniffing and filtering solution at the core of their network. It costs money, customers won't like the idea, and the potential for backlash remains high.'"
No one has told this guy about encryption yet?
Seven puppies were harmed during the making of this post.
Glickman called piracy the MPAA's #1 issue
No, the MPAA's #1 issue is their high prices and crappy movies.
I'm fairly sure it is either incorrect on "nothing" and "everything", or "lose" and "gain"...
Self proclaimed typo king, and inventor of the bear destroying coffee table (patent not pending).
Easy answer. If it REALLY costs the MPAA companies $6bn a year, they should be willing to pay quite a lot to have it done. Say, somewhere around 50% of the "pirated" revenue. So ask them to pay the ISPs $3bn a year and see if they are so keen. How many other investments do you know with a guaranteed 100% return?
- Paul
on a method of locally delivering stored digital content (Video-On-Demand) for fees, such as subsidizing the cost of VOD servers, more content would make it to the end users legally. I would see that as a win-win-win (MPI,ISP,User) for everyone. They get their cut, the ISP doesn't have to pay for the excess bandwidth in/out of their network and the end users get quick access to VoD.
Everything except public domain and governmental reports will be filtered?
By definition, all text, pictures, and video have copyright applied to them at the moment of creation.
1) the DMCA allows for safe harbor IF ISP's don't otherwise filter content. So if they start filtering copyright, they can be held liable for other illegalities - 419 scams, stock fraud, child porn.
2) The **AA's will therefore lobby for an exception to the DMCA for their stuff.
3) Congress will grant it.
Any questions?
"As God is my witness, I thought turkeys could fly." A. Carlson
I hope AT&T doesn't mind getting dragged into pretty much every lawsuit involving one of their customers that comes down the pike now... "what do you mean you're not responsible for the child porn coming out of one of your client's computers!? You filter content now, don't you...?"
(I know, loopholes and such, but at least (IMHO only) the precedent and mechanisms to claim AT&T responsible for all their users' content is now in place. If they filter inbound, they can filter outbound. If they filter movies, they can filter pr0n. If they filter by discrete packet, they should (at least according to a plaintiff in such a lawsuit) be now collaterally responsible for the flow of data through their network.
Quo usque tandem abutere, Nimbus, patientia nostra?
If they are willing to accept all of this liability, then I have no problems at all with them filtering network content. I'll still pick one of their competitors that doesn't, however.
I am TheRaven on Soylent News
you can't own information
you can own atoms: a ham sandwich, your car in the driveway, but bits and bytes, sorry, not yours, never will be
you'll figure it out in 200 years at the rate you are going
intellectual property law is philosophically incoherent. it is your moral duty to ignore it or sabotage it
And it's a point that is rarely if ever brought up.
These filtering systems, and by this I mean systems from Macrovision on VCRs on up to DVDs and internet video, serve not just to protect 'the content' but also serves to lock out any growing or potential competition. Just as the RIAA presumes that all MP3s are illegal, the MPAA presumes that all content online must also be illegal. How can any filter system like that ensure that legal content is permitted unhindered? And when 'legalized' video content is allowed through, what's there to prevent DRM or Watermarking from being stripped from the original data?
What these systems serve best, just as in the case of DVD CCS, not to protect the copyright...or really even the ability to copy, but the right of playback and content formatting and presentation control. How many times have you bought a DVD only to find that there are stupid commercials or previews that you are prevented from skipping? That's the REAL intent as far as I'm concerned.
Tired of FB/Google censorship? Visit UNCENSORED!
The RIAA and MPAA claim billions of dollars in damages due to piracy each year, yet when asked how much an individual download costs, they have no clue.
Get a clue: Clamping down on casual trading is not going to bring increased revenues. People aren't paying because they either see no value, or they feel the process is flawed. Making it harder to find these works won't make anyone suddenly feel as though there is value. People will just start to look elsewhere, or - as usual - get smarter, and find means around this. Virtually all deep packet inspection can be thwarted by encryption, so what exactly is there to be gained except more headaches for those running ISPs and higher prices for their customers?
"The ISP community is going to be at the forefront of this in the future because they have everything to lose and nothing to gain..."
What do ISPs have everything lo loose? They provide connection. Period. That's why customers pay them.
Not for filtering them. Period.
Is this "everything to loose" some kind of a threat? Reminds me a movie line: Go ahead, make my day...
Oh, right, I forgot; this is Slashdot. No-one has girlfriends, much less spouses and/or children :-)
- "History shows again and again how nature points out the folly of men" -- Blue Oyster Cult, 'Godzilla'
is to step on the citizens' legal rights like privacy and free speech.
And the software to do this is already fully mature thanks to American companies' partnership with the Chinese government. If you don't think it will happen, watch the PBS Frontline episode Tank Man. After railing on the Chinese government for censoring photos and video on the internet for 50 minutes, the American censors step in during part six and delete out a scene of their own in the name of copyright. It's already happening voluntarily. AT&T is promising you it will ratchet up the online oppression. Those reluctant to follow their lead will be forced to do so due to more legislation like the 1997 NET Act and the DMCA. The software developed in China could easily be deployed here. Copyright *IS* censorship.