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Canadian Fined For Videoing Movie In Theatre

canadian_right writes "A Calgary man was fined $1,495 and banned from theaters for a year in the first conviction under a new Canadian law making recording a movie in a theater a crime. Until the new law took effect in 2007, prosecutors had to show evidence of distribution to get a conviction; now, recording without permission is sufficient. The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was disappointed that jail time was not given." The man was also banned for a year from possessing any video recording equipment, even a video-capable cellphone, outside of his home.

382 comments

  1. Your Movie Rights Online. by Ostracus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

    --
    Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
    1. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bhtooefr · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Not sure that it's so much that the recording shouldn't be illegal (it should be, IMO, you're paying for a one view license, at that specific time, technically, and stuff even states that,) but rather the punishment being that extreme.

    2. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      Shouldn't you be able to record anything you see or hear with your own eyes, short of in cases of invasion of privacy?
      It's just on a tape instead of synapses.

    3. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bhtooefr · · Score: 4, Insightful

      Oh, and I'll reply to myself, because I forgot something... the fine certainly wasn't extreme, the not being allowed to possess video recording equipment outside of his house part is what I consider extreme.

    4. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Moridineas · · Score: 1

      I would agree, though the only part that really seems egregious is not being allowed any video recording equipment at all. Then again, he's an idiot, and it's only one year.

      Also, what if a theater WANTS to let him in?

    5. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      To share with your closet million or so friends?

    6. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I believe the interesting part is that its a relatively new law, iow not so long ago (2007 maybe) it was legal to video record a movie in some parts of Canada.

    7. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      Shouldn't you be able to record anything you see or hear with your own eyes, short of in cases of invasion of privacy?
      It's just on a tape instead of synapses.

      Um, you do realize that there are a few itty bitty fundamental differences between your brain and an electronic medium? Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.

      Unless of course you're a cyborg from the future, in which case I for one welcome our apparently borderline retarded, shitty-analogy-making, time traveling, Cybernetic Anonymous Coward Overlords.

    8. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I thought that the first-post was going to be about the fine: $1495

      Since when did the marketing department decide that knocking $5 off of $1500 would make people think that it was a better deal?

    9. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by conlaw · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I think there may be one more obvious question; despite the illegality of his actions,how could anyone expect to come up with a good image while just sitting there with a video camera aimed at the screen? It seems that you'd have to be careful where you sit--not too close nor too far from the screen. Then, even if you're in the best seat for making a quality videotape, you'll still have to deal with people getting up and walking in front of you, while the other folks around you are talking and a couple of kids are screaming.

    10. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by cjfs · · Score: 1

      Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      He shouldn't. The reason it's YRO is more concern over how far this will go. The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was pushing for jail time for this.

      People have been arrested before for recording under 1min clips on camera phones. Banning someone from operating any recording devices outside their home is a little odd as well.

    11. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      And that's why people dislike cam and telesync releases.

    12. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0, Interesting

      You may joke, but pretty soon it's going to be the situation - do we transcend our humanity and become something better, or do we let retards in the movie industry decide we shouldn't? We _know_ where their biases lie - borg, replicators, terminator, matrix, scary cyborgs in general.

      They HATE AND FEAR transhuman/posthuman technology and want to brainwash us to hate it too. Except for the japanese of course, they just go "ooh it might be good, it might be bad" (see: ghost in the shell).

      I say fuck the movie industry and fuck copyright and patent law. The irony is I don't even pirate their shit. But damned if they should be able to prevent me having an artificial visual memory superior to base human abilities.

    13. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Possibly the judge was trying to draw a hard line under the lesson for the perp and the public, without resorting to jail time -- which would be excessive for a non-violent first-time offense, immediately expensive for the public, and probably long-term expensive for the public and the perp because of the troubles he'll pick up from his time in our overcrowded prisons.

      It's an interesting sentence. It'll get more news-report column-inches and watercooler-discussion than a simple fine. I think the judge was thinking.

    14. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by hairyfeet · · Score: 0, Troll

      Not to mention this means that the guy will not be able to have a cell phone for a year,since it has been ages since I have seen even a shitty cell that didn't have a camera built in. Hell even those jitterbugs that they advertise for old folks that don't know how to use a cell has a camera built in!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    15. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by narcberry · · Score: 2

      Well he wasn't recording the movie, only the light absorption patterns on an otherwise blank screen. Where else is he going to do that?

      I wish Canadians would stop valuing corporations over science, like here in the states.

      --
      Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
    16. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Isn't the proper term, "recording a movie" not "videoing move"?

    17. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Wiseleo · · Score: 1

      Matinee showing - that usually means the theatre is nearly empty.

      I tend to watch movies during such times. I don't tape them.

      There are better ways. My camera, for example, has a "rec light" off switch.

      A better way could be using a micro-tripod, pointing the camera between seats and probably from either underneath a seat on which an object like a backpack could be placed or from top of the seat held in place by a backpack and covered by a jacket.

      Good luck detecting that!

      --
      Leonid S. Knyshov
      Find me on Quora :)
    18. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Informative

      Oh please. There are plenty of cell phones without cameras. You don't ALWAYS have to go for all that flash. Mine doesn't. My kids don't. My husband's has a camera but not video.

    19. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by LingNoi · · Score: 3, Interesting

      and as soon as you can record those synapses and download them off the internet we'll be hearing about mind wiping devices.

      I am assuming in 2040 we'll be hearing something like this, "We wanted to wipe people's brains before, it's just up until this point the technology hasn't been available to enforce our rights. You have the right to view our movie only once, not remember it!"

    20. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Well you might be able to get one if you paid out the nose,but when I went this summer to get my mom a new phone after hers bought the farm the local Alltel didn't offer ANY phones without at least the basic camera and goodies. Believe me I asked because my mom SUCKS at tech and I wanted to find mom the stupidest non tech phone possible. They simply didn't have one,and not a single phone that they give free with a plan didn't have a camera and the color screen and funky ringtones.

      Lucky for me I've been teaching the oldest nephew the ways of tech so he can walk next door to his grandma's place so I don't have to drive out and do tech support when she messes up her phone, but if they would have given her a condition like that she would have been SOL as there would have been no way she could have afforded what they wanted to "special order" a plain jane phone.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    21. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by ozphx · · Score: 4, Funny

      I see what you did their...

      --
      3laws: No freebies, no backsies, GTFO.
    22. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gregbot9000 · · Score: 1

      what? spelled everything wrong?

    23. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Nazlfrag · · Score: 1

      Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.

      So arrest him for that. If the video is only ever used for personal private use, who was harmed by the filming?

    24. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Yvan256 · · Score: 4, Funny

      You have the right to view our movie only once, not remember it!

      In the case of "Battlefield Earth", that would be a welcomed feature.

    25. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Which is when you hit up eBay, and go find yourself an old phone. I've actually got an old Kyocera QCP-6035 that I got simply because that was the ultimate in geek badass circa 2001... and I can get it activated on my plan (and because Sprint allows ESN swapping online, I can actually switch between my Centro and it at will, without having to get a line added, I believe.)

      Or, you can usually get one of the prepaid phones without a camera, and then move it over to that carrier's monthly plans.

    26. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by audiodude · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He shouldn't, but it's simply not a criminal matter. It should be prohibited by theater policy, in which case once he starts he's trespassing. And making a copy of the movie is a civil matter between him and the owner of the movie's copyright.

    27. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Furmy · · Score: 1

      Yeah, poor guy needs a camera that can't record video. He'll probably be stuck with an iPhone

    28. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 3, Insightful

      It's there theater and there movie. He was violating their agreement in all senses. File sharing infinitely copyable bits is one thing. This is outright blatant theft.

      Well, the movie is just electromagnetic radiation and variations of pressure in the air, right? Why aren't we allowed to reproduce them, huh?

      The correct answer is that the whole thing is stupid. We look at copyrighted media as just the media, and not what's on it. Imagine if we did that with private data? I'm allowed to copy bits, so I can copy your bits off your hard drive, or off your bank account, or wherever your credit card details are stored. Oh, they are stored physically? Well, since I'm allowed to capture light in my camera, I'll just photograph your documents/credit card.

      Thankfully, for all of us, the courts aren't so stupid. They realise that the value of media is more than the physical components. Unfortunately for some, the realisation that arrangement of mundane materials can have value in itself opens the door to applying the concept of property. I guess you have to take the good with the bad. You have to pay for your media, but then again, you get to keep the rest of your life savings.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    29. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Dachannien · · Score: 1

      They actually have detectors that can pick up the glint off of the camera lens caused by a bright IR emitter placed in the theater. Hard to tell whether/how many theaters have those installed, but it takes care of that problem.

      On a side note, in my former state of Ohio, this particular offense is a felony. It also doesn't have to be a theater, and it only has to be somewhere on the premises where a copyrighted work is being shown. Also, the facility owner is given the right to detain the offender until the police arrive (despite the fact that the facility owner virtually never has a stake in the copyrighted work). Are you a reporter doing a local news expose on the poor health conditions at the theater concession stand? Congratulations, buddy, you've just committed a felony.

    30. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by jroysdon · · Score: 1

      Plenty of current phones have no cameras. The Blackberry 8830 World Edition is one of them.

    31. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Lucky75 · · Score: 1

      Cell phones really shouldn't be counted as "video recording equipment". I don't understand the point of that punishment. Presumably it is to deter him from recording other things illegally, but honestly, let the man record his 320x240 60-second per clip cellphone video.

      What would he do, piece together the video for each minute, maybe using multiple cellphones so he wouldn't miss anything during the save delay? Maybe they should prevent him from carrying multiple cellphones instead.

      --
      DNA -- National Dyslexic Association
    32. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Lucky75 · · Score: 1

      The glint off the camera lens? As opposed to the glint off of a glasses lens? Lets ban those too, maybe they have a camera behind them as well...oh wait, it's the thing that the camera lens was based off of instead,

      --
      DNA -- National Dyslexic Association
    33. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Sinbios · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Do you know anyone who goes to the threatres and records a copy of the film for their "personal private use"?

      Besides, a movie ticket is a license to view the film once. If you want to do it multiple times you need to buy a different kind of license, called a DVD.

      --
      Anyone can "stand up for what they believe", but it takes a very brave individual to change what they believe. - Loundry
    34. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Gnaget · · Score: 0

      And actually, you bring up an interesting point. Take the Ender series (books 2-4), can't think of his name, but the boy with the cybernetic eye that could record. If we had that technology, would he then be banned from the theater? Technically, if you have a photographic memory and artistic skills, you should be banned to, because you could draw something out.

    35. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by freedom_india · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      No, they don't That's why this poor guy was not electrocuted or given a poison injection according to US DMCA.
      And that's why canadian banks are the strongest in the world.
       

      --
      "Doing what i can, with what i have." ~ Burt Gummer
    36. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by NiceGeek · · Score: 1

      Unless he jailbreaks it and installs Cycorder.

    37. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by jollyreaper · · Score: 1

      Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      I saw the Bond movie in the theater today and this story makes me regret that ticket.

      --
      Kwisatz Haderach
      Sell the spice to CHOAM
      This Mahdi took Shaddam's Throne
    38. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Poltras · · Score: 1

      Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.

      So arrest him for that. If the video is only ever used for personal private use, who was harmed by the filming?

      So you encourage RIAA tactics to sue anyone who ever had Kazaa/eDonkey/$p2psoftware installed on their computers? If they have proven anything, it is that what you are suggesting is NOT enforceable in any ways... so yeah, until you can prove the guy will only use the recording for himself without redistributing it, I should consider it illegal as well.

      Sorry pal, but reality is not as simple as "arrest only those who detonates bombs in malls, not those who build them as long as they don't use them" kind of thinking...

    39. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      They could let everybody watch the movies for free, and then as they passed the brain zapper built into the exit, they could charge the people who want to keep the memory of movie for downloading from their brain. They could also incorporate the memory transfer device into the cash register. The credit card information could be downloaded from long term memory while the movie was downloaded from short term memory.

    40. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by zippthorne · · Score: 2, Informative

      The ones with no camera are *cheaper*. You're just not looking hard enough. A cursory glance at my cell provider's offerings brought up the i335 by Motorola and S1 by Sanyo (i stopped looking after that) both free with 2 year agreement.

      Most of the pre-paid phones don't have cameras, either, and they're actually pretty small and sporty, and refreshingly no-frills.

      In fact, the one option you can't find is precisely the one you claimed you didn't want: a pricey up-scale wealth-announcer. You can't get a camera-free iPhone.

      --
      Can you be Even More Awesome?!
    41. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Glad that works where YOU are,but wouldn't work here. trying to get those PITA drones at Alltel to switch a phone you got somewhere else onto their network? You'd have an easier time juggling chainsaws while balancing on a bowling ball. And all their prepaid phones are the teeny bopper crap,just like their plan phones. I know because I thought of that too.

      Having choice must be a nice thing....sigh. Here in North Ar you have Alltel or.....well that is really it. You can get tracphone if you want to go climb a tree and wave your phone in the air every time you want to make a call,otherwise you are stuck on Alltel. And their employees know it and that is why walking into that place is like the ninth circle of hell. They know you ain't going anywhere. That is why I gave up my cell and just use a tracphone when I am on the freeway(which is pretty much the only place it works here) and use VoIP from my cable provider at home. Of course for high speed Internet you have cable in town or out of town you have.......well, you get the picture.My mom was a block and a half from the end of cable service when she built her home in 1980,and guess what? She is still a block and a half from cable service now!

      Of course the only reason she is on cell is because it is that or AT&T home,which charged her $400 for putting in a plastic phone jack that took all of 20 minutes and whose service was so lousy that it sounded like a tin can on a string and would cut out if you farted in its general direction. Like I said,having choices must sure be nice......big sigh.

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    42. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I imagine most people with glasses have two lenses and don't cover one for the entire film. Also, humans probably would move their head, so even if they were wearing a monocle, there'd be movement that such a detector would see.

      Failing that, they'd probably have a human operator who would look at it before risking shutting off the movie for nothing, who hopefully could rule out a pair of glasses first.

    43. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by CSMatt · · Score: 0

      A DVD is not a license to watch a film, it is a copy of the film that you are legally allowed to buy and then watch however you please, and then do with the disc itself however you please. The only exception is that you are not allowed to distribute copies of the disc or show it in a public setting.

    44. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by CSMatt · · Score: 1

      What exactly does your first sentence have to do with the rest of your post?

    45. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by CSMatt · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Let's not forget this little gem:

      The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was disappointed that jail time was not given.

      The fact that someone could get jail time for recording a movie is scary enough. The fact that the CMPDA wants to throw everyone caught recording a film into the slammer is just plain terrifying.

    46. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Patchw0rk+F0g · · Score: 1

      Man, I should forward the email I just got from a blogger, in reply to one of my posts. If there wasn't a difference between her brain and the electronic medium, then she wouldn't have written the tripe she did, in such an obviously "blunted" state.

      I've never had such a basic lesson in the distance between mind and medium in my in-box before. Some 60's parent's didn't live in vain.

      --
      When the going gets weird, the weird turn pro. ~~ Hunter S. Thompson
    47. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      It fits because we DON'T have the right to record movies in theatres and post them online...

    48. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      He could always get an iPhone. They don't do video.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    49. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      Well, there's always getting an ancient Alltel phone... or, getting a GSM repeater for $300 or so, and using the Tracfone...

    50. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      To share with your closet million or so friends?

      I don't think whether or not someone has publicly announced their sexual orientation has anything to do with it.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    51. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Kooty-Sentinel · · Score: 1

      An honest question - I wonder if the iPhone does count as a Video Recording Device, because jailbroken iPhones DO have video recording.

      --
      Your evaluation period for Productivity 1.0 has ended. Please purchase more coffee to continue using this product.
    52. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gyrogeerloose · · Score: 1

      Good question. I guess it would depend on whether the phone in question had been jailbroken. Most have not, probably because only nerds like us even know it can be done.

      --
      This ain't rocket surgery.
    53. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by stonedcat · · Score: 0

      I don't see what the fuss is all aboot eh.

      --
      You can't take the sky from me.
    54. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      Because of an assumption of liberty unless there's a good reason otherwise. The onus is on the other side, to show why he should be prevented from recording the movie.

    55. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.

      You can do this currently, with very poor fidelity, by storing a movie's plot in your meaty brain and repeating it to someone else. There's a bit quantitative gap there at the moment - but you can bet that improved technology is going to blur the boundaries within the next few decades.

    56. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by mpe · · Score: 1

      Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.
      Unless of course you're a cyborg from the future, in which case I for one welcome our apparently borderline retarded, shitty-analogy-making, time traveling, Cybernetic Anonymous Coward Overlords.


      But only if they look like Summer Glau :)

    57. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Not to mention this means that the guy will not be able to have a cell phone for a year,since it has been ages since I have seen even a shitty cell that didn't have a camera built in."

      He's only prohibited from having one with video recording facilities, not a camera. There are plenty of phones that have cameras without video capabilities, e.g. the source-of-a-million-Slashdot-articles iPhone.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    58. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "I think there may be one more obvious question; despite the illegality of his actions,how could anyone expect to come up with a good image while just sitting there with a video camera aimed at the screen?"

      Judging by some of the terrible stuff that's been on the torrent sites (which, by virtue of being an upstanding and law-abiding citizen, I have of course only viewed for research purposes), not being able to get a good image doesn't stop people from uploading movies that were obviously recorded in theatres under appalling conditions using less than wonderful equipment.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    59. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by thetoadwarrior · · Score: 5, Funny

      Well recording a movie is one of the worst things you can do. Al Qaeda record movies all the time.

    60. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by laederkeps · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Or, if you only want to view the film a few times but not commit to a lifetime* license, you can buy it on Blu-Ray and wait for the key revokation fever to hit you.

      And they say the consumer has too few choices...

      *lifetime of the storage media

    61. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by reiisi · · Score: 1

      First post and you're already asking if you're going to be the only shill?

      --
      Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    62. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      well, i red your comment and got really annoyed that someone would actually take the side of the s******* from movie industry. i tried to find a smart ass reply to your statement that goes against my moral and intellectual ideals. but yes why should it be allowed ... and in fact there is no way to allow it in general ... except for if the movie is shown to a public place.

      so where am i going here? is it right to record your favorite (or all) scenes of a movie you are watching, or is it wrong?
      morally it is right; of course it is, since anything else would mean you have to wipe your memory clean after watching ... but sadly and gladly law is not about moral its about justice.

      well, i am not so sure about how the law is in CA but in DE there is something called "hausrecht" meaning that when you are in someone else's home/house you have to abide their RULES (as long they have a point and comply with the constitution)... that's why they can kick you out and refuse further entrance in the theater when you do something they do not agree...

      a law against doing something that is yet covered by that right is an action that is:
      -redundant, as actually already exists a rule
      -unjust, as the other possible rules, like "bringing food with" or "anything" are not implemented in law (yet ;) )
      -waste of justice, as things like that are of minor or actually no interest for the public
      - oh.. and it leaves the theaters that allow screening of the movies for personal use no choice than to disallow it where they would actually allow it and maybe then they have to close the theater though. (this is maybe unlikely but yet it could exist)

      so that's the reason why it shouldn't be prohibited by law (or actually not made into law)

      but careful here... when it isn't prohibited by law it doesn't mean that it is allowed to do so.
      an general allowance always needs a consent from the community. a public benefit would lead to a general allowance. yet there is none.

      so to ANSWER YOUR QUESTION why someone would want to video a movie for private use ... there are several reasons:
      one is for example: as the movies aren't sold as DVDs or VHS yet to give a family member, that is tied to bed (forced to be in bed due to sickness), the opportunity to watch the movie anyway.
      or several other examples i can think of .... but to actually know where i am going ASK YOURSELF: if YOU WOULD HAVE THE BENEFIT OF FREELY RECEIVING A PERSONAL COPY OF THE MOVIE YOU JUST WATCHED what would you do with it? i mean you probably red the book watched the movie bought the t-shirt ... what you need the personal copy for? ... i dont know but i know YOU DO.

      about the penalty:
      the penalty is much to extreme ... like you wrote in your other comment
      and i find that asking for prison where it actually is only a disrespect to the property owner shows where this f*** is actually going and that people need to take a stand and not ask "why allow it" ... ask "why prohibit it by law?" ... and why in hell would any judge that has the power to make person a virtual cripple not simply say ... "the case is dismissed an the person has to be granted to have a personal copy of the movie" .... that would be the right decision to make.

      the future of cinemas:
      why you go to cinema anyway? what is the gain of sitting (straight) with a bunch of strangers (noisy, smelling and possibly infected with your next cold) in a big smelly room with a sticky floor watching commercials over and over. plus no pause button when you need to go to toilet. only to see a new movie? well, mr. and ms. MOVIE INDUSTRY here you see what should be next on your agenda. show new movies on a private basis. yes cinemas are obsolete. they became when movies started to convey "lets snuggle"-emotions ... i believe that was what lead to drive in cinemas?! ... ;)

    63. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Chrisje · · Score: 1

      Who is going to check that? Really.

      They're going to let the mounties stake out his place for the next year and frisk 'm every time he walks in and out of the house to see if he has any kind of camera on 'm?

      In Israel, people would just laugh at such a sentence. "Whatchugonnado" and "BFD" come to mind.

    64. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 5, Insightful

      What I find extreme is that there was the possibility of jail in the first place. He didn't use violence. He didn't threaten anyone. He's guilty of using a video camera in the wrong room.

      The worst you can accuse him of is that he was going to cause economic harm to a corporation (and even that's a stretch - how many people do you know that skip going to the cinema because some shitty rip is available? The only people I know who watch rips is because they can't physically go, and the rip is better than nothing)

      They didn't find a massive stash of recorded films and a dedicated shadowy organization ready to run off millions of DVDs and sell them across the far east, with him as the head making millions in profit. they found an unemployed builder on what appears to be his first offence. They didn't convict him of distribution or even copying.

      Yet the studios wanted to put him in jail for using a camera. That's what I find extreme.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    65. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by jargon82 · · Score: 1

      If the tech was at that level, would you need to watch the movie at all? Seems it could just be zapped into your brain (Which would certainly save on production costs ;) Yay more movie company profits!)

    66. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It's more of a deterrent in the sense that if he's found committing a crime with such a device on his person, he'll be in a whole heap more trouble.

    67. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Well, the movie is just electromagnetic radiation and variations of pressure in the air, right? Why aren't we allowed to reproduce them, huh?

      The correct answer is that the whole thing is stupid.

      Agreed. It's stupid to prohibit reproducing any of those.

      Imagine if we did that with private data? I'm allowed to copy bits, so I can copy your bits off your hard drive, or off your bank account, or wherever your credit card details are stored. [...] I guess you have to take the good with the bad. You have to pay for your media, but then again, you get to keep the rest of your life savings.

      No, that doesn't follow. Just like free speech doesn't entitle you to speak in my living room, freedom to reproduce information doesn't entitle you to break into my hard drive to obtain it, or to use it to withdraw from my bank account once you've got it.

      And frankly, this argument that you can't have privacy without copyright is off-base to begin with. There's a clear difference between public information offered to anyone who pays for it, like a movie, and private information disclosed only on a need-to-know basis, like financial or medical details. The law could certainly distinguish between them; like you said, the courts aren't stupid.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    68. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by PFI_Optix · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Most if not all cameras are vulnerable to being partially blinded by IR LEDs. I wonder if it would be possible for theaters to use these to ruin unauthorized recordings without spoiling the viewing experience, either by emitting from behind the screen or reflecting them off the screen along with the normal image.

      Of course enterprising pirates would eventually figure out how to work around this by filtering IR frequencies or whatever they would need to do, but it would stop casual recording and reduce the number of people who are capable of creating pirate copies in theaters, meaning that each arrest has a more significant impact on the scene.

      If you want to see the movie for free so bad, just wait for the DVD/Bluray rips to show up a day or two before it's in the store. If you really need to see it opening weekend, it's worth paying to see.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    69. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Lucky75 · · Score: 1

      So they would approach everyone with glasses who sits somewhat still?

      --
      DNA -- National Dyslexic Association
    70. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      No, that doesn't follow. Just like free speech doesn't entitle you to speak in my living room, freedom to reproduce information doesn't entitle you to break into my hard drive to obtain it, or to use it to withdraw from my bank account once you've got it.

      I don't have to break in. All I have to do is own a bank, or even just a restaurant, anything where I can get your bank/credit card details.

      And frankly, this argument that you can't have privacy without copyright is off-base to begin with.

      That's actually not the argument. It's a counter argument to this notion that copying is trivial, and that preventing it is stupid. Naturally this doesn't necessarily lead straight to copyright, but like I said, it opens the door to applying property. You must admit: there is value in our bits. We are prepared to torrent them, some of us are even prepared to brave the risk of criminal charges in order to alter/reproduce them. From deriving that bits have value, it's not unreasonable (but of course, not strictly necessary) to consider extending a version of property to them, especially when those bits come from the hard work of someone, whether they be an artist, or they be an average joe who has worked much of his lifetime in order to accumulate that value represented by those 32 bits. If you want arguments against copyright, I suggest you look at figuring out why we would be better off without applying property to intangible bits that represent art and entertainment, while apply property to intangible bits that represents private information. Trivialising information in the information age is futile. People know better.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    71. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by MiniMike · · Score: 1

      Oh, they just want to take the story and turn it into a movie...

    72. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Tikkun · · Score: 0, Redundant

      Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      Because you must record a movie to watch it.

      When you watch a movie, you are recording it with your mind. You can easily play back memorable parts at will, retransmit this information to others and with training you can memorize quite a bit of it (see Fahrenheit 451).

    73. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by CohibaVancouver · · Score: 2, Funny

      Am I going to be the only one who asks the obvious? Why should he be allowed to record the movie?

      Infidel. How DARE you ask such a blasphemous question on Slashdot.

      The answer is obvious: "Movies want to be free."

    74. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Oligonicella · · Score: 1

      No, it is not soon going to be the situation unless you call a hundred years or so 'soon'.

      "But damned if they should be able to prevent me having an artificial visual memory superior to base human abilities."

      They don't. Just pay for it cheapskate.

    75. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gsslay · · Score: 0

      He's guilty of using a video camera in the wrong room.

      You make it sound so innocent. He was just playing with his new toy, tucked out of sight in his clothing, and forgot he was in a movie theatre. Then, oops, before you know it he'd videoed a movie. Could happen to anyone.

      The only people I know who watch rips is because they can't physically go, and the rip is better than nothing)

      You mean people who can't physically go, and can't possibly contain themselves until the official DVD is out. Though just how it's possible to have such an urgent need to see a movie, and simultaneously be so unfortunate to have no way of seeing it, is a mystery. Must be very unlucky people.

    76. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Am I the only one in the world who actually enjoyed Battlefield Earth? No I'm not a Scientologist.

    77. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Killing others while drunk, no problem! Being a cop doing that - you just lose your job.

      http://www.cbc.ca/canada/manitoba/story/2008/07/03/taman-inquiry.html

      No jail! But god forbid someone records stuff with a camera! Jail him/her!

      Now that is fucked up.

    78. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Poltras · · Score: 1

      What exactly does your first sentence have to do with the rest of your post?

      *sigh* My parent suggested that we sue people who distribute copyrighted materials as opposed to those recording it. In my first paragraph, I stated that this was unenforceable and brought as proof that the RIAA tried exactly that and couldn't.

      Then, making an analogy with those who trigger bombs and those who make them, as similar to those who distribute the cam releases and those who make them. In both cases, as long as we can't enforce the first one, I'm against permitting the second one.

      So, what part of my post did you think made the less sense? I'm not sure I understand your inquiry, but I'm certain you didn't understand my post.

    79. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by LrdDimwit · · Score: 1

      You're paying admission to the show. While technically under US law you might have a leg to stand on for fair use for making a personal camcorder copy, it is also within the theatre chain's rights to say 'no camcorders allowed' and throw people out without refund. Don't like it? Get your own home theatre and hi-def disc. Or start your own theatre where camcording for personal use is allowed. (Be prepared for major movie studios to not give you access to any movies.)

      Everyone knows what these are used for. A source of bootleg copies of films that you can buy for a few bucks. So a while back, the film industry got a law passed (in the US, and I think also Canada) that specifically made filming inside of a movie theatre against the law in its own right. You can complain all you want, but the law is supposed to represent EVERYONE's interests, even the special interests everyone loves to hate, and it's real hard for me to say that this is unfair. There's very little legitimate reason you might want to do such a thing, and the law is aimed squarely at commercial bootleggers selling DVDs on a streetcorner.

    80. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bhtooefr · · Score: 1

      I don't have any issue with taping being illegal.

      Taping should be illegal, IMO.

      What I've got an issue with is the part of the punishment involving not being able to possess video recording equipment.

    81. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you do not remembering seeing it, you might be tempted to see it again. And again. And again...

    82. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Fyzzler · · Score: 1

      Wallmart sells prepaid Alltel simple freedom phones. I am sure you have Walmart's in Northern AR. Your mistake was stepping foot in the Alltel store in the first place. You can convert the simple freedom pre-paid phone to a regular billed account phone through their website or by calling Alltel directly. They are more than happy to take your money. You can even add the prepaid phone on as a second phone on an existing account.

      The walmart phones are simple no frills Motorola flip phones. Basically stripped down RAZR clones.

      --
      I have one question. If the Japanese Ministry of Agriculture is not in charge of Gundam, then who is?
    83. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by hairyfeet · · Score: 1

      Thank you for the info! I did not know you could skip the middlemen. After having such bad experiences with them I have tried to avoid cell phones like a goth avoiding a suntan. If my mom kills her phone again I will surely take your advice,but I am hoping that reports of AT&T expanding U-Verse in states like AR to compete with cable,plus the addition of what appears to be a DSLAM less than 4 blocks from my mother's house,may mean that I can finally get rid of cell phone providers and get her on high speed Internet with phone and TV from one location.

      It would be like a dream come true if I could simply remote in whenever she or my nephews broke their computer instead of having to pack up a box full of software tools and drive out there. Thanks for the information though,if she manages to kill her phone again that is exactly what I'll do. Thanks!

      --
      ACs don't waste your time replying, your posts are never seen by me.
    84. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A hundred years? try ten. You're woefully behind the times, I suspect you're american - have you seen the tech in japan and europe recently?

    85. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by garett_spencley · · Score: 1

      "I don't have to break in. All I have to do is own a bank, or even just a restaurant, anything where I can get your bank/credit card details."

      To my knowledge, there is nothing actually illegal about a bank employee reproducing your credit card details. In fact, if it was illegal for them to do so, they wouldn't be able to print copies of documents with your information in order to hand it over to you.

      Now, if they USE your credit to make purchases they've committed credit card fraud. If they withdraw money from your bank they've stolen from you. None of this has anything to do with their ability to take pictures or make photocopies etc. which is perfectly legal.

      There might be regulations in certain areas that prohibit store employees from making copies or recording credit card numbers etc. However, I'm pretty sure that these are policies set by the credit card companies and not the law. I might be wrong. In any case, such a law is preemptive and unnecessary. It makes a certain action illegal in order to prevent other action which in itself is illegal. The reasoning is to prevent crime but I don't see the logic in preventing crimes by making more activities illegal.

    86. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Joe+Jay+Bee · · Score: 1

      Do you really think that's a valid argument, in any way whatsoever?

    87. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Slippy. · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Seriously? Lame.

      You just grab a random sentence and posted inflammatory, trollish statements that have little to add or do with the article, story, or anything other than getting a rise. And not a very good one. Begone, foul beast!

      -----

      Back to the article.

      The recording was not so innocent a blunder, but not so bad either.

      The interesting point was the ban on recording devices *anywhere* outside his home. The rest of the story adds weight and background for personal opinions: How much should copyright be valued? How much do the circumstances change your opinion?

      --
      -- Life is good. Tastes like chicken.
    88. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by MikeBabcock · · Score: 1

      The question is about the punishment fitting the crime, not whether the crime is a crime or not.

      Tell you what, we'll pass a law that speeding results in getting your arms cut off, and we'll see a few numbnuts comments about "Why should people be allowed to speed?" after the first guy loses his arms.

      --
      - Michael T. Babcock (Yes, I blog)
    89. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by E++99 · · Score: 1

      He didn't use violence. He didn't threaten anyone. He's guilty of using a video camera in the wrong room. The worst you can accuse him of is that he was going to cause economic harm to a corporation... They didn't find a massive stash of recorded films and a dedicated shadowy organization ready to run off millions of DVDs and sell them across the far east, with him as the head making millions in profit. they found an unemployed builder on what appears to be his first offence. They didn't convict him of distribution or even copying.

      This is a real gem of left-wing logic. The theft itself isn't the serious crime... it's making a large profit that would be a serious crime.

    90. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We look at copyrighted media as just the media, and not what's on it.

      No, we don't do that. We just don't like copyright in its current form. The media is something physical, so it can be considered property. What's on is not physical, and is not property.

      I'm allowed to copy bits, so I can copy your bits off your hard drive, or off your bank account, or wherever your credit card details are stored.

      My hard drive is a physical device, and so are the hard drives on my bank's servers. If I were stupid enough to give you my hard drive, I couldn't complain if you copied the bits, no. However, I protect my data, and I would be damn pissed off at my BANK if they didn't keep my data encrypted.

      You protect your data by not letting other people see it. The moment they see it, it IS theirs and they should be allowed to copy it, yes. If you sing a song, and somebody else hears you singing it, it's ridiculous to think that you didn't literally give it to them. It's in their fucking brain, and they sing it, record it, let other people hear the lyrics, whatever. Data is not property.

    91. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Now, if they USE your credit to make purchases they've committed credit card fraud.

      Which, of course, they'd be allowed to do, because information doesn't belong to them, and those credit card details are just a sequence of digits and letters. If they're allowed to type 16 digits and a name into a text box, then why not some credit card info? It's not like the person who gave them the information "owns" that information.

      Or, I guess, they would be allowed to share that information with others (for a price, even). After all, copying bits is so easy, and so trivial. Copying happens all the time, and so therefore we should allow it all the time.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    92. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      You protect your data by not letting other people see it.

      Someone will have to see your data sooner or later. An institution that you would normally trust not to steal from you would be under no obligation to do so. If you have a bank account, someone (or something), somewhere has to know your personal details, even if only fleetingly. What if they took that data, and told everyone? By your argument, that data isn't yours. If you wanted any guarantee that your money would stay yours, you would have to keep it in cash form all the time, in your house. Sure it could work for some people, but others prefer not to be so paralysed with justifiable fear for their savings. Essentially, we would be putting a reasonable doctrine (freedom of information) to its completely unreasonable extreme for no adequately explored reason, at the expense of our well being.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    93. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Brandybuck · · Score: 1

      My question is: Why the heck did the government have to be involved? This isn't a copyright issue, it's a property issue. The property isn't the movie, it's the theater itself. All the theater had to do was evict the recorder. No need for police at all, unless he refused to leave the premises.

      The studios should just tell their distributors that there must not be any recordings. The distributors then tell the theaters that there must not be any recordings. The theaters evict recorders and put their names on a non-welcome list. If theaters don't agree they don't get to show the movies. Problem solved, all without copyright.

      --
      Don't blame me, I didn't vote for either of them!
    94. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Xaria · · Score: 1

      A better example would be if they set up a direct debit with your details. Credit is NOT your money. It's the bank's money. The bank is responsible for the payments, and then they go after you to get it back. So in the case above, the employee is stealing from the bank, not from you. Which makes it entirely the bank's problem. All you have to do is state that you didn't make those purchases and reasonably demonstrate that to be true.

    95. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by lennier · · Score: 1

      "We _know_ where their biases lie - borg, replicators, terminator, matrix, scary cyborgs in general."

      On the contrary, I think a cursory examination of the representation of humanoid cybernetic organisms in contemporary filmic drama would reveal that the cybernetic human form is as often presented in a literally 'seductive' guise. The portrayal of technology as beautiful women is endemic in the science fiction drama (and no doubt has Freudian overtones which I hesitate to investigate in this august -- if primarily and stereotypically male-gendered -- company).

      Starting of course with the oft-examined robotic Maria of Fritz Lang's Metropolis, we progress through such an array of recent examples as, for example, Seven of Nine, Six, Motoko Kusanagi -- and though I am not given to self-promotion, I should add my own portrayal of Cameron in 'The Sarah Chronicles'.

      QED. It is obvious that modern science fiction presents technology not as 'scary', but as fetish-object.

      -- Summer Glau

      --
      You are not a brain: http://books.google.com/books?id=2oV61CeDx-YC
    96. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Ostracus · · Score: 1

      This is why I save slashdot posts . Read in it's entirety.

      --
      Shai Schticks:"You don't make peace with friends, you make peace with enemies"
    97. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by arkhan_jg · · Score: 1

      You mean people who can't physically go, and can't possibly contain themselves until the official DVD is out.

      You obviously don't have children. Perhaps we should send parents who download rips to keep their kids amused to jail too? That seems reasonable.

      --
      Remember kids, it's all fun and games until someone commits wholesale galactic genocide.
    98. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by MrMickS · · Score: 1

      how many people do you know that skip going to the cinema because some shitty rip is available? The only people I know who watch rips is because they can't physically go, and the rip is better than nothing)

      Sadly quite a few. Its not that they can't go, or that they can't afford to go, its that the rip is cheaper. Would they go if the rip wasn't available? Probably not to every movie that they watch the rip of. There would be some though.

      --
      You may think me a tired, old, cynic. I'd have to disagree about the tired bit.
    99. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by rusl · · Score: 1
      "Thankfully, for all of us, the courts aren't so stupid."

      Now that my friend is comedy gold! Next time I need a lesson in learning something useful about making the tubes in the interwebs go I'm going to step into a courtroom and ask the judge for a quick howto. They sure are helpful in there.

      --
      Stupidity is its own reward.
    100. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheoGB · · Score: 2, Insightful

      I don't like to come down on the side of 'the Man' but in all honesty I don't see why anyone should ever be filming a film with recording equipment in the cinema.

      The studios want him in jail for breaking the law. Thankfully that didn't happen but equally the guy's a class A MORON who should have maybe read those warnings before the film that told him the penalties he could face if he attempted to film the movie, eh?

      I find it hard to have sympathy for dribbling incompetents.

    101. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please mod parent up.

    102. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      At press time, Tally Isham was unavailable for comment.

    103. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Kyreas · · Score: 1

      My local cinema has a large (about a metre wide, and 30 cm tall) bar of what look like IR LED's directly above the screen, angled to face the audience. I've never been able to check if they ARE what they look like, due to the obvious issues with getting out a camera to check while sitting in the cinema. They have been around for a few years though, at the very least. As long as I can remember going to the cinema there. Perhaps they are a bit ahead on ruining the attempts of pirates to film their films. They even had a big message all over the posters for the new bond film warning people off attempts to record it.

    104. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      The summary says 'video-capable cellphone'. Sounds like a good time to buy a nice video-incapable iPhone. Well, it would be if he didn't have a $1.5k fine to pay.

    105. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by N1AK · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure why you got funny modded, the original AC made a valid point and the fact your flame was borderline amusing doesn't make it +modding material. Of course their is a huge difference between recording a movie and uploading it to TPB for everyone to download, and just watching it in the Cinema. The major difference is however the act of distrobuting a copyrighted work without permission, not the act recording. If someone buys a gun (which they are legally entitled to) they aren't arrested on the grounds that is the first step required to murder someone with it. If someone with a good memory remembers the entire dialogue of a film (perhaps with multiple viewings) the fact that they didn't use a technological aid doesn't make it 100% ok for them to post the entire thing online. I have no issue with Cinemas imposing a policy where they remove people who bring in Camera equipment, I have no issue with film makers only agreeing to distrobute to Cinemas that have and enforce the above policy. I don't like the fact that the Goverment has created a new crime to catch people doing something that in itself is no issue.

    106. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by RMH101 · · Score: 1

      iPhone? He wouldn't be able to infringe using copy and paste, or record video.

    107. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gsslay · · Score: 1

      Perhaps we should send parents who download rips to keep their kids amused to jail too?

      No. But perhaps we should send parents who are slaves to their children's whims to parenting classes.

    108. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by gsslay · · Score: 1

      The recording was not so innocent a blunder, but not so bad either.

      Which was kind of my point. But good to see you picked up on it.

      Oops, you didn't.

    109. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by PFI_Optix · · Score: 1

      It's easy enough to check without looking suspicious. If you have a phone with a camera, just switch on the camera, point it at the screen and see what it looks like, then put it away. If by some freak chance you are seen doing this and they bother to confront you, just tell them the truth: you were curious whether you were right about them being IR LEDs designed to prevent piracy.

      --
      120 characters for a sig? That's bloody useless.
    110. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by ohtani · · Score: 1

      I agree to an extent.

      If there are CONTINUED offenses where there is a blatant disregard for this law, sure throw him in jail. A lack of video equipment, ehhh it's not THAT bad compared to the potential jail time. 1 year without video equipment is something one could sacrifice fairly easily, minus the fact that one's cell phone MAY suffer. It IS getting harder to get a cell phone WITHOUT video capabilities these days.

      --
      Pancakes. Oh I blew it.
    111. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by adolf · · Score: 1

      Let's switch off the conspiracy theories and think more practically, shall we?

      Some movies are shot in 3D. In the 1950s, this meant watching a movie with red- and blue-lensed glasses made of cardboard, and/or a headache. For quite some time now, however, the prevailing technique has been to issue 3D glasses with LCD shutters for lenses.

      These shutters are controlled and synchronized with the film by IR. Therefore: Somewhere, pointed at the audience, is a big IR emitter.

      Nothing to see here, folks. Move along.

    112. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      That's actually not the argument. It's a counter argument to this notion that copying is trivial, and that preventing it is stupid. Naturally this doesn't necessarily lead straight to copyright, but like I said, it opens the door to applying property. [...] If you want arguments against copyright, I suggest you look at figuring out why we would be better off without applying property to intangible bits that represent art and entertainment, while apply property to intangible bits that represents private information.

      Again, you're missing the distinction between property and privacy. We don't have to grant "ownership" of information in order to recognize that some information is private and shouldn't be shared.

      It doesn't make sense to say that a patient "owns" the fact that he has HIV, for example, or that an account holder "owns" his PIN. Those things are not subject to ownership; they can never be taken away. They can, however, be used to the disadvantage of the patient and account holder if they're spread too widely, and so it makes sense to treat them as private.

      I don't want too many people to know my account numbers, but on the other hand, Disney does want as many people as possible to have a copy of The Little Mermaid on DVD -- as long as they get paid for each one. It would be entirely possible and reasonable for the law to distinguish between private information like my bank account details, and public information like the contents of those DVDs.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    113. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Which, of course, they'd be allowed to do, because information doesn't belong to them, and those credit card details are just a sequence of digits and letters. If they're allowed to type 16 digits and a name into a text box, then why not some credit card info? It's not like the person who gave them the information "owns" that information.

      I'll ignore the conflation of property with privacy here, since I just posted about it above.

      The other problem with your line of argument, though, is that you're confusing the freedom to reproduce information with the freedom to perform every conceivable action that involves the reproduction of information.

      Free speech generally allows you to say whatever you want, but not in every context. "Give me your money or I'll kill you" is legal when you're reciting a line in a play, but not when you're threatening someone in an alley. There's a difference between simply speaking words aloud and directing them at a person to achieve a goal. Threats, incitements to riot, false advertising, and fraud are all limitations on speech based on the greater context in which it's spoken.

      Likewise, in the absence of any privacy laws, the freedom to reproduce information would allow you to share credit card details with other people, but using those credit card details to make a fraudulent purchase would still be fraud. By typing that number on the checkout page and clicking Submit, you're saying "this is my account and I'm authorized to make this purchase", which is a lie no matter how you say it.

      --
      Visual IRC: Fast. Powerful. Free.
    114. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      I'll ignore the conflation of property with privacy here, since I just posted about it above.

      Private information must belong to someone. Otherwise it wouldn't be private. I mean, what is privacy, if not an ownership of information? Certainly, if you apply much of the anti-copyright rhetoric that's flying about, saying things like copyright is an unnatural law, that it tries to prevent something that's natural behaviour, etc, you'll find that privacy fails to hold up to it. Calling that a conflation is highly misleading.

      The other problem with your line of argument, though, is that you're confusing the freedom to reproduce information with the freedom to perform every conceivable action that involves the reproduction of information.

      Ha! That's exactly right! That's my point! We have the freedom to copy, not copy every single thing we could copy. Some would hesitate to call it a freedom, and maybe it isn't, but few would contest its importance when they actually consider the reasons behind them. As to whether the line should be drawn before or after copyright is a different matter, but arguing that any law that restricts our natural urge to share is unnatural is clearly wrong, or missing the point.

      Likewise, in the absence of any privacy laws, the freedom to reproduce information would allow you to share credit card details with other people, but using those credit card details to make a fraudulent purchase would still be fraud. By typing that number on the checkout page and clicking Submit, you're saying "this is my account and I'm authorized to make this purchase", which is a lie no matter how you say it.

      Just to point out, punishing fraud is punishing others from using your identity. If all information belonged as much to me as to the next person, then I would have no say in how other people used my name or my identity. Hence, fraud would not be crime.

      --
      You know, there is a difference between trolling and pointing out the flaws in your reasoning. Just saying.
    115. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Again, you're missing the distinction between property and privacy. We don't have to grant "ownership" of information in order to recognize that some information is private and shouldn't be shared.

      Read this comment.

      It doesn't make sense to say that a patient "owns" the fact that he has HIV, for example, or that an account holder "owns" his PIN.

      The first is odd, because it's something you naturally wouldn't share. If your doctor had to know, and he felt that you had no claim to that information, and he decides, one day at the pub, to announce it to the female (or male) population in that pub, then you'd feel pretty pissed off. You'd feel that he had shared something that he had no right to share. The same goes for your pin. While you may laugh at the statement "owns his pin", you wouldn't laugh so much if your bank decided to share it.

      It would be entirely possible and reasonable for the law to distinguish between private information like my bank account details, and public information like the contents of those DVDs.

      Naturally, and I never claimed otherwise. Again (for the upteenth time), this argument is designed not to prove the necessity of copyright, but to prove the necessity to abridge the right to copy.

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    116. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Private information must belong to someone. Otherwise it wouldn't be private. I mean, what is privacy, if not an ownership of information?

      Privacy is the recognition that harm will result if certain information is spread too widely. We don't have to grant "ownership" of that information to anyone in order to recognize that they'll be harmed by its spread.

      For example, consider the classified details of a planned military operation: an obvious example of private information, right? If those plans become known to the wrong people, the success of the mission is in jeopardy, and lives may be lost. But who "owns" them? The soldiers whose lives may be lost? The generals who drew up the plans? The executive who ordered the plans to be drawn up? The taxpayers who ultimately foot the bill? No, no one owns them.

      Ha! That's exactly right! That's my point! We have the freedom to copy, not copy every single thing we could copy.

      Er, no, that's not what I'm saying.

      Copying is analogous to speaking. Freedom of speech means there's no limit on what you can say, or even on who you can say it to: only on where and how you can say it. Saying "give me all your money or I'll kill you" is one thing if you're an actor in the play, but if you pull one of the audience members into an alley afterward and say the same words to him, it's something else entirely, because your meaning is different, and courts aren't stupid.

      Freedom to copy, likewise, means there's no limit on what you can copy or who you can give the copies to (privacy laws notwithstanding). But that doesn't imply that you can do anything you want as long as a copy is somehow involved in the act.

      Saying "here's the first page of Harry Potter: [JPEG attachment]" is quite different from saying "here's the first page of a book I wrote: [same JPEG attachment]". If you aren't J. K. Rowling, then the latter statement is fraudulent.

      The freedom to share a scan of that page doesn't imply the freedom to lie about its origin, just like the freedom to share a credit card number (again, privacy laws notwithstanding) doesn't imply the freedom to make purchases on the account.

      Just to point out, punishing fraud is punishing others from using your identity.

      "Your identity" is the identity associated with you. It doesn't mean you own your name or the facts about your history, creditworthiness, etc., just like the phrase "your parents" doesn't imply that your mom and dad are your property.

      If all information belonged as much to me as to the next person, then I would have no say in how other people used my name or my identity. Hence, fraud would not be crime.

      Property and ownership don't enter into it: fraud is whatever the law says it is. If the law defines making unauthorized purchases on an account that someone else is responsible for paying as fraud, then it's fraud whether or not the account or the card number are "owned" by anyone.

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    117. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      The first is odd, because it's something you naturally wouldn't share.

      Exactly! That's not odd, it's the fundamental difference between private and public information. Private information is guarded and intentionally restricted to as few people as possible, because the spread of that information is potentially harmful in itself.

      While you may laugh at the statement "owns his pin", you wouldn't laugh so much if your bank decided to share it.

      Er, my PIN is not my property no matter what the bank does; the statement is still laughable. Of course I'd be upset if the bank decided to violate my privacy by sharing that information with the wrong people, but that has nothing to do with property or ownership.

      Again (for the upteenth time), this argument is designed not to prove the necessity of copyright, but to prove the necessity to abridge the right to copy.

      I agree, the right to copy isn't absolute, but neither is any other right. One cannot excuse every abridgment simply by pointing out that the rights aren't absolute; we should presume that the rights apply in every situation by default, unless someone can show that it's necessary to abridge them in some circumstances.

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    118. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      If you have a bank account, someone (or something), somewhere has to know your personal details, even if only fleetingly. What if they took that data, and told everyone? By your argument, that data isn't yours.

      That's right, it isn't -- data has no owner -- but that doesn't mean everyone else is free to share it. Not every law has to rest on property rights. It's perfectly OK to say "anyone who shares bank account details without the account holder's permission is guilty of a felony" without treating those details as a form of property.

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    119. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      We don't have to grant "ownership" of that information to anyone in order to recognize that they'll be harmed by its spread.

      OK then. Let's apply this to copyright. We won't call it the dreaded "O" word (ownership) or the dreaded "P" word (property), but we will "recognize that they'll [the artists] be harmed by its spread." Clear? It doesn't matter what you call it, but looking at privacy the same way that you look at copyright, you'll find, terminology aside, the two concepts are extremely similar. I know it's hard to compare two concepts that have such a different standing in your mind, but it's true: they are rather similar.

      For example, consider the classified details of a planned military operation: an obvious example of private information, right?

      Sure. It's not a bad example.

      If those plans become known to the wrong people, the success of the mission is in jeopardy, and lives may be lost. But who "owns" them?

      Whoever it is who is legally sanctioned to decide how the information is spread. In this case, it's the military.

      The soldiers whose lives may be lost? The generals who drew up the plans? The executive who ordered the plans to be drawn up? The taxpayers who ultimately foot the bill? No, no one owns them.

      Who owns the streets? Me? The guy who lives next door? The government? The taxpayers? No, no one owns them. Or perhaps, ownership can apply to groups of individuals as well as just individuals.

      Copying is analogous to speaking. Freedom of speech means there's no limit on what you can say, or even on who you can say it to: only on where and how you can say it. Saying "give me all your money or I'll kill you" is one thing if you're an actor in the play, but if you pull one of the audience members into an alley afterward and say the same words to him, it's something else entirely, because your meaning is different, and courts aren't stupid.

      Freedom to copy, likewise, means there's no limit on what you can copy or who you can give the copies to (privacy laws notwithstanding). But that doesn't imply that you can do anything you want as long as a copy is somehow involved in the act.

      That's a completely arbitrary comparison. You broke it instantly with the privacy laws thing (which can't exactly be brushed over, since it's the centre of our discussion), and it relies on there being no copyright. We could make copying like speech, but it'd rely on us redacting our rights to privacy. That last statement pretty much summed up my entire argument, really.

      The freedom to share a scan of that page doesn't imply the freedom to lie about its origin, just like the freedom to share a credit card number (again, privacy laws notwithstanding) doesn't imply the freedom to make purchases on the account.

      It depends. If you look at the stronger principle of freedom of information, then both are implied if taken to its unreasonable extreme. If you want to just make copying sacred, and not information as a whole, then sure, it doesn't necessarily follow, even though it could easily be argued that fraud is just another form of intangible copying and would therefore be sanctioned by law. But essentially, what you are suggesting is that information is not free, that it can be "tied to" (if not "owned by") a person (like your identity), but that anyone may copy that information, so long as they don't use it. It seems like a pretty broken way of guaranteeing privacy, and it offers no protection against the drunk doctor announcing you are HIV positive, but hey, you are entitled to your opinion. Good luck convincing others though.

      "Your identity" is the identity associated with you. It doesn't mean you own your name or the facts about your history, creditworthiness, etc.

      You say "associated with"

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    120. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      It's perfectly OK to say "anyone who shares bank account details without the account holder's permission is guilty of a felony" without treating those details as a form of property.

      And it's equally valid to define it as a form of property. Anything more to say? See the main thread.

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    121. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      I want to relegate this to a single thread, if possible, but I just want to say one thing:

      I agree, the right to copy isn't absolute, but neither is any other right. One cannot excuse every abridgment simply by pointing out that the rights aren't absolute; we should presume that the rights apply in every situation by default, unless someone can show that it's necessary to abridge them in some circumstances.

      I agree with you completely. That's the basis behind my argument. Some people seem to be arguing that we should allow copying for copying's sake, but other's don't seem to realise the ramifications of that. I'm hoping that, as a result of this argument, I can count on you realising those ramifications as well (even if you don't support copyright).

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    122. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      OK then. Let's apply this to copyright. We won't call it the dreaded "O" word (ownership) or the dreaded "P" word (property), but we will "recognize that they'll [the artists] be harmed by its spread." Clear?

      But the artists aren't harmed by its spread. Quite the opposite! If they wanted to keep their works secret, they wouldn't exhibit those works in public or sell copies of them.

      It doesn't matter what you call it, but looking at privacy the same way that you look at copyright, you'll find, terminology aside, the two concepts are extremely similar.

      I suppose they are, in the same sense that these two statements are extremely similar:

      1. Two plus two is four.
      2. Two plus two is five.

      The two statements differ in only one word, right? But that word is key to the meaning of the statement. Change that one word, and it falls apart.

      Privacy is about stopping the spread of private information. Copyright is about stopping the spread of public information, and that makes it completely different. The sharing of public information isn't harmful -- that's why it's intentionally made available to anonymous members of the public -- so the reasoning that supports privacy law falls apart if you try to apply it to copyright.

      We could make copying like speech, but it'd rely on us redacting our rights to privacy.

      Again, this just isn't true.

      Credit card numbers, bank account numbers, medical details, etc. already aren't subject to copyright. You have the same right to copy (or speak) my credit card number as you do any other 16-digit number, and if you spread it all over town, the legal recourse I'll have has nothing to do with "owning" that sequence of digits. Does that mean I have no privacy?

      But essentially, what you are suggesting is that information is not free, that it can be "tied to" (if not "owned by") a person (like your identity), but that anyone may copy that information, so long as they don't use it. It seems like a pretty broken way of guaranteeing privacy, and it offers no protection against the drunk doctor announcing you are HIV positive, but hey, you are entitled to your opinion. Good luck convincing others though.

      Er.. no. Honestly, I'm a little puzzled at this criticism: have you somehow ignored or misunderstood everything I've said about private information and privacy laws?

      Confidential medical details are obviously private information, and a drunken doctor who shares them without authorization would obviously have violated any law that restricts the sharing of private information. Open and shut case. That's no less protection than such information receives today. What's the problem?

      Owning information doesn't imply ownership of anything physical. It just means you own the fact that you have parents named $MOTHER and $FATHER, as part of a large body of information that consists of your identity.

      Wait, you're saying you own the basic facts of your birth? Who else shares ownership of this information: presumably your parents do, but what about your cousins and grandparents, the doctor who delivered you, your kindergarten teacher...? And what penalties do you propose for someone who violates this ownership by disclosing the fact that your mother is named $MOTHER without your permission?

      Likewise, many artists do feel a sense of ownership over their works, even though the manifestation of their work is intangible.

      If feelings are enough to grant ownership, then what's to stop me from claiming ownership of the money in your bank account if I start feeling like it should belong to me?

      The question remaining is, why shouldn't we allow copyright? What makes it so different from things like privacy and identity?

      Answered above.

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    123. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      But the artists aren't harmed by its spread. Quite the opposite! If they wanted to keep their works secret, they wouldn't exhibit those works in public or sell copies of them.

      But many artists need the money from those works. If they spread without payment, then it is most certainly is harming them. Just like people have the right to control the distribution of their identity and other private data, so too does the artist in order to help them survive. If they truly aren't harmed by free distribution, then they are under no obligation to keep all, or even any of their copyrights.

      Privacy is about stopping the spread of private information. Copyright is about stopping the spread of public information, and that makes it completely different.

      (I'll ignore your bullshit analogy)

      I can't help but feel that you're being blinded by different words again. In this case, public information refers to information given to a small subset of "other people", and private information (often) refers to information given to a tiny subset of "other people". Copyrighted works aren't "public information" in the sense that every member of the public is allowed to access it, only as the often small group who actually pay for it. It's not like there's some meaningful difference here. In fact, it seems, by these definitions, a poorly selling album would be "private information". Feel free to tell me your definitions, if you disagree.

      The sharing of public information isn't harmful -- that's why it's intentionally made available to anonymous members of the public -- so the reasoning that supports privacy law falls apart if you try to apply it to copyright.

      OK, so public information is made available to anonymous members of the public, correct? That still doesn't prove that sharing public information is not harmful. It is possible that an artist could be (and often is) far better off distributing himself, rather than leaving distribution to the anonymous masses. In fact, it seems to me that you think "sharing of public information isn't harmful" simply because of the word "public" in there, but I could be wrong.

      You have the same right to copy (or speak) my credit card number as you do any other 16-digit number, and if you spread it all over town, the legal recourse I'll have has nothing to do with "owning" that sequence of digits. Does that mean I have no privacy?

      Let's take this slowly, since I've gone over this many times. Fraud requires some "association" of data to a person (or group). You can't get around that. If there was no association, then we would have no clue who was the victim. It would be like any other piece of information wafting on the proverbial breeze. Luckily, we do "associate" identities with people, and we have a convenient and logical way of doing so, because the information, by definition, refers to someone, so we "associate" the data with them. If we didn't, then it would be dissociated from anyone, and anyone could do with it what they wanted, and yes, that does include making purchases that "someone else" is responsible for paying for. How would we know who is responsible for paying, if the information wasn't "associated" with someone? We couldn't. Somewhere along the line, someone has to be "associated" with identity information.

      Now, it is my contention that this "association" is similar to "ownership", so much so that we can extend the definition of ownership to information. Of course, this has already happened, so this is more of a remedial lesson. When we own a physical object, we can expect the (legally sanctioned) right to decide who the object is used by, how it's used, and when it's used (should we choose to decide that at all). From that, we can derive that stealing, or "borrowing", should be illegal, since it constitutes an unauthorised usage of the owned object. That one statement pretty much defines prop

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    124. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      But many artists need the money from those works. If they spread without payment, then it is most certainly is harming them.

      No, there's a difference between being harmed and not receiving a benefit. If you think there isn't, then I guess you're harming me by not giving me the keys to your house and car, right?

      I might like to get your house and car, just like an artist might like to get money from everyone who enjoys his work. But that doesn't mean either of us are entitled to it, or that we're being harmed when our wishes don't come true.

      It's not like there's some meaningful difference here. In fact, it seems, by these definitions, a poorly selling album would be "private information". Feel free to tell me your definitions, if you disagree.

      The difference is quite meaningful, and I've already explained it several times.

      Here it is once more: private information is that whose spread is inherently harmful, and so you don't want people to have access to it. Medical records, financial details, classified military plans, and so on. You keep your PIN secret not so you can sell it for the maximum profit, but because it's dangerous for that information to become widely known.

      Commercial copyrighted works, on the other hand, are not private. They're distributed to (potentially) millions of anonymous customers whose only qualification is that they have money in their hands. If I want to know how the latest Beyonce song goes, all I have to do is spend 99 cents on iTunes: no one could say with a straight face that that information is still, somehow, a secret, or that Beyonce is afraid of what might happen if it falls into the wrong hands. She wants to get it into as many hands as possible, as long as she's getting paid.

      A poorly selling album still isn't private. It stopped being private the moment it was offered for sale to arbitrary members of the public.

      (Now, if you want a gray area, consider a piece of private information that you'd still be willing to divulge for the right price. Who wouldn't give up their bank PIN for a billion dollars, for example?)

      That still doesn't prove that sharing public information is not harmful. It is possible that an artist could be (and often is) far better off distributing himself, rather than leaving distribution to the anonymous masses.

      Certainly, just like I'd be better off if you stopped doing your own web searches for free and instead paid me $5 each time to do them for you. So what? I don't get to insert myself into the information-distribution process just because it would put money in my pocket.

      Either the information is private, in which case its spread should be stopped to prevent harm, or it isn't, in which case the government has no reason to restrict people from sharing it.

      When we own a physical object, we can expect the (legally sanctioned) right to decide who the object is used by, how it's used, and when it's used (should we choose to decide that at all).

      Yes, that's true, but think about why we have that form of ownership. It's not because ownership is automatically good. It's because physical objects can only be in one place at a time: one person's use can interfere with another person's use, so we need some way to decide which use will prevail. That's where the owner comes in, to make that decision.

      In other words, ownership is a solution to the problem of needing some way to decide how an object will be used.

      Information, on the other hand, is not subject to the same rules: it can be in any number of places at once, so no one needs to decide which use will prevail. Ownership of information is a solution to a problem that doesn't exist.

      If I scream out your mother's name in the streets (I think there's a "your mum" joke in there somewhere), there would be no penalty. It's a word, and it isn't tied to you or your mother. If I use th

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    125. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      No, there's a difference between being harmed and not receiving a benefit. If you think there isn't, then I guess you're harming me by not giving me the keys to your house and car, right?

      It's a matter of entitlement. If you own a bank that has my money, it's not a matter of "not receiving benefit". The money is mine. You are not, however, entitled to my house and car. Now, in just about everything else in life, we are entitled to (a majority of) the sweat of our brow. There is good economic and moral rational behind this which I will gladly go into should you require it. I have, to date, seen no compelling counter-argument that trumps that rational when it comes to art, and I have heard a lot of these counter-arguments against copyright. Still, if you wish to press the point, I will listen.

      The difference is quite meaningful, and I've already explained it several times.

      OK, this discussion has been a little messy, so allow me to clear it up (for my sake). We agree upon:

      a) We have a right to, or at least no legal/moral problem with, sharing information
      b) The first statement not withstanding, there are common sense limitations on that "right", including identities and other private information that, for one reason or another, is shared with others
      c) Certain pieces of information must be associated with certain people, like identities

      We disagree upon:

      d) Whether that association can be considered a form of ownership
      e) Private information can't be shared, but public information (like artworks) can

      Agreed? Well, I've addressed d) at length. I'm not going to explain it again. If you don't agree with me, so be it. e) is a fine point (probably the best in your argument), but I'm failing to see a reason why we should treat copyright like public information. We make the law how we like it, and arbitrary rules like "public information can be shared" can become inflexible very quickly. There are counter arguments to sharing copyrighted works that are, IMHO, very convincing. It's cases like these that should define the law, not the law defining these cases.

      Certainly, just like I'd be better off if you stopped doing your own web searches for free and instead paid me $5 each time to do them for you. So what? I don't get to insert myself into the information-distribution process just because it would put money in my pocket.

      OK. Tell the artists they are not necessary by not consuming their goods. Just like it would be a useless service that no-one will pay for if I do web searches for you, prove to artists that they are an unnecessary component of the artistic work distribution system. Don't buy, don't copy, and don't download anything from an artist. If everyone did that, then artists' work would not be considered to be worth anything, and they would have no right to copyright. Copyright is designed to give artists a sporting chance in the demand-driven free market, but it certainly guarantees them nothing, and useless work will provide them with no reward.

      It's because physical objects can only be in one place at a time: one person's use can interfere with another person's use, so we need some way to decide which use will prevail. That's where the owner comes in, to make that decision.

      You know what also resolves that dispute? Communism. We could have the state allocate to us when we may use what. We don't do that because there's actually a second reason we have property: to reward hard work. Why work, when everything can be provided for you through someone else's? That's exactly the reason why we want copyright: to be an incentive.

      I think you dodged my question.

      I hope not.

      I'm not talking about the word that is your mother's name, I'm talking about the fact that you're claiming to own. If the artist who "owns" a song can use that

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    126. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Um, you do realize that there are a few itty bitty fundamental differences between your brain and an electronic medium? Like, for example, the ability to upload the data for others to download and circumvent copyright laws, and therefore is significantly different than a brain.

      While an electronic medium may /enable/ you to upload the data it does not, at least not in my part of the world, /force/ you to do so.

      But yay precrime I suppose.

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    127. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Which, of course, they'd be allowed to do, because information doesn't belong to them, and those credit card details are just a sequence of digits and letters. If they're allowed to type 16 digits and a name into a text box, then why not some credit card info? It's not like the person who gave them the information "owns" that information.

      You are focusing on the technical implementation when the real crime is in the bigger picture. Your argument is along the lines of "but moving my finger isn't illegal so I shouldn't be arrested just because I happened to be holding a loaded gun and pointing it at some guy while I was doing so".

      The crime is not "copying information" or "writing down numbers". The crime is impersonating someone else and fraudulently gaining access to their money. It doesn't matter /how/ you do this - it is illegal regardless.

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    128. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by bentcd · · Score: 1

      Someone will have to see your data sooner or later. An institution that you would normally trust not to steal from you would be under no obligation to do so. If you have a bank account, someone (or something), somewhere has to know your personal details, even if only fleetingly. What if they took that data, and told everyone? By your argument, that data isn't yours.

      You seem to think that I have a copyright on my bank account number, or my PIN code. I do not. Nobody has this and nobody /can/ have this because the information has no artistic value and so is not copyrightable in the first place. When banks do not share your data it is due to contractual obligations, due to govt regulation and because they want to keep getting more customers in the future. Copyright has absolutely nothing to do with this at all.

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    129. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Now, in just about everything else in life, we are entitled to (a majority of) the sweat of our brow. There is good economic and moral rational behind this which I will gladly go into should you require it.

      Please do. I'd love to hear how this philosophy applies to, say, a house painter who spends the sweat of his brow putting paint on someone else's house, yet ends up owning neither the paint, nor the house, nor the abstract fact that the house is now that color. Or a hired farm hand who spends the sweat of his brow planting and harvesting crops, yet owns neither the seeds, nor the plants, nor the harvested crops.

      I contend that we are not entitled to "the sweat of our brow". Expending effort on some process is not sufficient to grant ownership of whatever happens to come out of that process, and real-world examples bear this out.

      Instead, we're generally only entitled to retain ownership of the things we already own, and to gain ownership of the things we're given by their rightful owners. The farm hand doesn't own the crops he worked so hard on because they grew out of seeds, fertilizer, and land that all belonged to someone else, and applying effort to them doesn't change their ownership.

      Tell the artists they are not necessary by not consuming their goods. Just like it would be a useless service that no-one will pay for if I do web searches for you, prove to artists that they are an unnecessary component of the artistic work distribution system. Don't buy, don't copy, and don't download anything from an artist.

      No, that doesn't follow; that's like asking you to stop doing web searches altogether if you don't want to pay me to do them for you.

      In order to prove that artists are an unnecessary component of the artistic work distribution system, I don't have to abstain from enjoying artistic works: I just have to find another distribution channel. If I download a torrent instead of buying a CD from the artist, then voila, I've shown that distribution is possible without the artist's involvement.

      Artists are, of course, a necessary component of the artistic work production system. I would be delighted to see artists get out of the distribution business and charge for production instead.

      You know what also resolves that dispute? Communism. We could have the state allocate to us when we may use what.

      True. Ownership isn't the only solution, it's just the best one we've found. (OTOH, you could say that in a communist society, the state is the owner.)

      Why work, when everything can be provided for you through someone else's? That's exactly the reason why we want copyright: to be an incentive.

      But we don't need copyright for that. There already is an incentive for working, one that we're all familiar with: it's called a wage.

      If you want a maid to clean your house, you don't have to promise her some wacky new form of ownership over the fact that your house is clean. You just need to pay her for the task. She'll weigh the money you're offering against the other things she could be doing with that time, and if the price is right, she'll accept the offer. Then, once she's finished, the transaction is complete, and you don't have to worrying about paying her royalties or whatever on your house's newfound cleanliness.

      The same goes for just about every other job in existence. Lawyers, accountants, code monkeys, truck drivers, barbers, factory workers... they get paid for working. That's all the incentive they need. An accountant doesn't demand ownership of the numbers on your tax form; you just pay him for the time he spends coming up with them.

      Why should it be any different for artists, authors, and other producers of copyrightable works? Are they so greedy that being paid for their time isn't enough of an incentive? Do they lack the courage to negotiate a price for their labor, like everyone else manages to do? Is the average artist's labor simply so worthless that a sweepstakes-style market (many will enter, few will win) is the only way for any artist to turn a profit?

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    130. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Please do. I'd love to hear how this philosophy applies to, say, a house painter who spends the sweat of his brow putting paint on someone else's house, yet ends up owning neither the paint, nor the house, nor the abstract fact that the house is now that color. Or a hired farm hand who spends the sweat of his brow planting and harvesting crops, yet owns neither the seeds, nor the plants, nor the harvested crops.

      I contend that we are not entitled to "the sweat of our brow". Expending effort on some process is not sufficient to grant ownership of whatever happens to come out of that process, and real-world examples bear this out.

      "Sweat from our brow" doesn't refer to ownership per se; it refers to payment and incentive. The house painter provides a service, which he sells by choice for a profit. The farmer, again by choice, owns his crops until he sells them. He is entitled to the sweat from his brow, right up until the point he trades it for the sweat from another person's brow. An artist, without copyright, has little choice but to trade. The farmer and house painter are free to choose to sell their "sweat" for as little or as much as they want. An artist, if he chooses to trade, is forced to trade for zero value. His sweat is effectively stolen. His work is for nothing he can use or subsist off of.

      The "sweat of the brow" thing describes the general concept running capitalism: hard work is rewarded with riches. Just like it works for farmers and house-painters, it should also be applied artists, lest they feel strongly compelled to actually work at something they get a reward from. The problem is that this doesn't work automatically, thanks to a relatively unprecedented situation. We have intangible goods which can be copied by anyone, but they can't be created originally by anyone. New works are in demand and scarce, but as soon as they hit the shelves, they lose all their commercial value. The fact that this situation is relatively unprecedented means that we need to go back to first principles in order to find a solution. Our first, and, IMHO, best solution to date was to extend property to a limited extent to accommodate for those intangible goods. The solution managed not only to reward art, but to make formal an informal notion of intangible property that many people recognised artists held over their works (even if you don't).

      No, that doesn't follow; that's like asking you to stop doing web searches altogether if you don't want to pay me to do them for you.

      It actually does follow. If they are unnecessary, you don't need them. Period. By definition. That means, assuming you're right, there is no need to rely on any of the fruit of their work. You can acceptably ignore any and all contributions to the world. Whether you do that or not is your prerogative, but I must warn you, people (me included) are not going to think much of your argument if you can't be bothered to do a trivial demonstration, like not seek out any copyrighted work ever created. It's trivial, of course, because you don't need them.

      Oh, and by the way, there's no asking involved. If I find them unnecessary, then naturally that won't guarantee you that I'll stop. If they are unnecessary (i.e. no-one finds them necessary), then I will close up shop (unless I prop my business up with a night job). That's right: you have to convince others that they don't need their favourite commercial bands, or commercial movies, or commercial games, else they are not unnecessary. You could speed up that process by providing an alternative that truly replaces the current system, that makes people buy exclusively from you, but people have been trying that since the current system's conception.

      In order to prove that artists are an unnecessary component of the artistic work distribution system, I don't have to abstain from enjoying artistic works: I just have to find another distribution channel. If I download a torren

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    131. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      The farmer and house painter are free to choose to sell their "sweat" for as little or as much as they want. An artist, if he chooses to trade, is forced to trade for zero value. His sweat is effectively stolen.

      I don't get it. You seem to be asserting that artists can't sell their labor, which is obviously false. No one forces them to write, paint, or sing for free; they can hold out their hands and say "I won't sing until you give me some money", just like a farmer, a house painter, or anyone else can -- and does -- refuse to do their job until they've been paid (or at least promised some money). Since there is demand for the production of new works, and since that production depends on artistic labor, the money will be there.

      Just like it works for farmers and house-painters, it should also be applied artists, lest they feel strongly compelled to actually work at something they get a reward from. The problem is that this doesn't work automatically, thanks to a relatively unprecedented situation. We have intangible goods which can be copied by anyone, but they can't be created originally by anyone.

      It's only unprecedented if you insist on focusing on the works as the basis of trade. But there's no reason to do that. Artists perform labor, just like virtually everyone else, and they can avoid all this headache simply by trading that labor, the way everyone else manages to trade theirs.

      New works are in demand and scarce, but as soon as they hit the shelves, they lose all their commercial value. The fact that this situation is relatively unprecedented means that we need to go back to first principles in order to find a solution.

      Or maybe it means that since artistic works don't behave like other goods, we shouldn't pretend to treat them like other goods. The system we have for trading goods depends on scarcity; a good that isn't scarce belongs under an entirely different system.

      Anything that competes with traditional copyright for market-share, but doesn't unfairly undermine copyrighted works works for me.

      I don't think that would work. Copyright is so slanted toward copyright holders, and so ingrained in the common conception of How Art Is Made, that I wouldn't expect many people to choose an alternative. A wage-based system is preferable not just because it guarantees an income for artists, but also because it gives rights back to the public; artists aren't the only ones with a stake in this decision, so it shouldn't be left entirely up to them.

      Forming a wage-based system would be a welcome change for most artists. Their pay is often sporadic, and making art for profit is a risky investment. The problem is that we haven't figured out a framework on which we can pay wages. Who will pay for these wages? We know they must be paid before an artist creates anything of value, so they must be paid as an advance on the work itself. So I repeat: who will pay?

      I'm not sure why you think this is such a tough question. People pay for services all the time without knowing exactly what they're going to get, based on gathering what information they can about the service provider (e.g. reading reviews) and discussing their expectations with the provider beforehand.

      The only thing that separates artistic services from others in this case is the ratio between the price that a typical consumer is willing to pay and the price that the artist will demand. A single person can pay the full price of a $15 haircut, but he can't pay the full price of a $50,000 album.

      But the solution is simple: spread the cost between many individuals. To see how this is done, look at the recent political campaigns, or at sellaband.com (which is close, but not exactly the same as what I have in mind). If a candidate can raise $500 million by collecting $20 at a time from people who aren't even guaranteed to get anything in return, th

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    132. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      You seem to be asserting that artists can't sell their labor, which is obviously false. No one forces them to write, paint, or sing for free; they can hold out their hands and say "I won't sing until you give me some money", just like a farmer, a house painter, or anyone else can -- and does -- refuse to do their job until they've been paid (or at least promised some money). Since there is demand for the production of new works, and since that production depends on artistic labor, the money will be there.

      That's a myth. There's more than demand that affects availability (Dagnabbit, where's my time machine?). The fact that people want it doesn't mean that they will cough up the cash, or that coughing up cash is enough. For example, say I have a completely unique taste for a particular type of movie, one that I don't have the capacity to make myself. I want to buy it, but, of course, I don't want to pay more than about $40. That won't cover the cost of making it, unfortunately. There it is: demand, willingness to buy does not necessarily imply availability.

      That's an unlikely example, but the same principle applies in more common situations. If we want to pay for creation, it won't be uncommon for amounts of $200 or more to be required from each person. That's not even to say the demand isn't there; most people who would enjoy the work would either not know it yet, or be too lazy/financially prudent to donate money for something they will probably get anyway (well, that's the way they'll see it).

      Or maybe it means that since artistic works don't behave like other goods, we shouldn't pretend to treat them like other goods. The system we have for trading goods depends on scarcity; a good that isn't scarce belongs under an entirely different system.

      Could be, but the market hasn't produced any superior alternatives, and our current system works fine.

      I don't think that would work. Copyright is so slanted toward copyright holders, and so ingrained in the common conception of How Art Is Made, that I wouldn't expect many people to choose an alternative.

      I think that's bullshit. Look at you, look at sites like questioncopyright.com, and look at FOSS. People are questioning copyrights, and trying to come up with business models that, if not replace copyright, then use it in alternative ways (GPL, I'm looking at you). There's plenty of effort being poured into new business models. But it seems, with the exception of FOSS, there aren't any viable alternatives emerging from the think tank. It's becoming increasingly unlikely that we'll find a better system, but there's no harm in trying. Even most FOSS-licensed software have licenses that are reliant on copyright.

      artists aren't the only ones with a stake in this decision, so it shouldn't be left entirely up to them

      Agreed, but artists are our one and only gateway to culture, and making a living off art is, on average, very tough, even with copyright as it is, so expect any system weighing up the needs of both parties to be highly skewed towards the artist.

      I'm not sure why you think this is such a tough question. People pay for services all the time without knowing exactly what they're going to get, based on gathering what information they can about the service provider (e.g. reading reviews) and discussing their expectations with the provider beforehand.

      This is not like other services that you pay for beforehand. Unlike these services, you have no guarantee that your money will produce anything, and you may get what you want without paying, which is a big disincentive to invest.

      Naturally, there are other problems, like the extinction of non-mainstream tastes and no-name artists to deal with as well. Still, limitations in the business model don't necessarily have to bring it down. It could and, unless I'm mistaken, it currently does, op

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    133. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      The fact that people want it doesn't mean that they will cough up the cash, or that coughing up cash is enough. For example, say I have a completely unique taste for a particular type of movie, one that I don't have the capacity to make myself. I want to buy it, but, of course, I don't want to pay more than about $40. That won't cover the cost of making it, unfortunately. There it is: demand, willingness to buy does not necessarily imply availability.

      Of course, that only holds true for your hypothetical corner case.

      In the real world, people share tastes. $40 from one person isn't enough to make a movie, but $40 from a million people is. As long as there's enough combined demand, the only thing that's missing is a framework to collect money from all those people and deliver it to the filmmakers. And that's exactly the sort of thing that the internet makes easy.

      This is not like other services that you pay for beforehand. Unlike these services, you have no guarantee that your money will produce anything

      Sure you do. You have exactly the same guarantee as with any other service: if you pay but the service isn't provided, or is substantially different from what was agreed upon, the provider has failed to hold up his end of the contract and you can take him to court.

      and you may get what you want without paying, which is a big disincentive to invest.

      It's only a disincentive to the extent that the project is likely to be funded without your help. If it's a popular project, then sure, keep your money and someone else will probably fund it instead. If not, then you have a clear choice: if you want to see the work completed and released, you'll pay; if you don't really care whether it's ever made, then keep your money and maybe it won't be.

      In any case, I don't think these are realistic criticisms. Look at political campaigns again: no one has any guarantee that their money will be used for any particular thing (much less any guarantee that their candidate will win if he raises $X), and everyone knows that there are other contributors out there. And yet every time someone puts up a contribution button with a monetary goal and a shiny thermometer graph indicating progress, they meet that goal.

      Sounds great! Get some investors, sign some artists, and get it started! See how well it does!

      As I already mentioned, I don't think artists will have much incentive to try a new system as long as they can still use copyright as a crutch. This isn't about making a system that's more appealing to artists and winning their allegiance, it's about making a system that's better for everyone -- one that doesn't restrict free speech in order to make it easier for artists to make a buck.

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    134. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Of course, that only holds true for your hypothetical corner case.

      Oh, you are so wrong!

      In the real world, people share tastes. $40 from one person isn't enough to make a movie, but $40 from a million people is.

      OK, but what if there aren't a million people willing to put up cash up front? If the work is released, you don't just get money from the early adopters (for lack of a better term), you get money from people who pick it up and like it, you get money from people who withhold their judgement and then buy. You might even get money from people determined to hate it, but love it after they experience it. It's true: people share tastes, but it's more difficult than providing a framework. You have to convince them to pay significantly before they get any real indication of the quality of the work, or any benefits from it, and that's tough, especially from the large group of people who are looking for instant-fix entertainment.

      Sure you do. You have exactly the same guarantee as with any other service: if you pay but the service isn't provided, or is substantially different from what was agreed upon, the provider has failed to hold up his end of the contract and you can take him to court.

      Hmm. The problem with that solution is that artistry is a trial and error operation. What started out as a serious nuclear doomsday thriller could easily turn out to become a comedy classic. Under that system, that could constitute fraud. Turning artists into contract workers will turn a lot of artists away from their art. Most of them, I predict, would want to avoid the legal issues.

      It's only a disincentive to the extent that the project is likely to be funded without your help. If it's a popular project, then sure, keep your money and someone else will probably fund it instead. If not, then you have a clear choice: if you want to see the work completed and released, you'll pay; if you don't really care whether it's ever made, then keep your money and maybe it won't be.

      That's true to an extent. I thought of that while writing it, but I was more referring to the assumption that someone else will do it, which isn't so rational. It's laziness more than anything, and I predict it won't just affect the popular works.

      In any case, I don't think these are realistic criticisms. Look at political campaigns again: no one has any guarantee that their money will be used for any particular thing (much less any guarantee that their candidate will win if he raises $X), and everyone knows that there are other contributors out there. And yet every time someone puts up a contribution button with a monetary goal and a shiny thermometer graph indicating progress, they meet that goal.

      The argument never was that no-one would contribute, the argument was that the amount contributed is considerably less than the demand. Out of all the voters who vote for a specific party, how many of them contribute? Not many comparatively. Many of them who don't will think (correctly) exactly that: someone else will do it for them. Of course, those numbers are inflated compared to entertainment, because one is politics, and the other is, well, entertainment. People are going to be a lot more interested in politics.

      In fact, every dollar spent on politics counts, even if the person doesn't get elected. It represents an ideology being spread through advertising. It amounts to people's voices being heard by proxy, whether or not the figurehead rises to power. With music, you get nothing if the project fails. Nothing.

      As I already mentioned, I don't think artists will have much incentive to try a new system as long as they can still use copyright as a crutch. This isn't about making a system that's more appealing to artists and winning their allegiance, it'

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    135. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      If the work is released, you don't just get money from the early adopters (for lack of a better term), you get money from people who pick it up and like it, you get money from people who withhold their judgement and then buy. You might even get money from people determined to hate it, but love it after they experience it.

      All of this can be flipped around, though. You might get money from people who like the sound of the idea at first, but end up not liking the finished product. And for every "what if people don't want to pay up front", there's a "what if people don't want to pay for copies (since illicit copying is ultimately unpreventable)".

      The problem with that solution is that artistry is a trial and error operation. What started out as a serious nuclear doomsday thriller could easily turn out to become a comedy classic. Under that system, that could constitute fraud.

      Under the current system, it could also constitute fraud - against the investors.

      The argument never was that no-one would contribute, the argument was that the amount contributed is considerably less than the demand. Out of all the voters who vote for a specific party, how many of them contribute? Not many comparatively.

      But that's irrelevant. A candidate doesn't need every voter to contribute, and an artist doesn't need everyone who enjoys his work to pay. He only needs to collect enough money in total to fund the production of that work.

      With music, you get nothing if the project fails. Nothing.

      You get your money back, so what's the problem?

      It's about choice. Artists can choose whichever system they prefer, and we can choose to reward whatever system we prefer.

      But we don't really get a choice, other than to buy or not buy a product. It's illegal for us to repeat certain sequences of words due to a choice someone else has made. We're forced to participate in the copyright business model whether we want to or not. Why should we care about offering a choice to someone else if they're not willing to extend us the same courtesy?

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    136. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      All of this can be flipped around, though. You might get money from people who like the sound of the idea at first, but end up not liking the finished product.

      Which all contributes to the opinion that this system is not ideal. The wrong people end up paying for your entertainment.

      And for every "what if people don't want to pay up front", there's a "what if people don't want to pay for copies (since illicit copying is ultimately unpreventable)".

      Naturally, which is why I don't object to running this side-by-side with copyright business models. That way, both groups can be satisfied. If one group ends up shrinking in the long term, then their preferred business model will also shrink.

      Under the current system, it could also constitute fraud - against the investors.

      OK, I assume you are referring to publishers, right? It's different in the case of publishers. They are primarily concerned with making money, not the specific content. Whether it's a comedy or a thriller is neither here nor there if it sells. Plus, if they do have those kinds of objections, they have constant access to the artists involved, and can negotiate with them. Large groups of investors (under your system) can do that, but only if meetings are arranged, and pamphlets published, all costing a lot of money. Cutting corners on the cost might not even be an option, since, naturally, the artist will be obliged to make is intentions sufficiently clear, or else face the consequences. Finally, imagine what Joe Quick-fix will do. Will he read his pamphlets, should they be afforded, find any changes he doesn't like, attend the meetings, and vote against them? No, of course not. He'll just resent the process and stop paying money in future, possibly adjusting his tastes to more mainstream affairs that other people will fund for him.

      But that's irrelevant. A candidate doesn't need every voter to contribute, and an artist doesn't need everyone who enjoys his work to pay. He only needs to collect enough money in total to fund the production of that work.

      I think you missed my point. Lets say for argument's sake (since I don't know any exact figures) that 1% of people who support a party donate. For a large party, like the democrats and republicans, that's a lot of dough, and they can survive on it. For a smaller party, it's not so much, but even though it isn't enough for a campaign in its full splendour, they can spend their money trying to get their message across, even if they don't get elected. Entertainment isn't nearly so consolidated as politics. The 1% ends up being a lot less, even for mainstream works. It ends up being insufficient for less mainstream works. That's my point.

      You get your money back, so what's the problem?

      No problem financially. We do miss out on the culture though.

      But we don't really get a choice, other than to buy or not buy a product.

      ... or start doing it better yourself, which is what I suggested you choose.

      It's illegal for us to repeat certain sequences of words due to a choice someone else has made.

      That's another myth. It's only illegal (at least, here in Australia) if you reproduce 10% of the work or more, and I'm sure there are similar provisions in the US under the fair use doctrine. Not only that, it doesn't prevent you from coming up with those words on your own, only if you actually copy them. If you choose to read a copyrighted work, then be prepared to see (really, really large - pages even) strings of words that you can't copy verbatim.

      We're forced to participate in the copyright business model whether we want to or not.

      No, that's not true. You can avoid experiencing any copyrighted work. Sure, you can't avoid certain public arenas where

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    137. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      Plus, if [publishers] do have those kinds of objections, they have constant access to the artists involved, and can negotiate with them. Large groups of investors (under your system) can do that, but only if meetings are arranged, and pamphlets published, all costing a lot of money.

      Meetings arranged and pamphlets published? Dude, it's the 21st century. That can be done online, quickly, easily, and cheaply. There's no reason the contributors couldn't have constant access to the artists they're funding.

      That's another myth. It's only illegal (at least, here in Australia) if you reproduce 10% of the work or more, and I'm sure there are similar provisions in the US under the fair use doctrine. Not only that, it doesn't prevent you from coming up with those words on your own, only if you actually copy them. If you choose to read a copyrighted work, then be prepared to see (really, really large - pages even) strings of words that you can't copy verbatim.

      In other words, it's not a myth at all. You agree that it is, as I wrote, illegal for us to repeat certain sequences of words due to a choice someone else has made.

      Copyright law says that I can't share those strings of words with someone else. If I purchase a copy of that book, there are certain facts about my property that I'm required to keep secret, because if I divulge too many of them, I will have given someone else the means to reproduce the book (or a large part of it). That's not an unintended consequence, it's exactly how copyright is meant to operate.

      No, that's not true. You can avoid experiencing any copyrighted work. Sure, you can't avoid certain public arenas where music is playing or a painting print is being displayed, [...]

      So again, in other words, it is true. That's an odd tactic you've deployed here, starting off a paragraph by asserting a claim that you then disprove by the end of the paragraph.

      If I experience a copyrighted work, which we agree is effectively impossible to avoid, then whether I like it or not, I'm subject to restrictions on my speech in order to prevent me from sharing that experience with someone else. I have no choice in the matter.

      How unfortunate that I've chosen to support a system that doesn't force anyone into anything! My arguments would be so much more convincing if I could end them with "... and then anyone who doesn't play along is arrested or sued into destitution."

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    138. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by TheVelvetFlamebait · · Score: 1

      Meetings arranged and pamphlets published? Dude, it's the 21st century. That can be done online, quickly, easily, and cheaply. There's no reason the contributors couldn't have constant access to the artists they're funding.

      That was my first thought too, but I believe there are reasons why they don't contact over the internet. For one, not everyone has internet, and even though most people (if not everyone) who sponsored online has at least semi-regular access to the internet, I think companies are required to contact them by mail for important meetings like that, in case people don't have internet access. Maybe not explicitly by law, but perhaps in fear of lawsuits for misleading investors, or something like that.

      In other words, it's not a myth at all. You agree that it is, as I wrote, illegal for us to repeat certain sequences of words due to a choice someone else has made.

      It's a myth because its highly misleading. There is the condition, which you failed to mention, that you must have seen that string of words before, as they are exactly, in another work. There's also the fact that you have to form extremely large strings of words to qualify - far too large for there to be any measurable chance of it happening by accident. Suddenly, your phrasing, which suggests that forming strings of words is like treading in a minefield doesn't sound nearly so ludicrous. That is the myth.

      If I purchase a copy of that book, there are certain facts about my property that I'm required to keep secret, because if I divulge too many of them, I will have given someone else the means to reproduce the book (or a large part of it). That's not an unintended consequence, it's exactly how copyright is meant to operate.

      "Certain facts" is another misleading statement. That suggests that, say, summarising the book is not OK (it is), or that lending it to a friend is not OK (it is), or any of the other many activities that you seem to be suggesting are not allowed.

      I have a better idea than coming up with these "certain facts", or "sequences of words". Why don't you call them like they are? "Large portions of the work", for example. Yes, I know it tends to poke holes in your argument, but that's what you get when you base your argument entirely on the incorrect innuendo of the words that you chose to use in the first place! Copyright isn't as single-minded as you seem to be suggesting. It does support the sharing of ideas and inspiration, just not large verbatim portions of the work! That's it!

      So again, in other words, it is true. That's an odd tactic you've deployed here, starting off a paragraph by asserting a claim that you then disprove by the end of the paragraph.

      Yes it is odd, this concept of moderation, and pointing out exceptions upfront. I suggest you try it sometime. Who knows, your argument might reflect reality some time.

      If I experience a copyrighted work, which we agree is effectively impossible to avoid, then whether I like it or not, I'm subject to restrictions on my speech in order to prevent me from sharing that experience with someone else. I have no choice in the matter.

      If you don't actively seek it out, then the courts would have a hard time showing that copyright infringement took place. Let's look at the reality of the situation. If you walk into a shopping centre, you hear a copyrighted song playing in the speakers, and you have no recording equipment (as you would mot commonly do), then nothing you could do could be considered copyright infringement. You would have to actively seek out a recording of the song and copy it. If you did have recording equipment, then your audio/video would be considered to have its own "artistic merit" and that tinny sound, barely recognisable over the background noise, would not enter into it at all.

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    139. Re:Your Movie Rights Online. by Mr2001 · · Score: 1

      It's a myth because its highly misleading. There is the condition, which you failed to mention, that you must have seen that string of words before, as they are exactly, in another work. There's also the fact that you have to form extremely large strings of words to qualify - far too large for there to be any measurable chance of it happening by accident. Suddenly, your phrasing, which suggests that forming strings of words is like treading in a minefield doesn't sound nearly so ludicrous. That is the myth.

      That's a strange way to interpret what I wrote. Did you really think I was worried about what might happen to people who string words together at random and accidentally stumble upon a copyrighted sequence? I would've written "randomly spew certain sequences" if that were the case, not "repeat certain sequences", which implies that they've been heard somewhere.

      I'm not talking about treading in a minefield. I'm talking about repeating sequences of words that you've seen or heard, simply because abridging your speech makes it easier for a third party to make money. That's ludicrous enough on its own without any embellishment.

      "Certain facts" is another misleading statement. That suggests that, say, summarising the book is not OK (it is), or that lending it to a friend is not OK (it is), or any of the other many activities that you seem to be suggesting are not allowed.

      Again, the culprit here is your interpretation, not my statements. You're reading something into my words that I didn't put there.

      Copyright restricts the facts you can share about your property. If you own, say, a rock, you can describe in exquisite detail the position of every grain and speckle on its surface. You can cut it open, analyze its mineral makeup, and share your findings with whoever cares to listen. You can take pictures and put them on your homepage. Everything you can possibly measure or discover about that rock, you're allowed to share with anyone you want.

      But if you own a book, you don't have that freedom. You can describe what it looks like on the outside, as long as you aren't too specific about the illustrated cover. You can say how much it weighs. You can say what font it's printed in. You can describe in general terms what happens on page 1. You can even say what the first word is on page 1, and the second word, and the third word... but keep going long enough, and you'll find that you've shared too much of what you know about this thing that you own.

      These are objective, measurable things about a piece of your property, and the law requires you to keep them secret. And why? Not because national security is at stake. Not because anyone's privacy would be violated and their life ruined. Not because that information would be dangerous in the wrong hands. Instead, you must keep this information secret simply so that someone thousands of miles away can have an easier time selling copies of it. That's what I call ludicrous.

      Why don't you call them like they are? "Large portions of the work", for example.

      I want to illustrate what it means to prevent someone from sharing "large portions of the work". It means there are objective, measurable, undeniable facts that anyone can easily verify just by looking at a copy of that book, and yet you'll open yourself up to a lawsuit or worse if you share too many of them.

      Copyright isn't as single-minded as you seem to be suggesting. It does support the sharing of ideas and inspiration, just not large verbatim portions of the work!

      Once again, you're reading more into my words than is actually there. I didn't say copyright outlaws the sharing of all facts (or ideas, or inspiration) -- just an awful lot of them.

      But it must be said that copyright does prevent the use of many ideas, even though they aren't "large portions of the work". If you write and sell a story about a bespectacled lad

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  2. Is this any surprise? by rah1420 · · Score: 2, Insightful

    From TFA: he is an unemployed contractor with an aggravating injury that is preventing him from working. It's pretty obvious what he's doing.

    I'm not a big fan of either the MPAA or its Canadian cousin, but I don't see this as news. It's not as if they didn't warn you ahead of time that recording a movie within a theater is illegal.

    Frankly, the sentence seemed reasonable. FTW, he didn't even get jail time. He should count himself lucky.

    --
    Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
    1. Re:Is this any surprise? by MrNaz · · Score: 5, Insightful

      That you think that jail time is remotely acceptable, such that not getting it makes him "lucky", speaks volumes about the level of brainwashing that the RIAA and its global cohorts have managed to inflict upon the public.

      In the digital age, copying a film or music track should be a misdemeanor, given that the principles of the rule of law instruct that the ease of the offense, its commonality, the view that the general public has of it and the mindset that people have when they do it all have to be taken into account.

      Assigning jail time to an action that is as socially innocuous as copying an MP3 violates all of these. It is obviously only there to protect the now-defunct business model that the recording studios live by, and has no basis as a common social conception of what is and is not morally acceptable.

      Which, when you break it down, is what the law is supposed to be; commonly accepted morality. We as a society have become so socially sick that this fundamental concept seems odd to even state.

      --
      I hate printers.
    2. Re:Is this any surprise? by neoform · · Score: 1

      What's news here is that it is no longer a civil matter when you infringe upon a company's intellectual property rights, It's criminal. This should always be a civil matter. I do not want to have my tax dollars spent on locking people up in prison for copyright infringement.

      --
      MABASPLOOM!
    3. Re:Is this any surprise? by rah1420 · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Nope, I'm not brainwashed. However, I am minded to reply to your comments.

      1) The ease of the offense: We're not talking Ctrl-X Ctrl-Y, we're talking about a man taking a digital camcorder into a movie theater, setting himself up in a good vantage point, taking pains to conceal the camera (he used a sock or something, IIRC, to hide the recording indicators) -- are all these easy? Would the average moviegoer do this? You tell me.

      2) Commonality. Again, the average person knows how to copy files. The average person does not bring a camcorder into the movie theaters, the last time I checked anyway.

      3) The view that the general public has. Again, I haven't polled the general public about this but even given the comments I've seen on this article on /. (duh, serves him right, etc.) I think that it's obvious that the 'general public' would consider copying a file a bit more mundane than actually bringing in equipment to record a movie.

      4) The mindset that people have when they do it. I'm not even gonna touch this one. I think we have all formed a pretty good opinion of what his mindset was - and it wasn't to make an archival copy to watch later. Although I will be the first to admit that I don't know this for a fact.

      So, in my eyes, your argument that assigning jail time to an action 'as socially innocuous as copying an MP3' appears to beg the question of whether setting up video recording equipment in a movie theater is equally socially innocuous. I would hasten to argue that it is not. These are two separate kinds of actions.

      The question of whether it 'protects the now-defunct business model' is moot.

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
    4. Re:Is this any surprise? by gregbot9000 · · Score: 1

      You sir, are wrong.

      The law is not supposed to be a popularist "commonly accepted morality." Beating black people was once commonly accepted, even though it was wrong. The law exists, at least in a democracy, for the betterment of society and the people's rights. These people also include those who produce things.

      What you fail completely to understand is that file-sharing is a cheaper form of distribution. A CD may no longer cost $12 to make, but a full length motion movie still takes $400 million. You can't share in any way that will make the production of movies cheaper, only the distribution.

      They produce the movie, you have no right to it while it's copyright still holds unless you enter into an agreement with them. This is where the term copyright comes from, they, the producer, own the rights to copying of their product. This is a law that exists to better society because, even though the ability to copy has gotten orders of magnitude easier, the ability to produce a movie has not.

      Copyright exists for the betterment of society. While ideal length is debatable the value of the system in general really isn't. The law protects rights of producers so they continue to produce, to the betterment of society.

      I believe the RIAA has been socially harmful and the current length of copyright is too long, but you quasi-socialist mumbojumbo is just as harmful in the opposite direction.

    5. Re:Is this any surprise? by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      My god, you used "begs the question" correctly!

      The mind reels.

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
    6. Re:Is this any surprise? by rah1420 · · Score: 1

      My god, you used "begs the question" correctly!

      preen preen

      --
      Mit der Dummheit kämpfen Götter selbst vergebens.
    7. Re:Is this any surprise? by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      The law exists, at least in a democracy, for the betterment of society and the people's rights.

      As decided by whom? In answer to my rhetorical question; the society itself decides what is in its interest, and selects leaders to fashion rules (legislators) and apply it (executive and judiciary) according to those common conceptions.

      A CD may no longer cost $12 to make, but a full length motion movie still takes $400 million.

      Disagree. Some of the best movies I've ever seen were made by hobbyists. Clerks and Blair Witch Project come to mind immediately, but there are many more. The myth of the billion dollar industry is nothing more than an artificial barrier to entry. Sure, you need a $5k camera to get a good picture, but you do *not* need a $5m actor.

      They produce the movie, you have no right to it while it's copyright still holds unless you enter into an agreement with them.

      I don't disagree. I disagree with the absurd punishments being handed out for copyright infringement, especially when the police treat burglary and drug offenses with such nonchalance these days.

      Copyright exists for the betterment of society. While ideal length is debatable the value of the system in general really isn't. The law protects rights of producers so they continue to produce, to the betterment of society.

      That may have been the original idea, but the system is so corrupted now that it has resulted in an industry that sends a tiny share of the profits to the actual content creators and the majority to a bloated management structure that stifles, instead of encourages, free creative expression. So keep the copyright idealism to yourself, it's utter BS given the current state of affairs.

      I believe the RIAA has been socially harmful and the current length of copyright is too long, but you [sic] quasi-socialist mumbojumbo is just as harmful in the opposite direction.

      Aah the rant of the market fundamentalist; "You commie!" There's nothing Socialist (note the capital "S") about not wanting to be anti-social or keeping an idea on the real effects of things among the real people. Your rabid capitalist shill speech is pathetic, and I guarantee you'll change your tune if your parent/kid/sibling gets jail time for copying a film for a friend.

      I don't disagree that it should be discouraged, just that the punishment should fit the crime. Giving harsher penalties to copyright infringers than to drug dealers is so far beyond absurd that there is no word in the English language strong enough to adequately express it.

      --
      I hate printers.
    8. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The lines between private and public enterprise has been irrevocably blurred. Look at the massive bailouts governments all over the world are making - because private enterprise occupies such a large economic input, letting them fail would be more costly to the taxpayer. Similarly, letting piracy run rampant will (according to the **AA) end in the destruction of the entertainment industry (a massive sector in most/all western economies), which is why governments are bending over backwards to accomodate them. Not that I agree with such dealings - it's technically a form of extortion/ransom ("Give us what we want or we'll die, and we're taking you with us), but unfortunately, there's no scope for getting out of this extortion without spending even larger sums of taxpayer money.

    9. Re:Is this any surprise? by SpeedyDX · · Score: 4, Interesting

      I agree with your points. I do think that recording movies seems to be a "higher level" offence than simply electronically distributing them. If I were to see someone opening utorrent and sharing a movie, I wouldn't bat an eye*. But if I saw someone set up a video cam to record the movie, I would probably report him to theatre security.

      I don't think, however, that he should have received jail time. One upshot of Canada's system of sentencing is that it allows judges to be very creative. IANAL (I am not a lawyer), but IAACS (I am a Criminology student), so here is a quick and dirty lesson on Canadian law. The relevant statute is s. 432.1 in the Criminal Code of Canada, which states:

      432. (1) A person who, without the consent of the theatre manager, records in a movie theatre a performance of a cinematographic work within the meaning of section 2 of the Copyright Act or its soundtrack

      (a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than two years; or

      (b) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.

      An indictable offence is similar to a felony. If the Crown (the prosecutor) decides to proceed by indictment, the accused is given certain rights, such as the right to choose to be tried by jury or by judge, the right to be tried in a federal court, the right to a preliminary hearing, etc. In this case, the maximum jail term if the Crown elected to proceed by indictment is only 2 years. If the Crown elects to proceed by summary (similar to a misdemeanor), the rule in the Criminal Code is that the maximum jail term is two years less a day, and the accused does not need to be given the rights mentioned above. I did not read the actual case, but I'm pretty sure that the Crown elected to proceed by summary in order to avoid all the hassle of having a trial by indictment, considering the punishment would be similar either way.

      Maximum sentences are extremely rare in the Canadian justice system, and jail time is generally considered a last resort, especially in summary convictions. If we considered the closest possible world (i.e., similar judge with similar leniency, etc.), the sentence for jail time would probably be considerably less than 6 months. Considering that it was his first offence, with no evidence of past or potential future offences, and that he is a relatively young adult, I can't imagine a jail sentence of more than 3 months. Judges often take into consideration the impact that jail time would have on your life (job, family, etc), on top of the already stigmatizing effect of a conviction. In this case, it is likely that the judge thought that a jail sentence would do more harm than good to the individual, that the psychological effect of being put through the system, and that a significant fine was enough to "teach him a lesson", as it were. Considering the fine requested by the Crown was only $2000, it is probably the case that the accused could not reasonably have afforded to pay a fine much higher than $2000, which would make the current fine a significant amount. Plus, as someone in his age-range, I would think that it sucks to not be able to carry around a phone with a video camera, which most new phones have nowadays.

      * I, personally, would not bat an eye. Most of the people I have been in contact with (Canadians) would probably not bat an eye. The few Americans that I have talked to (on WoW, admittedly), however, seem to be pretty averse to P2P. I've gotten reactions like "Isn't it illegal?" or "Aren't you afraid of getting caught?" or other similar statements. It seems, on an anecdotal, probably unreliable sense, that the average Canadian is more lenient towards P2P than the average American.

    10. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      On 4)

      Mens rea, or the mindset of the criminal, is the defining characteristic of a crime. Traditionally, a person is not guilty of a crime unless it could be *proven* that he/she intended to commit a crime. Otherwise, punishment would be unjust, and the result of the harm was called "restitution", such as for an accident.

      It is only in recent times that we have started punishing people for doing things they plainly did not intend or know was a crime. I attribute this to businesses using the law as their own personal enforcement arms.

    11. Re:Is this any surprise? by truthy_squared · · Score: 1

      I don't disagree that it should be discouraged, just that the punishment should fit the crime. Giving harsher penalties to copyright infringers than to drug dealers is so far beyond absurd that there is no word in the English language strong enough to adequately express it.

      Wait, what really is the crime? Where does the money from your $10 ticket, $5 popcorn, and $4 drink go? It goes to the people who make the film and run the theater. It even goes to the farmers that grow the corn - in both your drink and your bucket. Thats a lot of people, and if you give that movie you cammed in the theater to say half a million north american viewers, that adds up to a lot of money. Not to mention what happens to your video once it leaves the country. You may call it socialist bullshit or whatever else you want, but its still trickle down economics. One guy in a theater in Canada really can have that sort of effect in our world today. The world is flat. Now I ask, what is the harsher crime? A guy peddling drugs to a homeless bum, or a guy who's enabling the loss of $50 million dollars to the local and national economies? I think the potential monetary loss due to copyright infringement is far worse than the potential crime committed by my potential dealer.

    12. Re:Is this any surprise? by gregbot9000 · · Score: 1
      WOW did you just call me a market fundamentalist? do it again! do it again! WEE! I'm mister big business. Haha, good times. The term market fundamentalist is an insult used by people on the far left, much like leftist is used by the far right. Leftist BTW is what I was called the other day for defending Obamas tax cuts. I'm a complete centrist. Removing laws to pretty much steal from producers is commie, and bad for society. My speech wasn't rabid capitalist, it was based on the constitution, it wasn't a excuse to steal.

      My kid would never get arrested for sharing a DVD because the law will never get that draconian. Getting a 1.5k for blatantly stealing isn't that bad. Using the horrors of what the law would be like if allowed to go too far right doesn't justify a policy move too far left.

      the society itself decides what is in its interest, and selects leaders to fashion rules (legislators) and apply it (executive and judiciary) according to those common conceptions.

      In the US, and most countries, we don't have direct democracies to add a level of insulation to the law. Most also have a piece of paper somewhere new laws have to be measured against to see if they fly. This is so we don't have moral majority's commonly accepted morality ruling, but the law as written, to be modified, after careful consideration.

      The myth of the billion dollar industry is nothing more than an artificial barrier to entry. Sure, you need a $5k camera to get a good picture, but you do *not* need a $5m actor.

      I knew you were going to bring up that crap. You might like independent movies distributed over P2P. I really liked Batman: TDK which I was forced *gasp* to pay for because of copyright, and produced because they were assured, by the law, they would be able to profit. The value and cost of movies is determined by many things like utility and supply and demand(thats econ 101 BTW, which is a "Market Fundamental") Stars get paid, and cost, a lot because they can perform very well and pack a theater. You might think it's a myth, but I guarantee you it's not, Heath Ledger was worth every cent. That $5k camera can capture the right picture, but that $5m actor is the one who can create the right feeling.

      You can keep the "Imaginary property" idealism to yourself, it's utter BS given the current state of affairs. The system needs reform, not people justifying theft.

    13. Re:Is this any surprise? by Ravon+Rodriguez · · Score: 1

      I find it interesting that the prosecutor can choose to forgo a trial by a jury of your peers and still have you sent to jail for the same amount of time minus a day. Democracy in action.

      --
      Jesus loves me, he loves me a bunch, because he always puts Jiffy in my lunch.
    14. Re:Is this any surprise? by Ravon+Rodriguez · · Score: 1

      A big flaw in that argument is that it assumes everyone who copies the movie would have shelled out the fifteen dollars to see it in the theater, had they not downloaded it. This is simply not the case, and it applies to all forms of copyright infringement (software, music, and movies). There has to be real money being lost before you can assume a loss of $50 million dollars to the economy, not fictional "maybe dollars" that the RIAA and MPAA like to use.

      --
      Jesus loves me, he loves me a bunch, because he always puts Jiffy in my lunch.
    15. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think the real flaw in his argument is that it is a steaming pile of zebra shit.

      I can't believe there is someone fuckheaded enough to think that camming a movie is a worse social offense than selling drugs, even going to far as to assume that all drug purchases are "homeless bums", and then attempting to claim that a guy camming (even assuming you follow his trickle down river of horseshit) costs society $50 million.

      He is certainly one of the most myopic, ignorant fuckwits I've ever come across.

    16. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I think grandparent didn't meant that copy-paste is same as bringing digital camcorder to the teather. I think he meant that if copy-paste is not a crime, then 1 step further (bringing camera to teather) is not SUCH big crime, that it would be even considerable to give Jail time.

    17. Re:Is this any surprise? by MrNaz · · Score: 1

      My kid would never get arrested for sharing a DVD because the law will never get that draconian.

      Must be nice and warm under that rock then.

      In the US, and most countries, we don't have direct democracies to add a level of insulation to the law. Most also have a piece of paper somewhere new laws have to be measured against to see if they fly. This is so we don't have moral majority's commonly accepted morality ruling, but the law as written, to be modified, after careful consideration.

      Right, and if that's how you think it is then I once again marvel at the level of bliss available under rocks these days.

      The value and cost of movies is determined by many things like utility and supply and demand(thats econ 101 BTW, which is a "Market Fundamental")

      Before you jump on that high horse, I studied economics in university.

      You can keep the "Imaginary property" idealism to yourself, it's utter BS given the current state of affairs. The system needs reform, not people justifying theft.

      What on Earth is wrong with you? I've said it *twice* now, I'm not justifying his actions, I'm saying, let the punishment fit the crime. The RIAA/MPAA and their global sidekicks are running around slapping people with fines in the hundreds of thousands of dollars. The Canadian association here, as stated in the summary, wants him to go to jail. I'm not saying he's blameless or even that his actions are not a crime. Bloody hell, you're arguing against a point I'm not even making. What I *am* saying is that arguing for jail time and fines that you normally see corporations being slapped with for anti-trust is absurd.

      --
      I hate printers.
    18. Re:Is this any surprise? by harmony7 · · Score: 1

      By that logic, law enforcement should only prosecute the murder of wealthy people. Who cares if a poor person gets killed? There is much more potential monetary loss due to the killing of a wealthy man. Monetary loss isn't the foundation of the law.

    19. Re:Is this any surprise? by mpe · · Score: 1

      Some of the best movies I've ever seen were made by hobbyists. Clerks and Blair Witch Project come to mind immediately, but there are many more. The myth of the billion dollar industry is nothing more than an artificial barrier to entry. Sure, you need a $5k camera to get a good picture, but you do *not* need a $5m actor.

      The movie industry (along with the music industry) uses such convoluted accounting practices that it's possible impossible to tell if using expensive actors is actually "worth it" in terms of revenue in any case.

      I disagree with the absurd punishments being handed out for copyright infringement, especially when the police treat burglary and drug offenses with such nonchalance these days.

      IIRC the most economically damaging, but often ignored crimes fall into the catagory of "corporate crime".

    20. Re:Is this any surprise? by mpe · · Score: 1

      A big flaw in that argument is that it assumes everyone who copies the movie would have shelled out the fifteen dollars to see it in the theater, had they not downloaded it. This is simply not the case, and it applies to all forms of copyright infringement (software, music, and movies).

      It's something which a lot of people just don't get. That many of these people were never "potential customers" in the first place.

      There has to be real money being lost before you can assume a loss of $50 million dollars to the economy, not fictional "maybe dollars" that the RIAA and MPAA like to use.

      To do this you'd need to know the number of people who didn't go to see the movie because of the "pirate version" vs the number of people who only went to see it because they got a "preview". The vast majority of people watching the pirated copy may well fall into the "wouldn't have paid to see it" group. Thing is that both of these industries are so used to "creative accounting" (typically to avoid paying the actual creative people) that they probably don't have a clue what actual money is. Though it might not be a bad idea to have some of their accountants try a bit of screen writing once in a while :).
      One simple action which could be taken which would probably reduce piracy would be not to restrict release to one geographic region at a time. Which leads to there being a huge group of people who cannot pay even if they wanted to. Given a choice between "pirate copy" and nothing (with a possiblity of an official copy turning up sometime in the future) what does anyone with two brain cells expect.

    21. Re:Is this any surprise? by mpe · · Score: 1

      What's news here is that it is no longer a civil matter when you infringe upon a company's intellectual property rights, It's criminal. This should always be a civil matter. I do not want to have my tax dollars spent on locking people up in prison for copyright infringement.

      There's also a very big problem that criminal law for all practical purposes does not apply to "corporate people". The principle of equal protection under the law is being violated here. Since when a company infringes an individual's intellectual property there is no way in which that company will wind up in prison.
      That's before you even consider that this involves companies which are completly hypocritical when it comes to the whole issue of copyright infringement.

    22. Re:Is this any surprise? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      The parent said that _the accused_ has the right to choose whether to be tried by a jury or only a judge, not the prosecuting authorities.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    23. Re:Is this any surprise? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Mens rea, or the mindset of the criminal, is the defining characteristic of a crime."

      It actually defines which of a set of possible crimes a person is charged with, not whether they are charged.

      " Traditionally, a person is not guilty of a crime unless it could be *proven* that he/she intended to commit a crime."

      Please cite a legal tradition where ignorance of a law is an excuse for breaking it. This certainly hasn't ever been the case in the British legal system that underlies both the US and Canadian ones, and it wasn't the case under the Napoleonic system that's still used in some European countries, or the Roman system, the ancient Greek system, the Code Of Hammurabi which Shariah Law is based on, or anything else I can think of.

      "It is only in recent times that we have started punishing people for doing things they plainly did not intend or know was a crime."

      No system based on the rule of law has _ever_ regarded ignorance of laws as being an excuse for breaking them. The only exception to this is (the legal rather than medical definition of) insanity, but even that doesn't usually result in all charges against the law breaker being dropped.

      "I attribute this to businesses using the law as their own personal enforcement arms."

      The laws of most countries in nearly all historic periods have been tilted heavily towards the wealthy and powerful for as long as there have been codified laws, because it was the wealthy and powerful who both wrote and enforced them. That's why horse thieves were hanged in both America and Europe until fairly recently in historic terms, pepper thieves had their throats cut under mediaeval European law, and Islamic law cut the hands off thieves of any type. And if you think for one moment that "I didn't realise taking pepper that isn't mine is illegal" would wash with the judiciary of those periods any more than it would today, then I've got a catalogue of lovely bridges to show you that I'm willing to sell at bargain prices.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    24. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We're not talking Ctrl-X Ctrl-Y

      Cut and interrupt? You do that often in movie theaters? Seems much more infringing to me than Ctrl-C Ctrl-V.

    25. Re:Is this any surprise? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      From TFA: he is an unemployed contractor with an aggravating injury that is preventing him from working. It's pretty obvious what he's doing.

      Hehe, and moreover winter is coming, one reason more to move to somewhere warm and cosy :)

      But hey,... this is Canada, there are easier ways to achieve the same goal:

      • Hitch a ride to Thunderbay
      • Check into the local Shelterhouse, as the bum he is.
      • Volunteer to help in the kitchen.
      • Piss of the influential Rotaryans (who operate the shelterhouse) by threatening to talk to the press about the enormous amounts of food that are thrown away rather than given to the bums.
      • ...
      • Wait for the goon squad to haul him off into where he wanted to go so badly
    26. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      ... your argument that assigning jail time to an action 'as socially innocuous as copying an MP3' appears to beg the question of ...

      s/beg/raises/;

    27. Re:Is this any surprise? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      The parent said that _the accused_ has the right to choose whether to be tried by a jury or only a judge, not the prosecuting authorities.

      Only if the prosecuting authorities chose to try it as an "indictable offense" (felony), not as a misdeamor. In the present case, the law allowed both options, and the prosecution chose summary conviction (misdaemor).

      But then, the Canadian system is still quite out of whack, if they want you in the slammer badly enough, they can just hold a kangooroo court in route absence, video-tape it, and then edit footage of you into it after the fact (you get to "testify" before the camera after the verdict has already been spoken, and the footage will be "proof" that you had a proper trial).

      It would have been poetic if they had chosen to do a "video trial" for this particular offense, hehe.

    28. Re:Is this any surprise? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      then I've got a catalogue of lovely bridges to show you that I'm willing to sell at bargain prices.

      Just in case you didn't know: real-estate fraud is a crime in most jurisdictions.

    29. Re:Is this any surprise? by purpledinoz · · Score: 1

      I totally agree! Jail time would put him with rapists and murderers. Last time I checked my moral compass, raping and murdering is MUCH worse than recording a movie. But I guess the some people would disagree...

      These movie companies need to provide consumers better convenience and value. I hate going to the movie rental place to endlessly browse for a movie that doesn't suck, then when I finally decide on one, I find that it's gone. The movie companies need to sell their movies online at a price where consumers treat them as disposables. Maybe $2 for a movie download. I think this is cheap enough where people are willing to shell out the money, watch it once, and won't bother to pirate it. Also, to add extra value, they can provide extra services, where it tracks the movies you have watched, and recommends movies based on your viewing habits. Like what Netflix does (and it's awesome). Also, when you're picking a movie between friends, a great feature would be to find a movie that no one has watched and matches their viewing preferences. I would love to pay $2 for movies and have all these conveniences.

    30. Re:Is this any surprise? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Only if the prosecuting authorities chose to try it as an "indictable offense" (felony), not as a misdeamor."

      I think the right is actually more limited than that, i.e. an offender can only demand a jury trial when the potential sentence is 5 years or more. I could be wrong on this though, and would welcome being corrected.

      "if they want you in the slammer badly enough, they can just hold a kangooroo court in route absence, video-tape it, and then edit footage of you into it after the fact (you get to "testify" before the camera after the verdict has already been spoken, and the footage will be "proof" that you had a proper trial)."

      I'm not really familiar with the Canadian system per se, but the fact that it's based on the British one would mean that I'd imagine they'd need more than just an edited video to pull something like that off, i.e. collusion from judiciary, the defence, other court officials, forged court records, etc. I'm not disputing what you're saying here, but simply saying that it would take a lot of balls to try and pull something like this off given the risk that somebody would squall to the press and kick off what could end up as a massive scandal with heads rolling as ministers and other members of parliament do everything possible to distance themselves from it by shifting the blame on to everyone except themselves.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    31. Re:Is this any surprise? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      There I was, smugly thinking I'd be completely immune from the law because I could claim I didn't know it was illegal to sell bridges that I don't own, and you pop up and ruin everything by telling me it's illegal.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
    32. Re:Is this any surprise? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The question of whether it 'protects the now-defunct business model' is moot.

      You sir are a moron. Buying out the legal system with money such as the CMPDA has done clearly crosses multiple lines. It is NOT A MUTE POINT.

    33. Re:Is this any surprise? by oogoliegoogolie · · Score: 1

      The ease of the offense: We're not talking Ctrl-X Ctrl-Y, we're talking about a man taking a digital camcorder into a movie theater, setting himself up in a good vantage point, taking pains to conceal the camera (he used a sock or something, IIRC, to hide the recording indicators) -- are all these easy? Would the average moviegoer do this? You tell me.

      Oh brother, you're over dramatizing what he did and making his actions sound like their some elaborate plot from a spy thriller novel! His actions were not any more complicated that a person pulling out a cell phone and clicking the talk button. He recorded a movie....big deal. The average person knows how to use a camcorder, just like the average person knows how to use "Ctrl-X Ctrl-Y" as you say. What he did does not justify jail time, and it's right that he did not get any.

    34. Re:Is this any surprise? by ArsenneLupin · · Score: 1

      given the risk that somebody would squall to the press

      Squall to the press and risk similar treatment?

      Squall to the press and risk losing your job as a policeman, court official, cameraman (he!), lawyer, judge, ...

      Squall to the press an risk losing being labeled as a traitor or anal-retentive procedurist by your former colleagues?

      Politicians? Well too low level for them to truly know about. And if they know, low-level enough for plausible deniability.

      kick off what could end up as a massive scandal with heads rolling as ministers and other members of parliament do everything possible to distance themselves from it by shifting the blame on to everyone except themselves.

      You bet! That they will distance themselves from this, that's for sure! No politician is going to want to be associated with such SNAFU. And I bet that even Rotary International would scramble to distance itself from its Thunderbay branch faster than it takes them to say "shelterhouse".

      Heads rolling? Maybe at a local level, but it's all too easy to just claim misunderstandings, clerical errors, or "innocent" shortcuts in procedure ("a proper trial would have been too expensive, we're doing this to save taxpayer's money")

      After all, Canada has strong data protection laws in place, which makes it easy to forestall any in-depth investigation.

      Welcome to the real world! Constitutional protections only have value if the people in power want to uphold them.

    35. Re:Is this any surprise? by daveime · · Score: 1

      Queue car analogy in 3 ... 2 ... 1 ... action !!!

      In the digital age, stealing a car should be a misdemeanor, given that the principles of the rule of law instruct that the ease of the offense, its commonality, the view that the general public has of it and the mindset that people have when they do it all have to be taken into account.

      It's easy to steal a car.
      It's very common that cars get stolen.
      The general public have the view that it's okay to steal a car (provided it's not THEIR car).
      The mindset of people who steal cars is that they like to steal cars.

      What kind a warped social view do you have that just because something is considered "socially acceptable", it suddenly ceases to be subject to the rule of law ?

    36. Re:Is this any surprise? by smoker2 · · Score: 1

      Not squall, squeal. Squall is a nasty patch of bad weather.

    37. Re:Is this any surprise? by unknownroad · · Score: 1

      squall: n. A loud, harsh cry. (Your definition is also correct)

    38. Re:Is this any surprise? by Brain+Damaged+Bogan · · Score: 1

      would you request jail time for someone travelling 5miles/hour over the limit? no? why request jailtime for this, another non-violent crime that doesn't actually harm anybody. (and if you say it harms the bottom line of the movie producers, it does not... the people that download and watch the torrents -generally- weren't going to go to the cinema to see that movie anyway)

      --
      -- Sex is the antonym of pringles. Once you pop it's time to stop.
    39. Re:Is this any surprise? by truthy_squared · · Score: 1

      You can't compare murderers to non-violent drug offenders. Those are two very different types of people. I was saying that the magnitude of the crime is a lot different for somebody breaking a copyright law by posting an illegal copy of a movie online compared to somebody selling $20 worth of drugs to somebody else on the corner.

    40. Re:Is this any surprise? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "Heads rolling? Maybe at a local level"

      That's what I meant by saying that heads would roll as politicians scramble to distance themselves from it. The rolling heads would come from the people directly involved in the case (judge, lawyers, other court officials, catering staff, police, etc.) who would of course be found to have hatched a conspiracy to suborn justice entirely on their own by a parliamentary enquiry which issues a report saying that politicians are completely blameless, utterly shocked by what happened, and determined to ensure that nothing like it ever happens again.

      And it's the above which provides the greatest level of protection against kangaroo courts that act on behalf of ruling political parties in democracies, because everybody with an IQ above that of packaging materials will know it'll be their bollocks in the fire if Amnesty International causes a worldwide press stink that embarrasses the politicos both at home and abroad. Self interest is a pretty big motivator in today's world, and this sort of act definitely isn't in line with the interests of any of those who would be required to participate in it.

      "it's all too easy to just claim misunderstandings, clerical errors, or "innocent" shortcuts in procedure ("a proper trial would have been too expensive, we're doing this to save taxpayer's money")"

      All of which would be grounds for appeal to a higher court, and eventually the Canadian Supreme Court, an organisation which isn't famed for its pro-government stance.

      "Canada has strong data protection laws in place, which makes it easy to forestall any in-depth investigation."

      I doubt that it would forestall the higher courts (because trials are supposed to be public, so they'll want to know why public records are being withheld from them), or the queue of anonymous leakers jumping up and down to exchange copies of those records for a large manilla envelope full of money that a reporter just happens to be wandering around a dark alley with.

      "Welcome to the real world! Constitutional protections only have value if the people in power want to uphold them."

      It goes a lot further than constitutional protections, because everything ordinary citizens have and do is at the sufferance of those with greater power than them, and it doesn't have to be regulatory or judicial power, as those whose jobs and homes have been lost or are in jeopardy because of the world financial crisis are discovering.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
  3. Umm... by Zencyde · · Score: 1

    Last I checked, videotaping a movie was illegal in most places. I'm pretty copyleft.. but why is this story on the front page? 1. Videotape movie in theater 2. ??? 3. Get fined by the government

    --
    What day is it? Could you please tell me?
  4. So? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The guy goes into a theatre to film the movie... I mean, come on. We're not talking about time-shifting a DVD rental by copying it on a computer to view it later (thanks for nothing, 1-day rental).

  5. People who do this should be killed. by Adult+film+producer · · Score: 0, Troll

    Enough is enough. It's time to draw a line in the sand. Next time a pirate is caught there shall be no due process.. just kill them. Movie studios are struggling during their tough economic times, everybody can sympathize with their situation, I do. Should you find yourself in a dark place, alone and crying out for help... look for me, I will be there for you... with a clawhammer ready to smash your skull.

    1. Re:People who do this should be killed. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I will be there for you... with a clawhammer ready to smash your skull.

      And I will be there to record and seed it.

  6. jail time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    good to see canada is trying to keep those hardened criminals off the streets. seriously why the fuck should a person get prison for something like that?

    1. Re:jail time? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 5, Insightful

      because corporations are the new aristocracy. in the olden days committing a crime against an aristocrat was a far worse offense than the same crime committed against a commoner. ridiculously harsh sentences were there to reinforce the difference in status. if you stole from or committed any other offense against an aristocrat/noble they could pretty much do whatever they wanted with you. that was their aristocratic privilege.

      as caste systems began to fall out of favor with educated societies people began to seek a more egalitarian justice system. therefore punishments for crimes were the same regardless of the socioeconomic status of either the perpetrator or victim. but like the concept of democracy this egalitarian idealism didn't last for very long in practice. a corporate plutocracy was quickly created to replace the nobles and ruling elite of the past.

      and with corporate interests dominating the government & political system in most capitalist societies, the same double standards are again resurfacing. that is why the RIAA is allowed to bully regular citizens using the threat of costly court battles to extort money from innocent individuals, and individuals convicted to pirating music are ordered to pay hundreds of thousands of dollars for "stealing" $20-30 worth of music. similarly, non-malicious hackers accused of causing financial damages to large corporations are often punished more severely than violent offenders.

    2. Re:jail time? by gregbot9000 · · Score: 1

      Way to not read TFA, or even the summery. He didn't do any prison time.

    3. Re:jail time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do people copy and paste this shit? He didn't get jail time you fucking idiot.

    4. Re:jail time? by westlake · · Score: 1
      seriously why the fuck should a person get prison for something like that?
      .

      When you ask Willie Sutton why he robs banks, the expected reply is "Because that is where the money is."

      Banks aren't doing so very well right now.

      Looking elsewhere:

      The Dark Knight cost $185 million to produce and in theatrical release sold $528 million dollars worth of tickets in the US alone.

      Clean industry.

      Skilled labor and high-tech. High-paying on the production side.

      Hog Heaven.

      Generates billions in export dollars.

      It doesn't matter whether your home district is in New York or Toronto, Vancouver or L.A. Protecting this industry is not a tough sell politically.

      The genuine Sutton might hit the geek a little too close to home:

      "Why did I rob banks? Because I enjoyed it. I loved it. I was more alive when I was inside a bank, robbing it, than at any other time in my life. I enjoyed everything about it so much that one or two weeks later I'd be out looking for the next job. But to me the money was the chips, that's all."

    5. Re:jail time? by rovar · · Score: 1

      An alternate and more plausible explanation is the following deterrence principal: The magnitude of a punishment must be indirectly proportional to the frequency with with the punishment is used in order to maintain deterrence. Copyright laws have severe penalties because they are very rarely enforced against individuals. The nature of technology and cost of litigation make it difficult to increase the frequency of catching violators, so penalties must be increased to maintain deterrence.

    6. Re:jail time? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      so then a jaywalking ticket should come with a prison sentence because 99.9% of jaywalkers are never caught? it's not just copyright laws that have overly severe penalties, so do corporate libel convictions like the McLibel case in the UK a while back. and copyright breaches against smaller companies with less legal muscle do not come with the same disproportionate fines/restitution.

    7. Re:jail time? by rovar · · Score: 1

      Your jaywalking analogy is erroneous. Jaywalking is most often a harmless crime (e.g., crossing a barren street), so it makes no sense to issue tickets in those instances. Indeed, tickets are hardly ever issued in such situations. Yet, when jaywalking is dangerous (like at busy intersections near college campuses), higher penalties are utilized. This is similar to copyright laws which usually preserve harsh penalties for the harmful situations (e.g., someone sneaks into a theater to make a bootleg that may very easily be distributed at hundreds of flea markets). Just like cop

    8. Re:jail time? by Ravon+Rodriguez · · Score: 1

      I think you mean to say inversely proportional.

      --
      Jesus loves me, he loves me a bunch, because he always puts Jiffy in my lunch.
    9. Re:jail time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe you anticorporationists have forum or home addres?

      Regards,
      not-(RIAA or friends)

    10. Re:jail time? by reiisi · · Score: 1

      But the new law says he could have, and the MPAA female-dog-on-a-leash expressed disappointment that he didn't.

      So, because he got lucky we should be satisfied that the law is okay?

      --
      Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    11. Re:jail time? by Catil · · Score: 1

      Let's say our justice system was egalitarian - how would you expect the outcome of this case to change?

      In order to find the answer, why don't we just forget those undoubtedly evil corporations, their holding companies and the million dollar cinema complexes for a while and imagine ourselves on a small independent island, inhabited by 20 people, to get a better perspective.
      You are one them, and for a living you are making nice movies for the other people to enjoy. As this is kind of expensive for you, you don't just give copies of your movies to others but instead show them inside your home on a screen for an entry fee. 15 paying people are going to see your new movie every week. It works just fine, you love your job, people love you and life is good.

      One day, however, one of your guests starts to record your movie right off your screen. At first, you don't have a problem with it but the next week only 13 people visit you. A week later the number shrinks to 12, then to 11. Of course, your earnings shrink as well and because you have bills to pay, just like everyone else, your budget to make movies has to shrink too. After some time, you get suspicious and start to wonder why this is happening. You decide to follow the guy that still comes to record your movies ever week to his home. There, you find out that he is showing your movies to your former audience for free. When confronting them on the reason they don't come to visit you anymore, they claim that the quality of your movies has gone bad and that they are not worth paying for anymore. You tell them that if they would just continue to pay in order to see them, that you would have a bigger budget to make better movies. They don't care, so you figure that if they had not the possibility to watch your movies for free in the first place, the problem would just solve itsself. You decide to sue the guy recording your movies.

      Coincidentally, you are also the judge on this island - what is your decision and why?
      Now tweak the varibles. Would you come to a different judgement if the recording of your movies wouldn't affect their quality? Would you come to a different conclusion if the guy earned money himself by showing your movies?
      And finally, would it matter if 300 million people lived on the island and not just 20?

    12. Re:jail time? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is what is meant by the term, "Justice is Blind."

      Many people do not think about this statement or its true meaning. True justice is completely blind to all motives, positions, rank, and authority of the individual it is exercised upon. "Blind Justice" neither takes pity on the poor transgressor nor does it favor the rich transgressor. Equal punishment is meted out to both. That is the beauty and cruel truth of a perfect system of justice. As citizens of a free society, we must seek a justice system that is neither sympathetic in overlooking crime due to the tribulations a perpetrator has lived through as well as being free from the influence of powerful individuals who wish to manipulate the courts. Senators deserve the same treatment as citizens, tax payers deserve the same treatment as tax writers, landlords deserve the same treatment as their charges, servants as their employers, gangsters as mafioso's, Judges as Lawyers, Free Men as Free Men.

    13. Re:jail time? by lysergic.acid · · Score: 1

      i don't really have that big of a problem with the outcome of this case. though i do think the fine is a little excessive, likewise with not being able to have video recording equipment outside of the home. but otherwise it's not really all that unreasonable compared to what Americans get fined for file sharing convictions.

      my post was in response to the GGP's question "seriously why the fuck should a person get prison for something like that?" which i assume referred to this statement from the summary:

      The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was disappointed that jail time was not given.

      i don't think any normal person would consider this man's crime worthy of incarceration. the reason why CMDPA actually thinks jail-time is called for in response to such a minor offense can be explained by the same reason the defendants in the McLibel case were ordered to pay McDonald's £60,000 in restitutions for distributing pamphlets critical of the McDonald's corporation.

  7. Medical devices by Hao+Wu · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Are they going to ban retinal implants for the blind?

    Eventually they might produce quality vision that can be recorded (and of course redistributed):

    The system comprises on an implant, ... a pair of spectacles that contain a camera and a transmitter, and a wearable computer worn at the patient's waist that processes the input from the camera to replace the information processing function of the formall healthy retina.

    --
    I suggest you read Slashdot
    1. Re:Medical devices by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      First Thought: Good. Now all we have to do is get formerly blind people to copy all the movies.

      Second Thought: Maybe they'll take the Microsoft approach and require all artificial vision devices to reduce to 320x240 when they detect the copyright flag in movie theaters or HDTV.

      Third Thought: Vision-Corrected people will be forced to resort to looking anywhere but directly at the movie screen, and later play back what their implants recorded in peripheral vision. Movie Industry insists they're filthy pirates. Suspected pirates claim this is the only way they can actually view the movie above 320x240.

  8. Riight... by cjfs · · Score: 4, Insightful

    The house lights were turned on and the movie was shut off and Calgary police arrested him.

    I'm sure all their paying customers enjoyed this. Way to encourage honest people to buy your product.

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

      Who cares, 50 people in a theatre doesn't equal $1,500, right?

    2. Re:Riight... by eggnoglatte · · Score: 4, Informative

      Actually, a police raid sounds loads more interesting than the crap they have been showing in theaters lately ;-)

    3. Re:Riight... by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      Way to make an example of somebody in front of the other moviegoers. If they wanted to go all the way, instead of turning on all the lights they would have put a spotlight on him.

    4. Re:Riight... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Im just glad they arrested the OTHER guy who was filming it instead of me! WHEW.

  9. What took so long? by C18H27NO3+ · · Score: 3, Interesting

    1. They arrested him on the spot with the equipment.
    2. The theaters each have a unique embedded watermark.
    3. The investigation into his wrongdoing took 6 months.
    /boggle

    1. Re:What took so long? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Police aren't known for their ability to do paperwork.

    2. Re:What took so long? by SpeedyDX · · Score: 2, Insightful

      This wasn't a crime where anyone's right to physical security was threatened. Police just took their time to investigate, gathered evidence, and made a case against the accused. I don't see what's wrong with this. I'm GLAD it took this long. It means the police didn't take (m)any short cuts. This is just what due diligence by the police looks like. We still have some semblance of it in Canada.

    3. Re:What took so long? by scientus · · Score: 1

      FUD

    4. Re:What took so long? by magus_melchior · · Score: 2, Interesting

      It's 1 month to build the product and 5 months to play Doom...

      Scratch that, 1 month to actually collect evidence, and 5 months to convince the DA/judge/jury with the requisite court procedures.

      Litigation/prosecution is far from fast. We may think "speedy" in terms of nanoseconds, but you can't shrink the legal process down (yet) similarly to Moore's Law because the legal process also exists to protect the rights of the accused.

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
  10. And thats it... by beatle11 · · Score: 0

    He could make much more than $1495 recording movies in theaters. One movie would suffice. Plus how are they going to enforce the ban. Is every theater gonna have the guys picture around? "The man was also banned for a year from possessing any video recording equipment, even a video-capable cellphone, outside of his home." Again same issue, except maybe the cellphone. To me that's stupid.

    1. Re:And thats it... by Seraphim1982 · · Score: 2, Interesting

      The point of a ban like this is to keep him honest. If he is caught doing it again proving was in a theater, or was carrying a camera, is a lot easier then proving they were videotaping a specific movie. For example, if he deletes the video/tosses the disk before the police catch him, then the authorities don't have to worry about trying to restore it, or proving it was there, because he's still in trouble for having the camera or being in the theater.

      Most bans imposed as a result of a criminal trial work under the same idea. The court tries to it a lot harder for the criminal to repeat his crime without being convicted, and hopefully that works to deter him.

  11. Videoing Movies at the Cinema by notseamus · · Score: 2, Interesting

    I've seen the warnings that are played before movies since about 2006, but I', not sure if I'd report anybody that was recording a movie. Has anyone else actually encountered this? What would you do?

    --
    I dreamed of Freud: What does this mean?
    1. Re:Videoing Movies at the Cinema by Skye16 · · Score: 2, Funny

      Watch the movie?

      Mix sno-caps and popcorn together in one mouthful?

      Hiss at my fiancee when she decides to try talking during the previews?

      Pretty much the usual.

      (Hey, you asked!)

    2. Re:Videoing Movies at the Cinema by Naturalis+Philosopho · · Score: 1

      Nothing. Kind of like I don't report speeders on the highway every time I see them; and the speeders might actually hurt someone.

      On a sort of related note, it was when I took my niece to see Superman back in '06 that I found out about pirating movies. I'd never though of it before, but upon hearing the total for two tickets (one child), two drinks and a popcorn, I was looking downward to cool myself off from the register-rage (the close-cousin of sticker-shock) that was welling up when I noticed a label on the counter that told me not to download movies. I vividly remember saying to myself, "You can do that? Why are we here then?" Now, I won't download that crap, but really, why would someone pay when they get ripped off at the theaters and could just watch the movie on their great big television at home that the corporations convinced them that they needed?

    3. Re:Videoing Movies at the Cinema by corychristison · · Score: 1

      I would tell the person doing the recording to turn it off.

      If s/he does not do so, I would then get up and find the manager.

      (my good friend is the manager of the only cinema in my town)

    4. Re:Videoing Movies at the Cinema by AmberBlackCat · · Score: 1

      Jump in front of his camera, say hi to my mother, thank all of the people who made this day possible, and send a shout out to my entire crew. Or nothing.

  12. We need to BAN videocams NOW! by elashish14 · · Score: 2, Funny

    Serves that bastard right for using it for the wrong purposes.

    Stay away from my guns though. I reserve every right to carry them around in public.

    --
    I have left slashdot and am now on Soylent News. FUCK YOU DICE.
    1. Re:We need to BAN videocams NOW! by st0rmshad0w · · Score: 1

      Stay away from my guns though. I reserve every right to carry them around in public.

      Hey you never know then you'll be subjected to another Battlefield Earth or Ishtar and want to take the easy way out.

  13. Blame Canada! by madcat2c · · Score: 1

    Invade them!

    Seriously, kinda harsh with the one year ban thing,...It shouldn't be that hard to insert artifacts into each theaters films to see where the pirated ones are coming from. Then stake out that theater.

  14. Phones will be getting good video by LockeOnLogic · · Score: 1, Insightful

    not now, but eventually, the quality of video recording in phones will be getting pretty decent. Am I going to get arrested for bringing in a phone with video recording capability? What if I txt during the movie? At what point do the house lights go up and the police barge in?

    1. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If it becomes a problem, the telecommunications companies will simply stop allowing phones with decent cameras on their networks under the guise of some technical problem, or they will attempt to lock them down in some way, perhaps by embedding a chip in them that disables the camera when it receives a certain signal.

      Big media looks after their own.

    2. Re:Phones will be getting good video by icegreentea · · Score: 4, Informative

      When the person next to you, or behind you sees you holding up your cellphone pointed at the screen for 20 straight minutes. Seriously, use some common sense. The people running theatres aren't all dumbasses. They'll put up some rules about cellphone use, and since they won't want to piss off their customers, they'll make the rules reasonable, and in return, they'll ask people to report other people who have their damn cell out for 30 minutes at a time.

    3. Re:Phones will be getting good video by ozbird · · Score: 5, Funny

      What if I txt during the movie? At what point do the house lights go up and the police barge in?

      As soon as possible, you inconsiderate clod.

    4. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Come on; use common sense. Nobody's going to send in the SWAT team just because you have a fucking phone (although now that I think about it that might not be a bad idea). However, if I ran a theater and some fucktard started texting in the middle of it I would be sure to make an example of him.

    5. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you're just txting with your cell phone, and you're doing it long enough that they get paranoid and the lights go up and 10 cops rush in and drop you to the floor (dramatization added!) before they can cart you off they'd need to prove you had been camming I would guess. (until further legislation is added so they just have to pretend to think you were camming.) So what they would likely do is take your cell phone and inspect it's contents.

      If you weren't camming, there would be no movie saved correct? At which point they're in a pretty awkward position. Unless you were also camming something illegal of other subject matters, at which point your life is still fucked up.

    6. Re:Phones will be getting good video by rmallico · · Score: 4, Interesting

      had a row of teen girls in front of us last week (their parent right in front of my 4 year old) at the Madagascar 2 showing... two people asked them to stop texting and the mgmt was not anywhere in sight. my 4 year old was getting into the movie and his feet were kicking the back of the seat (of the parent might i add) and she asked me to control my child kicking her seat... and my response was short and sweet..

      I would love to have him stop once the texting by her child (and others) stopped...

      I expected her to have them stop... no, she huffed and moved the group up to the neck crick seats (ones like 5 feet away) and which also put her children in plain sight of the finally walking through theatre mgmt person who asked them 2 times to stop and finally booted them...

      what a great show it was...

      --
      sig goes here!
    7. Re:Phones will be getting good video by mordenkhai · · Score: 1

      Last movie I went too, about one to two weeks ago, they added texting to the "Please stop being an ass and don't use your phone in the theater" announcements. Honestly, I hope they do assume anyone using a phone is trying to do something illegal, then maybe people will only watch movies when they have the time to not interrupt other people's entertainment.

    8. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Dutch+Gun · · Score: 1

      And you've summed up nicely why I rarely go to theaters anymore.

      A 63" TV + extra large subwoofers + my own theater room in my own house > movie theater. Being able to pause the movie to grab a snack or go to the bathroom doesn't hurt either.

      --
      Irony: Agile development has too much intertia to be abandoned now.
    9. Re:Phones will be getting good video by ljw1004 · · Score: 1

      > A 63" TV... Being able to pause the movie to
      > go to the bathroom doesn't hurt either.

      For some reason, the bigger the TV, the prouder people are about their incontinence. I have a 110" screen from my project but I can hold it in for three hours...

    10. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 1

      what's wrong with texting?

    11. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Phroggy · · Score: 2, Informative

      what's wrong with texting?

      The backlight from your phone, which you hold up while you do it, is distracting to the people behind you. Also, even if you have it set to vibrate, I can probably hear it every time a message comes in.

      --
      $x='S24;r)>63/* h@<5+oZ)32"5cz';$me='phroggy'x$];
      $x=~y+ -xz+\0-Tx+;print$_^chop$me for split'',$x;
    12. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should be shot on the spot for texting in a movie.

    13. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Kinetix303 · · Score: 1

      You'd think that, but when going to see Nick and Norah's Infinite Eyesore here in Montreal a few weeks ago they actually had metal detectors and confiscated all cellphones on the way in! My girlfriend's phone doesn't even have a camera and they took it away, but they took a look at the iPhone and said "Oh... an iPod, no worries." Then we had got a patdown, including the naughty bits. It was like going through airport security. Later on, these same thugs were wandering around during the movie wearing night vision goggles and whispering into their headsets and standing in front of the screen, further ruining the film.

      I can put up with this kind of crap when I board an airline. I am *not* going to put up with it on date night and nobody else should either.

      Incidentally, they've actually created a pretty good argument for downloading movies.

    14. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bravo, except, why are you taking a 4 year old to the movies? You're just as much a reason I don't go as those teenagers.

    15. Re:Phones will be getting good video by rmallico · · Score: 1

      you are joking right? only place i want photons coming from during a movie is the screen and possibly the exit sign down on each side of the theatre... i don't think i am alone in that requirement/need...

      --
      sig goes here!
    16. Re:Phones will be getting good video by piltdownman84 · · Score: 1

      I was at a movie a few years ago and some Muppet was trying to take pictures with a flash. I guess they didn't understand why I didn't work and just kept trying. Eventually people in the theater started yelling at them and they stopped.

    17. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IF you text during a movie, I personally would like to barge in on you.

      Seing the backlight of phones is to me _the_ most annoying thing at a movie theathre these days.

      I do not condone my friends approach, but if she does have a clear shot.. she _will_ land a piece of gum in your hair ;)

    18. Re:Phones will be getting good video by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Not every 4 year old is misbehaving. Be angry at the ones who do misbehave, but leave the others alone, mmkay?

    19. Re:Phones will be getting good video by halcyon1234 · · Score: 1

      they'll ask people to report other people who have their damn cell out for 30 minutes at a time

      I'm 5'8". My fiance is 5'2". Whenever we sit down in a theater, 99.99% of the time, some tall lugnut will walk in, and sit down right in front of her.If we move, a second lugnut will come in and repeat the process. If we sit down in an empty theatre, where we are the only two people there, then 5 seconds before the movie starts some lugnut will wander in, drool a bit, slither up the steps then sit right in front of her.

      The movie industry should invest some money in discovering the force that causes this effect, and have it installed into every camera phone. Forget IR lights, forget police raids, forget turning everyone into snitches-- this one device alone would make cam recording impossible forever.

  15. Sounds reasonable to me. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    He was banned for a year, not for life. He's got a second chance. He was fined a figure that seems like a reasonable amount that will make him think twice before trying again, rather than some amount that he wouldn't be able to pay anyhow.

    My only gripe is that the police didn't wait for the movie to end, which would piss me off as a customer, but that has nothing to do with the law or the enforcement of it. This is a much more sane and fair approach than you'd see in the U.S., where he'd probably get fined $990,000 for each MINUTE of video he recorded, get 3 years in jail, and be banned from theaters for life.

  16. I thought piracy was done digitally by dpbsmith · · Score: 1

    I thought film piracy wasn't done by taping off the screen (I can't imagine that would produce a watchable result), but by people who have access to the film in a quality digital format, e.g. the DVD "screeners" sent out for promotional purposes.

    The judge said "but he has an item that is more supportive of taking something to be used to make a profit." Really? Is there big money to be had in shaky, flickery, low-quality home videos off a theatre screen? Not a rhetorical question.

    1. Re:I thought piracy was done digitally by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can just burn yourself a set of DVDs to sell at a flee market, upload it to some Chinese businessman you made a deal with, etc.

      How else do you think all those terrible Chinese bootlegs are made? They don't care about the source as long as they can sell it and the chumps who buy it are satisfied with it.

    2. Re:I thought piracy was done digitally by rdnetto · · Score: 1

      Some pirated copies are cams, but they only last until a proper ripped version emerges. Typically, they're downloaded by those who can't wait for the DVD to be uploaded.

      --
      Most human behaviour can be explained in terms of identity.
    3. Re:I thought piracy was done digitally by truthy_squared · · Score: 1

      I thought film piracy wasn't done by taping off the screen (I can't imagine that would produce a watchable result), but by people who have access to the film in a quality digital format, e.g. the DVD "screeners" sent out for promotional purposes.

      The judge said "but he has an item that is more supportive of taking something to be used to make a profit." Really? Is there big money to be had in shaky, flickery, low-quality home videos off a theatre screen? Not a rhetorical question.

      Nope, they are out there. Sure, there are dvd screeners, but those are actually traceable to their origins from what I remember hearing. See here about that.

      On the contrary, I have seen screen capture from cameras in two recently released movies. The quality sucked, and in the case of one - Tropic Thunder - was so bad I was actually inspired to go see it in the theater for myself. The poor quality was due to poor sound and poor picture. There are better captures out there, but the point is that they are still being made.

      I can honestly say that I didn't download these, and in general encourage watching a movie in the theater instead of at home. Its just an overall better experience that by paying to see it you are helping to support the film industry that is fronting the money to make the movies. That trickles down to the kids working in the theater. Going out to a movie is one of the most american things you can do in my opinion.

      Taping in a theater not only should be illegal, but I'm glad that a-hole got busted because it was probably pretty annoying to the other people in that theater. I'll bet they cheered when he got taken away.

    4. Re:I thought piracy was done digitally by gregbot9000 · · Score: 1

      I don't know about the selling of bootlegs being that profitable, but the ones I have seen actually have fake covers and are out by like the third day of release. The quality on some cam rips is actually pretty good. I watched a rip of Wall-E, it was great. Remember, some of those cameras can record in HD, and they don't shake if resting on something.

    5. Re:I thought piracy was done digitally by troll8901 · · Score: 1

      Well said.

      Obligatory article link.

  17. Fine by me by jesperhh · · Score: 5, Funny

    Fine by me, i hate cam releases!

    1. Re:Fine by me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      when they came for the cammers
      i remained silent
      i hate cam releases

      when they came for me
      there was no one left to speak out

    2. Re:Fine by me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Agreed, the dvdrip should be up within a few hours anyway.

  18. I disagree. by B5_geek · · Score: 1

    A person is doing something that a private company does not want him/her to do in their establishment. The company then has the right and obligation to insist that he leave the premises and/or call the police to have him removed (which also includes a trespass warrant against entering again).

    Now in Ontario, you can only be 'Charged' with a trespass offence if you do NOT leave when first asked.

    It seems to me that the government shouldn't get involved at all. The movie 'owners' (MPAA types) then have a civil obligation to sue him if they have evidence that he tried to distribute their product (making a copy {aka "backing up"} is a different can of worms so lets not go there).

    --
    "The price good men pay for indifference to public affairs is to be ruled by evil men." ~Plato (427-347 BC)
    1. Re:I disagree. by narcberry · · Score: 1

      How do you keep the government out, but the courts in?

      --
      Modding me -1 troll doesn't make me wrong.
    2. Re:I disagree. by wfstanle · · Score: 1

      Your joking aren't you? The answer is obvious, you can't because the courts are a part of the government!

  19. Can't recode =( by psnyder · · Score: 2, Funny

    ...the first conviction under a new Canadian law making recoding a movie in a theater a crime.

    Damn. Guess I can't use Nero Recode in the theaters anymore. I'll have to go all the way home to start compressing the video I took. What a pain...

  20. Why bother? by Blackhalo · · Score: 1

    I am astounded that whatever police force was involved in this would even bother? There are people in the world who traffic in narcotics for relatively paltry sums of money, at the risk of very harsh mandatory minimum prison sentences. Contrast that with this paltry fine? Who is going to care. The audacity of the wasted effort boggles my mind to think that any effort to keep a screener off of the torrents is asinine. The greater the effort put forth to prevent distribution, the greater the reward or prestige from defeating it. Just the thought of all the potential points of failure for to keep a film that has to be distributed internationally for a global premiere of the net is just all kinds of stupid. And here the Canadian RIAA has managed to find/fund some law enforcement to make some kind of example. What a waste. Of course if all you have is a dead business model the only thing you can try to do is resuscitate it.

    --
    "There is nothing to do it. But to do it." -Floyd Pepper
  21. ill tell you why by CHRONOSS2008 · · Score: 0

    A) he pays 10$ practically the cost to buy a dvdr
    B) add to that most people get soaked for what
    17$ more for pop and popcorn ( now we at 27$ )

    and you want to fine him ?
    they ought to hand out a dvdr when you go in, then there is no reason to.

    As to punishment and the crime when he dont pay his fine or cant afford it, hes gonna get 1 day in jail per 10$ max time or almost 5 months. What other crimes fit that?

    1. Re:ill tell you why by FishWithAHammer · · Score: 1

      17$ more for pop and popcorn ( now we at 27$ )

      In what insane world do you spend $17 on a gallon of sugar water and a feedbag of popcorn for a probably-less-than-two-hour movie? Are you planetoidal?

      (Setting aside the complete stupidity of his statement, of course.)

      --
      "You can either have software quality or you can have pointer arithmetic, but you cannot have both at the same time."
  22. Year old Law Nabs One....taxpayers got hoosed by CHRONOSS2008 · · Score: 0

    Heading SHOULD READ
    YEAR OLD LAW NABS ONE PERSON

    this reflects the complete stupidity of it. The waste of taxpayers dollars regarding it.
    The fact that in one year ONE person has been caught shows exactly the points ihave made around the net. HOLLYWOOD is abusing its authority of copyright. They spent millions ot get the law in lobbying and for what a fine of 1400$? OMG.

    If he doesn't pay he gets almost half a year in jail that will cost tax payers almost 20000$ to house him. That's economic value!!!!!!!!!!!!

  23. Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by timholman · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Frankly I wonder why theater owners haven't tried placing infrared floodlights all around the screen, so that any cell phones or videocameras pointed at it will only record a washed-out image. I know that some researchers at Georgia Tech have tried building a system that targets cameras and blinds them with directed IR, but that's always struck me as overkill. Just brute-force it with lots of floodlights.

    1. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Snowtred · · Score: 2, Informative

      Could easily be countered by a cheap IR filter, no? There are dozens of sufficient ones in our optics lab. I wonder if this would stop even the directed IR?

    2. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1

      What about behind the screen? in most places, the screen is simply a piece of blank white cloth.

      I imagine it shouldn't be difficult to set a large bank of IR lights behind it so that the image is impossibly washed out for videos.

      Of course, they'd just need to throw an IR filter over the lens to compensate, but, if I recall correctly, most consumer gear does not have that by default.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    3. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by deniable · · Score: 1

      Would it damage the screen? What about heat load and air conditioning?

    4. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because that would generate a lot of heat directed directly at the audience?

    5. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by ozphx · · Score: 5, Funny

      The problem is that IR lamps will make everyone hot. We should pick a frequency that won't heat up the body, but will stop the recording.

      A strong gamma source should do it...

      --
      3laws: No freebies, no backsies, GTFO.
    6. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Nothing like blinding people's eye with invisible light to protect a crappy movie..

    7. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Atlantis-Rising · · Score: 1, Informative

      And give radiation poisoning to everyone in the theater, sure.

      How about UHF? We can jam their cell phones at the same time.

      --
      "It is possible to commit no errors and still lose. That is not a weakness. That is life." -Peak Performance
    8. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Waccoon · · Score: 1

      I've heard about people trying to attach IR LEDs to the hoods of their jackets to keep their faces obscured from security cameras. The skinny: it doesn't work.

      Why place the lights around the screen and risk hurting people's eyes with light they can't see? Just have one IR lamp on the roof of the theater beam a light show on the screen, just like the projector does. Any cell phones recording the performance will have messages like, "enjoy your bootleg, PIRATE WUSSIES!" marquee across the picture. An IR filter will have a hard time taking those out reliably without having massive artifacts left over.

    9. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      not to mention you'd be blinding the audience with invisible radiation.

    10. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Camera's already have IR filters, the IR wavelength results in a slightly different focal point, blurring the image. Heating the sensor could also increase the noise level.

      All you would need is a better IR filter on your camera. even if it start to effect the red colors of the movie, that can be fixed later.

    11. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by rachit · · Score: 1

      And give radiation poisoning to everyone in the theater, sure.

      Whoosh!

    12. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by emj · · Score: 1

      And give radiation poisoning to everyone in the theater, sure.

      Whoosh!

      Whooosh!

    13. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I'm pretty sure there are more problems with gamma sources than with IR....

    14. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The Premise for Hulk III?

    15. Re:Why not place IR floodlights around the screen? by adolf · · Score: 1

      Right on.

      But I'm thinking more along the lines of "Eat at Joe's," "Ford - Drive one," and "Drink Pepsi." I think we, as a society, can make this whole piracy thing pay for itself in no time, if it can just be properly capitalized.

  24. A bit overboard on the second part by jaredbpd · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I think I'm more bothered by the fact that he can't possess any video recording device, of any sort, outside of his home, for any reason, for an entire year. Last I checked, most people don't automatically walk into a movie theater the second they leave their homes.

    1. Re:A bit overboard on the second part by erikina · · Score: 1

      It's really not a big deal. He got away with no jail time (which I think he should've) -- he can spend a year without a video camera.

      In fact, I'd like to see punishments like this for people that aren't a danger to society. Like tax evasion, let's not ruin their lives over it (at further tax player expense, may I add) but still provide a disincentive to other people.

  25. The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Are they going to ban retinal implants [igargoyle.com] for the blind?

    Based on this article I don't see why. The article (and even the Slashdot summary) makes it quite clear that under the new Canadian law, it's necessary to prove that there was intent to re-distribute the illegal recording before any charges can be laid.

    What happened (if the article's correct) doesn't really bother me. It's a movie protected under copyright law that he was illegally recording in a movie theatre with the intent of re-selling it for his own profit, breaking copyright laws. I can remember stories about people using home video cameras in various places at least as far back as 1993 for selling crappy renditions of newly-released movies on the streets, and I bet it's been going longer than that. The sentence that he got for doing this sounds reasonable to me.

    What irks me about this whole thing, which unfortunately still doesn't surprise me, is that the Judge has been quoted as comparing what he did with stealing a cart of meat! From the article ('Skene' is the judge in the case):

    "Skene said if one compared Lissaman's crime to shoplifting, it was not like someone stealing a loaf of bread or litre or milk for personal use but like someone taking a cart of meat to be re-sold for profit."

    Surely a judge would know the difference between stealing and copyright infringement, and perhaps she was just dumbing the whole thing down so a reporter could understand it, but it really doesn't help for the accurate portrayal of information to the masses. All it does is to publicise exactly the same mis-truth that the corporate copyright propagandists want everyone to believe, which is that copyright infringement is the same as stealing and that its damage can be measured in the same way.

    1. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by canajin56 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      He's not saying it's the same at all. He's making an analogy. Steal a loaf of bread to eat, they will go easy on you. Steal it to sell it they will not. Record a movie for your own use, they can't even charge you under this law. Record a movie and sell copies, they can!

      Would it make you feel less righteous indignation if he compared it to breaking and entering? If you break into a home with intent to rob, they'll throw the book at you. If you are caught in a storm and break into a remote cabin you stumble across, that's a completely different situation. Better?

      --
      ASCII stupid question, get a stupid ANSI
    2. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Insightful

      He's not saying it's the same at all. He's making an analogy. Steal a loaf of bread to eat, they will go easy on you. Steal it to sell it they will not. Record a movie for your own use, they can't even charge you under this law. Record a movie and sell copies, they can!

      Good point, I mis-read it and was hasty in assuming she was saying copyright infringement is the same thing as stealing. It still irks me though that she even used the stealing analogy given the topic of the case.

      The movie and recording industries would love people to believe the claim of copyright infringement being the same as stealing -- they spend enough time trying to tell me and everyone else. From what's supposed to be a respected legal position, she's giving them a heap of new quotations in connection with a copyright case for everyone to get confused with.

    3. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by CSMatt · · Score: 2, Informative

      Based on this article I don't see why. The article (and even the Slashdot summary) makes it quite clear that under the new Canadian law, it's necessary to prove that there was intent to re-distribute the illegal recording before any charges can be laid.

      No it doesn't.

      Until the new law took effect in 2007, prosecutors had to show evidence of distribution to get a conviction; now, recording without permission is sufficient.

    4. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      Oops, good point, I completely mis-read it. Thanks for pointing that out. This is disturbing.

    5. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      He's not saying it's the same at all. He's making an analogy. Steal a loaf of bread to eat, they will go easy on you. Steal it to sell it they will not. Record a movie for your own use, they can't even charge you under this law. Record a movie and sell copies, they can!

      Would it make you feel less righteous indignation if he compared it to breaking and entering? If you break into a home with intent to rob, they'll throw the book at you. If you are caught in a storm and break into a remote cabin you stumble across, that's a completely different situation. Better?

      It is a she. Catherine Skene is a provincial court judge.

    6. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Record a movie for your own use, they can't even charge you under this law. Record a movie and sell copies, they can!

      The whole point of the article is that he wasn't selling/distributing it, and still gets in trouble! (rtfa...)

    7. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by kalirion · · Score: 1

      The article (and even the Slashdot summary) makes it quite clear that under the new Canadian law, it's necessary to prove that there was intent to re-distribute the illegal recording before any charges can be laid.

      Not quite....

      Until the new law took effect in 2007, prosecutors had to show evidence of distribution to get a conviction; now, recording without permission is sufficient.

    8. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The article (and even the Slashdot summary) makes it quite clear that under the new Canadian law, it's necessary to prove that there was intent to re-distribute the illegal recording before any charges can be laid.

      Actually, the article and summary make it quite clear that the new law doesn't require proof of distribution; to quote the summary, "now, recording without permission is sufficient."

    9. Re:The judge's comments annoyed me in this one by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      Yep, that's correct. My mistake and thanks for pointing it out (along with everyone else). :)

  26. I'm curious... by rampant+mac · · Score: 1

    "...the first conviction under a new Canadian law making recoding a movie in a theater a crime. Until the new law took effect in 2007, prosecutors had to show evidence of distribution to get a conviction; now, recording without permission is sufficient."

    What if I'm an indie film director and I want to film part of a movie that takes place inside of a movie theater? What kind of hoops do I have to jump through just to line permission?

    --
    I like big butts and I cannot lie.
    1. Re:I'm curious... by SpeedyDX · · Score: 2, Informative

      Perhaps you misunderstood the poorly worded summary. There are two ways to read the summary: 1) You cannot create video footage in a theatre; or 2) You cannot create video footage of a movie that is being shown in a theatre. The statute is as follows (emphasis mine):

      432. (1) A person who, without the consent of the theatre manager, records in a movie theatre a performance of a cinematographic work within the meaning of section 2 of the Copyright Act or its soundtrack

      (a) is guilty of an indictable offence and liable to imprisonment for a term of not more than two years; or

      (b) is guilty of an offence punishable on summary conviction.

      The statute states clearly that you can't create video footage of the movies that are being shown on the screen of the theatre, rather than not being allowed to create video footage in a theatre. If you wanted to create video footage in a theatre, it's fine so long as you have the permission of the theatre, and there is no movie being shown in said theatre (unless you have permission from the copyright holder and/or the movie has gone into the public domain). There are no more or less hoops to jump through than before, because recording movies shown in a theatre for the purpose of distribution was illegal prior to the amendment, IIRC.

    2. Re:I'm curious... by LingNoi · · Score: 1

      Then you should be paying to use another films content in your film. You can't just use other people's copyrights.

      I doubt anyone would arrest you for filming someone watching a film as long as you're not filming the screen.

    3. Re:I'm curious... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You won't get approval. The theaters are in bed with the big studios, who hate competition.

  27. Note to editors by damn_registrars · · Score: 2, Informative
    --
    Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
    1. Re:Note to editors by dave420 · · Score: 1

      It is commonly used as a verb in many non-US places, fyi.

    2. Re:Note to editors by Aladrin · · Score: 1

      It's pretty commonly used as a verb in the US, too. GP forgets that dictionaries aren't the language, but just an imperfect and dated reference to it.

      --
      "If you make people think they're thinking, they'll love you; But if you really make them think, they'll hate you." - DM
    3. Re:Note to editors by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The one place I thought I was safe from a grammar police raid =(

  28. Because IR floodlights are HEATERS by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That's really going to help the theater going experience and raise operating costs.

  29. Double Standard for Jail Time by CuteSteveJobs · · Score: 5, Insightful
    > "The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was disappointed that jail time was not given."

    That's a bit rich since the movie industry itself regularly engages in fraud to rip off movie makers and actors. Did you know the author of Forrest Gump didn't make a single cent from the movie, the smash hit My Big Fat Greek Wedding technically made a loss (so the actors were ripped off royalties) and both Rob Schneider and Spielberg and many others have both stolen movie ideas in the past and baulked at paying the creators. So why is camcording a movie a criminal offense publishable by jail but fraud isn't? and in the US why is fraud only ever settled in civil courts without the threat of jail?

    http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_accounting
    http://www.tmz.com/2007/12/11/aussies-to-adam-you-stole-our-gay-firemen-flick/
    http://news.ninemsn.com.au/article.aspx?id=335127

    1. Re:Double Standard for Jail Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      So why is camcording a movie a criminal offense publishable by jail but fraud isn't?

      Two wrongs don't make a right?

    2. Re:Double Standard for Jail Time by mpe · · Score: 1

      That's a bit rich since the movie industry itself regularly engages in fraud to rip off movie makers and actors.

      Together with the MPAA pirating both movies and software.

    3. Re:Double Standard for Jail Time by E++99 · · Score: 1

      So why is camcording a movie a criminal offense publishable by jail but fraud isn't? and in the US why is fraud only ever settled in civil courts without the threat of jail?

      Fraud is a criminal offense, punishable by prison time in both the U.S. and Canada.

    4. Re:Double Standard for Jail Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Check the Hollywood Accounting link to Wikipedia. There's not a single case where the movie executives involved have done prison time.

    5. Re:Double Standard for Jail Time by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Because big business (including famous directors and producers) have lots of money and regular people do not. Of course. I thought that couldn't be any clearer than it already is. Money is power. Power is protection from the law. Law is for control. You are the target.

  30. Hotbed, eh? by Grokko · · Score: 4, Funny

    What makes this funny is the comments from the Paramount exec:

    From the TFA:

    "Canada is a hotbed of movie pirating, which is a billion-dollar loss to the movie industry," Mark Christiansen, executive vice-president of operations for Paramount Picture's motion picture distribution, said outside court after reading his victim impact statement.

    - Really? They caught one guy. You had a better chance of winning the lottery than getting caught for recording a movie.

    "The perception is that Hollywood stars are the only ones hurt by this, but it affects everybody who works in theatres."

    - I'm sure all the high school students getting minimum wage in the theatre believe that in all their hearts, their pay and jobs will be affected by some jerk recording a fuzzy copy of a movie.

    Virginia Jones, of the Canadian Motion Picture Distribution Association:

    "We would have liked to see jail time, sending a stronger message. We hope this is just a starting point," she said outside court, also after delivering a victim impact statement.

    - She delivered a victim impact statement? Asked for jail time? The winner, for best performance in a dramatic role is Virginia Jones.

    1. Re:Hotbed, eh? by rakslice · · Score: 1

      I'd be interested to actually read that whole victim impact statement if someone has the link. I'll admit, I'm skeptical that it will actually talk about the impact, but if it does I'm interested to hear what they have to say.

      Also, I have to say I'm a little saddend at you, Slashdot posters, that so few of you have anything to say about that "no video recording equipment outside his home" restriction. It's ridiculously excessive, since it's a blanket prohibition (like prohibiting a convicted document forger from carrying so much as an HB pencil outside his house). And it's basically unenforceable, as the guy can certainly still acquire a video camera at any retail electronics store that can be hidden away in his pocket to get past the velvet rope, so the prohibition is hard to justify even purely on the basis of its crime prevention value. (A ban on entering movie theatres would probably be more effective.) Pretty soon you'll be telling me that giving the Mitnicks of the world access to programmable calculators and musical greeting cards is "being soft on crime."

    2. Re:Hotbed, eh? by Grokko · · Score: 1

      And I'm amused that you are saddened. I agree with you, it's completely unenforceable. If I were this guy, I'd so have a lot of fun with it. This is comedy gold material. Imagine, for the first time in your life, you may see a wanted poster in a theatre ticket office booth:

      "Wanted: This guy here for recording fuzzy movies. Contact RCMP immediately. Approach with caution, may be armed with camera."

      Imagine the call to the police: "Come quickly! There's a guy here watching a movie in contempt of court! He may buy popcorn, or even leave before the end of the movie, it's that BAD!"

      Imagine the Movie industry pulling a RIAA-like unlicensed investigator to shadow this guy in case he visits a theatre, video store or Best Buy.

      He should make himself available for every interview he possibly can. He should videotape himself in his own home, and put it up on YouTube. At least then he'd be a FAMOUS video hobbiest. He'd have to be careful not to take any money talking about his deeds...proceeds of crime and all that. But he could easily become the poster boy for all that is wrong with copyright law.

      I'm sorry, but not having a video camera or cell phone with a camera outside his house is no big deal, and if you really, really, really think he will get busted for carrying an HB pencil, then you just amused me far more than he did.

      Chill out. The cops won't bother, and the biggest hardship will likely be paying his lawyer, not the rather miniscule fine.

      I'm sure the judge levied the fine just because it's the stupidest case he's ever had to rule on.

      I haven't laughed so hard at a news story in a long time, and I'm still laughing.

    3. Re:Hotbed, eh? by Spatial · · Score: 1

      Canada is a hotbed of movie pirating, which is a billion-dollar loss to the movie industry

      I had a loss like this yesterday. I lost a billion dollars I never had. Tough times!

    4. Re:Hotbed, eh? by magus_melchior · · Score: 1

      Part of the RIAA's litigation campaign is aggressive intimidation of would-be small-scale pirates and bootleggers. Small-scale, as in, maybe one or two copies downloaded or uploaded. The audience for the Paramount exec wasn't his customers or the media, it is politicians: "We're suffering because your country doesn't protect our profits. Hamstring your citizens, so that we can continue to post fraudulently high growth numbers to our shareholders and the SEC. Oh, and give us total control over the production/distribution process and lifetime-and-a-half copyright terms-- preferably indefinite terms, if you don't have a spot in your law that requires copyright limits. Yes, we'll have fries with that."

      --
      "We are Microsoft. You shall be assimilated. Competition is futile."
    5. Re:Hotbed, eh? by garett_spencley · · Score: 1

      "- I'm sure all the high school students getting minimum wage in the theatre believe that in all their hearts, their pay and jobs will be affected by some jerk recording a fuzzy copy of a movie."

      This is extremely late so I'm sure it won't actually be read, but you reminded me of this.

      When a movie is first released in theater you get telesyncs being posted on the torrent sites. What is a telesync ? It's essentially a cam that's IN THE PROJECTOR ROOM and syncs with the audio. It's still a cam but it's immensely higher quality than anything a cellphone or hidden camera in a seat will produce. There's no audience talking / laugther. No heads. No one standing up to go the bathroom. It's perfectly centered on the screen and the audio is exceptional.

      Obviously these telesyncs have to be recorded by employees of the theater. Seems to me like it's an extremely worse problem than people bringing crappy cams into the theaters, they're all over the torrent sites (so they're extremely common and pretty much every new release gets telesyncs uploaded) and yet you never even hear about it in the media.

  31. Better Headline by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    "Man Caught Taping Movies for Download Forced to Download Movies To View"

    Incrementing the demand counter. Very intelligent.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  32. Isn't it just like a EULA? by jesterzog · · Score: 1

    A person is doing something that a private company does not want him/her to do in their establishment. The company then has the right and obligation to insist that he leave the premises and/or call the police to have him removed (which also includes a trespass warrant against entering again).

    I kind of agree as far as being allowed to have some say in what happens on your property, but in situations like this -- especially where the main use of the property is to publish copyrighted material under controlled conditions -- I think it's necessary to be very careful about how far property owners can go. Letting people impose certain restrictions simply because something occurs on their property opens the door to let businesses infringe on rights that people should fundamentally have. In this case, it's helping content creators re-write copyright laws to suit themselves.

    If a movie is only ever published in controlled theatres, should the banning of recording equipment be allowed on it forever? Even if the copyright term expires? (Actually copyright expiry is a bad example, simply because copyright terms are so stupidly long these days.)

    What if someone wants to criticise the movie and use an out-take under fair use, but the publisher doesn't give them any avenue to get it? To me it seems as if it's letting creators write their own copyright laws and set new terms on distribution of their work that suit themselves rather than everyone in the community who gave them a temporary monopoly in the first place, similar to DRM in some ways.

    If content creators can control access to their published content simply by making people sign a EULA and agree not to take bits of it out before their allowed to see it, there needs to be some serious thought into how that can happen without infringing on the rights that people should already have.

    1. Re:Isn't it just like a EULA? by Toll_Free · · Score: 1

      What right do you have to taking someone's copyrighted products without (or, in most of your cases with no) permission?

      How about you give me your address and I'll help myself to anything in your house? You can just STFU, and I'll take anything I wish out of your house. Seems like a good analogy to me.

      Or, how about I siphon your gas tank every day. That's even better, since the cost of gas is somewhat higher than actually eating nowadays :).

      I understand your point of view, but I tell ya what. What's mine is mine, and if I so choose to make you pay to view it, and you attempt to cirucumvent my wishes with MY product, I'ma kick your ass.. Legally if I can, or outright for ripping me off.

      Human beings don't have automagical rights. We have a basic right to life. LIberty, pursuit of happiness, etc. can't all be god-given rights, as at times, one can trample another... (think slaves. The 'whites' needed slavery to support them in THEIR pursuit of happiness, but it took the basic right of life away from the people PUT in slavery. IOW, ones rights cannot trample those of another.

      Why you think just because you paid for the movie theater experience that gives you the RIGHT to do what you want during that time, I cannot fathom. Matter of fact, I've seen ON TICKETS in the US that bringing recording equipment into the venues can usually get it either confiscated, destroyed, you evicted or a combination of the above.

      Renting is not ownership. If it was, everyone would rent a house. You rent time and the experience in a movie theater, since most people don't have a screen bigger than the walls of their home, or a multi-thousand watt sound system to deliver the experience (props to those that do, man).

      --Toll_Free

    2. Re:Isn't it just like a EULA? by jesterzog · · Score: 2, Interesting

      How about you give me your address and I'll help myself to anything in your house? You can just STFU, and I'll take anything I wish out of your house. Seems like a good analogy to me. Or, how about I siphon your gas tank every day. That's even better, since the cost of gas is somewhat higher than actually eating nowadays :).

      But that's a fundamentally different thing from copyright.

      Why is it a fundamental right of yours to control the use of information that you happened to create in the first place? It's not physical property and you don't lose anything if someone makes a copy of it. There certainly never used to be restrictions on making copies of things or using other people's ideas until relatively recently, and building on other people's ideas and extending other people's work tends to be how progress happens.

      If I make a copy of something you did, you haven't lost anything at all because you still have your copy of it and you can do what you like with your copy. At best, there might be a lower possibility of you making money in the future by charging for access, but exactly how much you would have made if you applied yourself is uncertain anyway.

      But this is why copyright law exists. It's an artificial legal construct to provide an incentive for people to create something in the first place, which it does by letting content creators have a monopoly on their work for a limited time and under certain conditions. (ie. Other people are still allowed to reproduce it in certain ways and for certain reasons.) It's supposed to be a balance for both sides, to allow the creator to benefit from what they've done, while at the same time letting everyone else have a reasonable use of it and (eventually) unrestricted use when it finally moves into the public domain.

      The fact that copyright terms have become so ridiculously long just means that authors and publishers get mis-led into thinking that their IP is some kind of real property, and that it must be a crime if it's ever used in any way they don't authorise, even if it's completely legal under law. When authors and publishers start assuming people are criminals because they might be copying something (or even because they are copying something), it also means they're effectively re-writing the law on their own terms in a way that prevents legal copying, and this is what concerns me. If theatre owners don't want recording equipment on their property then whatever, but there needs to be a way to make sure that the avenues for using information legally aren't being cut off because a few publishers happen to be paranoid.

      Copyright law is a good thing, and I think it's great to give people limited control over work they produce so they can make some money from it and have an incentive to do it in the first place... but copyright law only even exists so that there is an incentive to create new content in the first place. The problem with content distributors putting physical restraints on the abilities of people to make copies and cryptigraphic constraints on the abilities of people to make now get offended that their stuff comes out of copyright at all, or gets used by other people legally without their permission while it's still in copyright. The only thing you might not have anymore is the ability to make money from people you might have sold it to.

  33. How many songs are in that movie? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Now, assuming that the average modern movie has, say, bits of 10 popular songs spread out throughout it, what is going to stop someone from simply downloading his camcorder movie and listening to the songs in the movie instead of buying a CD? Shouldn't he be fined $10,000 per song for pirating music, too?

  34. Not extreme by Perf · · Score: 1

    Fined $1495 for illegal video recording -- not extreme.

    Banned from possessing video recording equipment for distributing crappy videos -- not extreme.

    1. Re:Not extreme by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Funny

      For everything else, there's Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

    2. Re:Not extreme by supernova_hq · · Score: 1

      Did you not notice the cellphone thing? Have you tried to find a cellphone lately that DOESN'T have a phone built in?!?

      I know there are "some", but if you go the cellphone retailers (Bell, Telus, Verizon, etc) and look around the store, you won't find any. This judge has basically banned this guy from owning a cellphone for a year!

    3. Re:Not extreme by Perf · · Score: 1

      This judge has basically banned this guy from owning a cellphone for a year!

      And there was much rejoicing!

    4. Re:Not extreme by FredFredrickson · · Score: 1

      I know you meant camera, but actually- it's more true the way you said it.

      --
      Belief? Hope? Preference?The Existential Vortex
  35. What if you Txt? KThxDie! by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

    What if I txt during the movie?

    Texting is obviously different, since your phone would be in your lap and not stuck out right in front of your face where everyone could see it.

    If you do text with the cell phone glowing for all around to see, I'm not sure if it matters much what with your cell phone either in tiny pieces at the front of a room or stuffed in your drink.

    Remember, doing things that greatly annoy others in a small dark room in the middle of a building with multiple exits is just about the stupidest thing you could possibly do.

    --
    "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
  36. I don't see what the big deal is by ffflala · · Score: 1

    Even if he was going to distribute it, the fact that it was in English with those annoying Canadian subtitles would have considerably restricted its appeal.

  37. what the law is supposed to be ... by reiisi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Yeah, society is sick when so many people are thinking, "But he shouldn't have been ..." instead of "Why can't the theatre just confiscate the tape, eject him from the theatre, and bar him from coming back?

    As far as we know, this was a first offense.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    1. Re:what the law is supposed to be ... by MartinSchou · · Score: 1

      You mean apart from the fifteen other theatres, he was ejected from before this one filed charges with the police?

      Granted, there's nothing that indicates that this is the case, but then again - if they had simply done as suggested, how would others know?

    2. Re:what the law is supposed to be ... by E++99 · · Score: 1

      Yeah, society is sick when so many people are thinking, "But he shouldn't have been ..." instead of "Why can't the theatre just confiscate the tape, eject him from the theatre, and bar him from coming back?

      How is that going to discourage him from doing the same thing at another theater? The punishment is reasonable. What is sick is that we live in a society where people are dishonorable enough to behave this way. In a reasonably honorable society, all it should take is a sign that says, "Please bring no recording devices into the theater" and it wouldn't happen. In an honorable society, people would stop thinking so much about their rights and start thinking about their duties as human beings.

    3. Re:what the law is supposed to be ... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This was the first time he was caught...

      Do you think if the police catch someone selling drugs for the first time, they should just take the drugs, remove him from the street corner he's on, and tell him not to do it anymore? I'm sure that would work every time.

    4. Re:what the law is supposed to be ... by adolf · · Score: 1

      Right. Because selling crack across the street from a school is EXACTLY like recording a movie with a video camera.

      Thank you for finally setting the record straight.

  38. At least it was only $1,495 by leamanc · · Score: 1

    At least it was only $1,495 and not $185,325 Canadian dollars (based on the MPAA's figure of US$150,000 per copyright violation).

    --
    :q!
  39. You formed a "pretty good opinion", I suppose. by reiisi · · Score: 1

    Your opinion of what the guy was up to is your opinion. Did you get far enough in TFriendlyA to read that they prosecution did not even attempt to show intent? That there was no record of a similar past offense?

    I used to carry a video recorder with me all sorts of strange places -- taking pictures of different places in Japan to send home to the folks. That lasted about a half a year before I realized that maybe some of the people around me were not exactly welcoming the sight of the video recorder. In particular, there are a number of moral issues in recording school events.

    The duct tape on the indicator LEDs? Well, if it was pre-meditated for whatever purpose, sure, he's probably going to think about that.

    But that still does not say that he was going to do more than, for instance, take it home and watch it again, maybe with his buddies, maybe with his family, maybe by himself. You might say that theorizing a desire to critique the movie for a college literature class would be presenting a strawman argument. (Maybe he's trying to get a degree and get off disability?) But, from the information we have, we don't know that he wasn't.

    You can form your own opinions, you can draw your own conclusions. But, for me, innocent until proven guilty is as much about not requiring the law to uphold bad logic as it is about being nice. And I guess I'll have to say this, sure, we don't need more proof that he recorded the stuff. But then saying that we might as well have proof that he intended to make money from distributing is a huge jump.

    Just like saying that money made by those who pirate copyrighted works necessarily translates to any kind of a direct loss to the owners of the copyrights, much less the authors of said works, is a huge jump.

    If a pirated work is represented as an original, that is a criminal offense against the purchaser of the pirated work. I'll grant that. And there have been some cases where systematic pirating has done more damage in lost sales than it made up in advertising. China, in particular, has a bad record on that score. That is to say, some importers in China have a bad record there.

    But this "theft of billions" concept is pure wishful thinking, and the fact that it poisons us to the point we accept this kind of illogical law should give us pause.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  40. Half the Story? by cipher1024 · · Score: 1
    If this guy was just some dumb ass recording a movie then the penalties were a bit excessive and strange. However, I think the authorities believe this guy is part of piracy operation. They don't have enough proof to bust him for everything they suspect him of, so they put the screws to him for what they do have on him. From TFA:

    The conviction came as a relief to the motion picture industry, which had lobbied for the legislation that came into effect on June 1, 2007, and conducted a six-month investigation that led to Lissaman's arrest.

    She said all movies are distinctly watermarked, which means legal or illegal copies can be traced back to a specific theatre. That led to the lengthy surveillance.

    To me, this implies they've found pirtated movies being distributed, studied the watermark, staked out the theater identified by the watermark, and busted this guy recording a movie in that theater. That makes this statement seem more accusatory and less FUD:

    Jones and Christiansen said in their statements to the court a single copy of a movie made in a Canadian theatre can be used to distribute both unlimited numbers of DVDs that are shipped around the world via the Internet or other means for distribution.

    If that's the case, they should have let him go, followed him around and busted him in the actual act of distributing. Sounds to me like the cops were just lazy and the guy could be getting off easy. That's going under the assumption that the article is telling the whole story, which is doubtful. If it told the whole story, it would be longer than a sound byte and the public would get bored.

    1. Re:Half the Story? by Weedlekin · · Score: 1

      "If that's the case, they should have let him go, followed him around and busted him in the actual act of distributing."

      This assumes that the person supplying what ends up being multiply copied and distributed is also the one making and distributing those copies, which isn't necessarily the case. There doesn't even need to be any physical contact between the person doing the recording and the copier / distributor, who can be sent physical media by post or have a non-physical version transferred to them electronically.

      --
      I'm not going to change your sheets again, Mr. Hastings.
  41. The law and the common morality by reiisi · · Score: 3, Insightful

    Setting aside for a moment what the law is supposed to do, we must recognize that it does reflect the common morality.

    Two hundred years ago, the common view of the world was a lot more dog-eat-dog than it is now. Malthus was an optimist. Actually, Malthus is still an optimist, but the misinterpretation was considered optimistic back then. There was a prevailing opinion that the only way a person could have a reasonable standard of living was on the back of at least a few someone else's slave labor. Even the guys on the bottom accepted that idea to a certain extent. (Speaking from a "western" point of view, since we are talking about western laws. The moralities and laws of the people that were imported to be the new bottom rung didn't count, which, of course, makes the slave trade that much more evil.)

    The revolutionary concept was that we didn't have to be at war with everyone else to survive. That we didn't have to oppress others to have something good of our own. And we've forgotten that concept.

    And this law, frankly, is stark evidence that we have forgotten it.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    1. Re:The law and the common morality by rusl · · Score: 1

      I like the gist of what you are saying but I disagree with your notions of progress. The dog-eat-dog morality and cultural norm was as false then as it is now. There are always ups and downs in certain areas. We have food that you don't have to fight for. Back then you didn't have to fight to copy an idea (as that is how people's minds work, by copying then processing - as any computer). Certain Europeans were good at portraying things in terms of progress for their own reasons. Some of this was good. Some of this was creating of the very idea of private property land etc. that has lead directly to the private property mind of nowadays problems.

      --
      Stupidity is its own reward.
  42. Reread the summary and article? by Mathinker · · Score: 1

    From the article:

    Before [emphasis mine] the Criminal Code amendment, the Crown had to prove a suspect was intending to distribute an illegally recorded film before action could be taken under copyright laws.

    The summary says the same thing. It is now a crime to record regardless if there is any intent to redistribute, and that is new.

    The article goes on to state:

    Defence lawyer Steven Jenuth, who sought a fine in unspecified hundreds of dollars, told the judge it appears to be a one-time event for his client, with no evidence of any other offences and no evidence of any sales or recordings.

    which means that the judge's analogy, implying that the defendent intended to sell the recording, does not seem to be based on any evidence.

    1. Re:Reread the summary and article? by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      Yep, you're completely right. My mistake.

  43. whybother! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The real question is why would you bother? who would want to watch a cam movie? I downloaded a cam movie once before and its crapy sounds and people moving around in front of the camera, its pretty bad.. dont know why he would waste his time. but thats another story.

    If someone wants to watch some crappy version on there little computer screen they are probably to cheap to go and pay anyways. so i doubt they are losing all this money....

    As for a IR lamps or gama sources.. haha i dont want to be blasted with stuff when i go to the movies..

  44. Red LED by Easy2RememberNick · · Score: 2, Funny

    I bet a person in the movie theater could have some fun with a 9V battery, a resistor and a red LED.

    1. Re:Red LED by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Funny

      I bet a person in the movie theater could have some fun with a 9V battery, a resistor and a red LED.

      Not as much fun as a 9V battery, some resistors and LEDs at Logan Airport in Boston...

    2. Re:Red LED by kwikrick · · Score: 1

      I imagine, some day, just knowing what a resistor is and understanding how to connect LEDs to a battery, can get you arrested. If you understand things that the lawmakers do not, then you are dangerous, and potentially a terrorist or a criminal, and that is enough to put you away.

      --
      assignment != equality != identity
  45. Recording movies used to be legal in Canada by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Recording a movie in a theatre was legal in Canada until quite recently. This is the first person to be charged under the new law. Previously the only remedy a theatre had was to escort the person off their premises. It is not surprising that the result is a fine, especially as no copyright infringement had been committed (yet). Jail time would have been considered very extreme.

  46. They get a new phone, you get pwned. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    However, they'll get a replacement phone and the perpetrator who damaged the phone gets something on their record and a not-so-small bill.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  47. When the person damages the phone. by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    No sooner, no later. They get a huge bill and a court record, and the person gets a new phone for your efforts.

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  48. Typo: *You get a huge bill and a court record, and by sethstorm · · Score: 1

    N/T

    --
    Twitter supports and protects racists - by smearing their critics with the "Hate Speech" label.
  49. Wrong Wrong Wrong by JRGhaddar · · Score: 1

    Jail should be enforced. Period. It's theft. Whether you want to admit it or not it is in fact theft.

    Let's say you write a piece of software. I like it burn it on a bunch of discs and go hawk it around the street making money off your hard work and labor. And last year you were making 60k off your software and now this year you are making 1k. Would you be upset?

    Now if I get a bunch of people together and we all walked into different stores. Pick up a bunch of candy bars, walk out and started selling them on the street should I go to jail... by your logic this is "brainwashing" and the now-defunct business model of retail has no basis as a common social conception of what is and is not morally acceptable because hey "everyone is doing it"

    Look what happened is that technology provided people the means to circumvent the traditional sense of commerce associated with these industries. It's still wrong, and everyone knows it.

    Now making a back up of a physical copy you purchased. Well that is okay it's your item you bought it. But doing anything that would circumvent the sales and distribution of the product is wrong period.

    People will continue to do it as long as there is no real check on it, and jail time is the way to go.

    If you want the song buy it. if you want to watch the movie buy it. Don't piss and moan because the industry that you are stealing from wants it to stop and wants people to understand that there should be consequences.

    Anything over 12 grand is typically considered a felony. Steal 12 grand worth of candy bars...it's a felony. 4 plasma screens. Felony.

    Recording a Film and uploading it on torrent and having 1500 people download it or buy a bootleg copy is the EXACT same thing.

    Now if those 1500 people do the same thing... it gets exponentially out of control.

    People need to learn to pay for entertainment. Period. And anyone recording in film should be thrown in jail for at least 2 years.

    Don't agree with me. Well if where you work 10,000,000 + people are stealing what you do everyday and your industry is contracting because of it well maybe you would see it differently.

    It is morally unacceptable because real people are losing there jobs because of it. And people downloading and recording are to blame. So the next time you go and download a song or rip a dvd off torrents think about the key grip who can't feed his family because there isn't any production work going on or the office clerk who lost her job because of cutbacks.

    It is affecting real people and piracy is to blame.

    1. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by GospelHead821 · · Score: 1

      Not all behaviours that result in monetary loss to a property owner are "theft." The difference between theft and copyright infringement has to do with the natural scarcity of goods versus the artificial scarcity of media. Intellectual property is a legal fiction -- one that I think is important, mind you, albeit one whose definition has grown outdated. That argument, however, is pedantic.

      My real concern with what you've said is your argument in favour of jail time. I agree that recording a film in the theatre should be a crime. You follow with a series of assumptions that may or may not be true and which violate the principle that the accused is innocent until proven guilty. There is no evidence of uploading or downloading of any sort if the perpetrator was caught in the act of recording the film in the first place. You can throw around potential dollar figures all you like, but the fact of the matter is, because he was caught in the theatre, there were no actual damages at all.

      Finally, I think that jail time is already overused as a punishment for nonviolent crime. You suggest that it's the only way to drive home the point. Frankly, I think we'd do a greater service to society if we made bolder attempts to address the causes of crime and to educate and rehabilitate criminals instead of just punishing infractions.

      --
      Virtue finds and chooses the mean.
      Aristotle, Ethica Nichomachea
    2. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by Dr.+Hellno · · Score: 1

      8 of the top 20 highest US box office grosses in history are from movies released in the past five years. I won't say the industry hasn't contracted, but that metric suggests to me it isn't in any serious trouble.

      The industry (your industry, I'm assuming) has indulged in decadence for so long, they seem to have forgotten that movies don't need to cost 500 000 000 to make. That's why they're bleeding cash, in my opinion.

    3. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People need to learn to pay for entertainment. Period.

      Why pay for entertainment when your post provides it for free.

    4. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by JRGhaddar · · Score: 1

      Actually it does violate the scarcity of the media. You can only view the media at its specified distributor. By making a copy (with a video camera) you in fact make the media less scarce. Anytime you copy ANYTHING you make it less scarce.

      Just as if you took a dollar and copied it. That is illegal also. It's not within your rights to copy it . If people were allowed to do that then the dollar would lose value. It's the same with media. It's the media creators rights to determine how and when it can be copied.

      Jail is good. If everyone who was doing it went to jail just for one night, I am very confident that there would be a lot fewer people doing it.

      The thing is that there are a lot of people that would never steal doing this, but if they realized it would go on there permanent record I think they would stop pretty quickly.

      Fines are one thing, but I think that should be reserved for people who are copying the media and putting it up on torrent. Fine them and throw them in jail.

    5. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by Duradin · · Score: 1

      Jail should be enforced. Period. It's theft. Whether you want to admit it or not it is in fact theft.

      You work for or invest in a privately run prison corporation don't you? Any other sane, rational person would realize that we can't afford to keep filling the prisons with non-violent petty offenders.

      Now if I get a bunch of people together and we all walked into different stores. Pick up a bunch of candy bars, walk out and started selling them on the street should I go to jail... by your logic this is "brainwashing" and the now-defunct business model of retail has no basis as a common social conception of what is and is not morally acceptable because hey "everyone is doing it"

      Actually they'd need to into the store with their lossy clone-o-matics and clone up poor quality copies of those candy bars and then try to sell those. Or to make the crime fit your analogy he'd have to of stolen the actual film reels.

      Aside from finding out a movie sucks, a crappy cam of a flick won't stop someone from seeing the movie in a theater. You're not just paying money to see a film, you're paying to see a film on a large screen with a good audio system. If you didn't want to pay for access to the extras a theater provides you wouldn't go to the theater anyways.

    6. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by JRGhaddar · · Score: 1

      Yes and we have had extremely high inflation and ticket prices have been raised to offset the losses curtailed.

      But when you go back to the last film Titanic that broke all box records it was BEFORE the internet, file sharing, etc. took off.

      "indulged in decadence only by a very small handful."

        In reality there are tons of people who work in the industry NOT making 20M a picture that help keep things going and they are always the first to pay the price.

      In fact mid budget flicks 10-39M are now totally dead. They have to spend "500 000 000" to make projects these days because those are some of the ONLY ones that can make enough real money.

      If a small niche project is made for 3M and they spend 3M on advertising. And it makes 1.5M in ticket sales, 1,500,000 in DVD sales and 500,000 Rentals then you lost 2.5M on it. Now if 1,000,000+ are watching it from torrent and usenet crap. and dvd bootlegs... well what is the incentive to focus on those smaller ones.

      You can try and make 30-40 of these, but what happens is you are crowding shelf space. There is too much out there...so you have to go BIG BIG to get people's attention.

      It's really a very complicated industry, and one that really doesn't need people stealing from it, no matter how rich you think all of us are...

      Most of us work unbelievable hard 12-15 hour days 7 days a week just so YOU can laugh, or cry, or say "Woah that was cool"... the least you could do is buy it if you want to watch it...

    7. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by JRGhaddar · · Score: 1

      You work for or invest in a privately run prison corporation don't you? Any other sane, rational person would realize that we can't afford to keep filling the prisons with non-violent petty offenders.

      I said Jail not Prison. Those are different. And most rational people would agree that if people stole from you everyday you would want someone to put a stop to it, or at least the means of a legitimate penalty process. If not cool I'll copy down your credit card numbers and charge things up. Don't call the police or anything...I mean it is only a copy. It's non-violent you can just fine me or something...oh and don't forget to file individual claims on charges against the 1 million plus that are doing it to you everyday.

      Actually they'd need to into the store with their lossy clone-o-matics and clone up poor quality copies of those candy bars and then try to sell those. Or to make the crime fit your analogy he'd have to of stolen the actual film reels.

      Actually it's the act of making the good less scarce without a means of compensating the creator. Doesn't matter how you do it. It shouldn't be done and you know it.

      Aside from finding out a movie sucks, a crappy cam of a flick won't stop someone from seeing the movie in a theater. You're not just paying money to see a film, you're paying to see a film on a large screen with a good audio system. If you didn't want to pay for access to the extras a theater provides you wouldn't go to the theater anyways

      Yes it will. If you can buy a DVD bootleg on the street. then some won't pay to go see it in theaters. same with torrents or anything. The fact that someone wanted to watch it is there. That's why these markets exist. People want to watch it...people don't want to pay full price so they look to an alternative.

      And as to finding out a movie sucks there are "reviews" and "friends" that saw it that can fill you in.

      Look I know this is a MPAAFIA and RIAAFIA kinda place, but really it is wrong. If you want to watch it...pay for it...we all work hard so YOU can laugh...so YOU can enjoy something...if you want to watch it....pay for it...

    8. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by Brain+Damaged+Bogan · · Score: 1

      copyright infringement is not theft. who says that any of the people downloading the film would have bothered seeing it anyway? what about countries where it isn't released etc. as for the 10,000,000 theives... citation needed.

      --
      -- Sex is the antonym of pringles. Once you pop it's time to stop.
    9. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by JRGhaddar · · Score: 1

      copyright infringement is not theft.

      Yes it is if that infringement involves reproducing the work and distributing it without the consent of the creator.

      You go into your place or business. Photocopy internal documents and then distribute them. See what charges are filed.

      Who says that any of the people downloading the film would have bothered seeing it anyway

      It's not just watching it. It's the fact that they should not have a copy, and now they do.

      What about countries where it isn't released etc.

      There are lots of means in which to watch the work. DVD's are a great example. I am certain that if you wanted to watch a movie there is a legitimate means for you to watch it eventually. This notion of instant gratification in terms of "well I want to watch it now, but I can't so that makes it okay" is ridiculous.

      as for the 10,000,000 theives... citation needed

      http://thepiratebay.org/top/200
      Now I added up the top 100 movie torrents in leechers and the number is 308,863.

      Now that is just ONE source. Not excluding bootleggers, usenet, file sharing, IRC etc.

      But if I can pull up just 1 means and 308,863 are currently participating now...you can safely deduce that this is a rampant problem.

      Look there is no way to go around this. Downloading, Recording, Distributing, Selling, unauthorized is wrong. I know this might sound crazy to people like you that think this behavior is okay, but in an economy consumers should actually pay for a good or service. It's kind of what makes the system work.

    10. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by Brain+Damaged+Bogan · · Score: 1

      who is to say that he ever had intent to distribute the content? he pleaded guilty to filming the content. not distributing, you are jumping to conclusions without looking at the logical steps needed to approach such a conclusion. FTFA: "He is not, despite the allegations, charged with distribution or even copying that movie."

      308,863 is a helluva lot less than 10 million as you originally suggest. box office movies STILL sell millions of tickets plus millions of DVD copies, so the subset of people who pirate it and don't pay to see it in a cinema would seem minute in comparison, not rampant - about 4% if a movie sells 8 million tickets. and of those 4% many will have paid to see it in the cinema already.
      I myself will pay to watch a good film, then download it so that I can watch it again before it is released on DVD... I consider my "tax" for seeing the film to be paid.
      I may even download the film and watch the first few minutes to determine if it is worth paying to see in a cinema.
      viewing every download as a lost transaction skips over all the contextual data that may be surrounding that one download.

      --
      -- Sex is the antonym of pringles. Once you pop it's time to stop.
    11. Re:Wrong Wrong Wrong by rusl · · Score: 1

      Here we are now, entertain us... You are stupid and contagious! (sorry kurt)

      --
      Stupidity is its own reward.
  50. "IR lamps will make everyone hot" by Animaether · · Score: 1

    huh?
    Have you ever pointed a remote at yourself? Didn't hurt one bit, did it? Now imagine just a few of those blinking at a few regions of the screen.. won't heat up the place at all, but will make any camera recording quite useless.
    Presumably, epileptics wouldn't be bothered by this either, otherwise we should have seen people going into shock over TV usage.

    Perhaps you're thinking of the IR lamps used in beauty salons / chicken farms.. those do get hot - but then, that's their intended purpose.

    1. Re:"IR lamps will make everyone hot" by Rich0 · · Score: 1

      Additionally, IR pulses aimed at various parts of the screen could encode information such as the theater, room number, and date/timestamp. That would aid stopping the practice greatly.

      I don't have a major problem with banning the use of recording devices in theaters (not the mere possession of cellphones/etc). However, this should really be subject to a fine - not a prison and a felony conviction. The intent should be to prevent wanton distibution of copyrighted works - not to make examples out of people whose clear intent was something innocuous.

  51. Draconian penalty by jandersen · · Score: 2, Insightful

    The Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association was disappointed that jail time was not given

    Which is why it is just as well that the prosecutor is not the same as the judge.

    The man was also banned for a year from possessing any video recording equipment, even a video-capable cellphone, outside of his home.

    Which is what I think is wrong on many levels. A fine is OK, I think - he knew that he was doing something that was illegal and it had to have consequences. A ban from going to theatre might have been reasonable too; but banning a person from carrying any video recording equipment in public is likely to be perceived as wrong. The validity of any law rests ultimately on public support, not on the severity of the punishments, and if penalties are seen as unreasonable, you lose the public support. We can see this in several places in UK - when the police want to investigate even a murder in certain areas, they don't get anywhere, because people don't support them. Whole local communities have somehow lost their trust in the authorities and simply don't want to help the police. From that perspective it may turn out to be a very stupid decision by the judge.

    1. Re:Draconian penalty by luther349 · · Score: 0

      now that i think abought it it is a bit of overkill. better then jail but still. a fine and banning him would have been plenty. or a fine and banning his of recording eq but not theaters how would he be able to even record then. not both.

    2. Re:Draconian penalty by Repossessed · · Score: 1

      I don't see it as so draconian. He committed a crime with a specific device. That device was taken away. (Ignore for the moment the question of if what he did is wrong). We take cars away from drunk or reckless drivers don't we?

      --
      Liberte, Egalite, Fraternite (TM)
  52. The judge quoted on her view of the law by D4C5CE · · Score: 1
    The judge told us in TFA what she was thinking:

    It's not a simple theft of an item for personal consumption.

    Trouble is, legally copyright infringement (while prohibited) is something very different from theft, and she had to know this and see some trouble with the new rules, of which even the Canadian Motion Picture Distributors Association admit:

    But under old copyright laws, it was difficult to prove what had occurred.

    ...i.e. convictions now are at least in part for what might occur, while in the judge's own words:

    You can say he and his pals will watch the movie, but he has an item that is more supportive of taking something to be used to make a profit

  53. quite clear? by reiisi · · Score: 1

    Are you sure that was quite clear?

    From TFriendlyA:

    Before the Criminal Code amendment, the Crown had to prove a suspect was intending to distribute an illegally recorded film before action could be taken under copyright laws.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    1. Re:quite clear? by jesterzog · · Score: 1

      Yep, my fault. I completely mis-read that. Thanks for pointing it out.

  54. If you were right, you might be right, but, ... by reiisi · · Score: 2, Informative

    That's not how I read the article. In fact, if I remember the article correctly, it said something to the effect that, under the new law, they don't have to show any evidence of intent to sell.

    The old law, they did have to prove something, and that was why the RIAA wanted to change the law.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  55. two rights wronged. by reiisi · · Score: 1

    Everybody steals a riff or two.

    Un-negotiated covers are a stock way to get a start in the industry.

    Nothing new under the sun.

    All creative work is derivative.

    There should have to be proof of flagrant activities misdirecting profits before any criminal charges can be made.

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
  56. IR right in your face for the entire movie?!? by freaker_TuC · · Score: 1

    Do you keep your IR remote control led for 2 hours non-stop radiating in your face?
    IR's are generally also sent in small bursts (I guess to conserve battery life?).
    I frankly wouldn't know the health implications of such an IR radiating for one and a half hour non-stop.

    Try pointing your camera or anything with an IR filter to the remote control; I used to have those little IR plastic filters to test.

    Maybe it would be better if these things would just flicker up every 5-10 seconds making the recording a general nuisance.

    --
    --- I am known for the ones who want to find me on the net. Is that a privacy risk or a privilege? One might wonder..
  57. why watch big-name movies in the first place? by wikinerd · · Score: 1

    People who either pirate or buy movies or music created by copyright freaks don't know what is a good movie or good music. There are many movies and music pieces around under free licences by amateurs who really love making movies and music and sharing it freely, and viewers or listeners remix freely. Plus, they are of much higher quality. The amateur scene has more creativity than a bunch of big name directors.

    1. Re:why watch big-name movies in the first place? by Toll_Free · · Score: 1

      Oh yeah, the special effects by most Indie, small budget movies are so much better than blockbusters with multi million dollar budgets.

      Don't knock movies just because of budget, watch them all. Most all movies have SOMETHING to contribute, but not watching something because it is big budget is limiting yourself in a BIG way.

      --Toll_Free

  58. Professional criminal by Alomex · · Score: 2, Insightful

    Look, someone with a video camera in the theater is likely not a high-school kid making copies to file share with his classmates. In all likelihood this person had done it before, many times which is why they were waiting for him with cops and all (yes Virginia, movies have theater-specific watermarks).

    The only reason people here are supporting this guy is reflexive anti-RIAA sentiment, nothing else.

    On this case, they seem to have landed a professional criminal who makes it a business to record movies and sell them for distribution, in which case jail time is not out of the question.

    1. Re:Professional criminal by euxneks · · Score: 1

      On this case, they seem to have landed a professional criminal who makes it a business to record movies and sell them for distribution, in which case jail time is not out of the question.

      Frankly, jailtime for something like this is preposterous. Maybe fines and monetary remunerations, but jailtime? What the fuck man - that should be reserved for the truly heinous crimes, like murder or rape! Jail is a place we put people who impact the public good to the point where leaving them in the public for rehabilitation would do the public more harm - jail is not for punishing copyright infringement.

      --
      in girum imus nocte et consumimur igni
    2. Re:Professional criminal by Alomex · · Score: 1

      What if he doesn't have any assets to pay for his crimes, since he spent all his profits? Do we let him walk free then?

      How about someone who breaks into your house, should we also make him pay a fine instead of going to jail?

  59. understanding the analogy -- cartload of meat? by reiisi · · Score: 1

    Since we assume that the honorable judge is aware of the fundamental difference between moving the bits or waveforms of an electronic copy of a movie and moving the protein strands of a cartload of meat, I think it might be worth trying to see why she uses an analogy that would appear to indicate the opposite conclusion she appears to be trying to assert.

    First, let's look closely at the meat.

    When it is stolen, the molecules are gone. You can't get another copy of those molecules. So the store would appear to be out the wholesale price of the meat, plus some paperwork and time/wages for bringing meat in to replace it. If the meat is a specialty item, it may not be possible to replace it, and the store could be out the full potential sale price, as well. Also, since it takes finite time to bring the new order in, the store would be losing the sales that would have been while while the replacement meat is coming in.

    If the meat is stolen to be sold, then the money of the sales not made is not only lost to the store, but is transferred to the pocket of the thief.

    Of course, we should note that most stores have some insurance against theft of merchandise, so the actual loss would be initially less. The insurance premiums are likely to rise, as well. So, while there is not an infinite amount of replacement, there is replacement, but there are also costs.

    Now, let's look at the movie.

    In the case of the movie, since moving the actual merchandise is performed by copying from the data server, replacement bits are always available, at very minimal cost. The copying does not make the product in any way unavailable from the legitimate sellers, so there are no lost sales from unavailability. The only paperwork costs involved are such as the sellers, copyright holders, authors, etc., insist on. If they don't insist on suits and criminal charges, there isn't going to be much paperwork incurred, nor time/wages to handle the paperwork and re-stocking.

    So, the only money that is lost to the legitimate sellers is that from sales which go to the "thief" instead. Now, as the sellers' association is quick to point out, the "thief" does not have to receive any actual money, as long as actual sales have been diverted away from the legitimate sellers.

    In the case of the meat, the amount of diverted sales can be calculated to a reasonable upper limit. The legitimate seller could not have lost more sales than there was meat stolen.

    The lower limit, of course, is zero.

    We could imagine a court asking the store for records on how well the brand and type of meat which was stolen sold, I suppose, but then we also have to note that any unsold meat would have to be disposed of, and the thief has potentially relieved the store of that cost of disposal.

    There is no way to calculate the upper limit in the case of the movie. That leaves us with a conundrum, and one that can't be resolved. We could ask the seller to prepare reports on expected sales vs. actual sales, but the vagueries of the market make any such report extremely susceptible to argument. Popularity charts go up and down without any real logic, much though the producers of commercial pop music want to think they have some magic success formula. We really are talking about superstition here.

    One very potent argument is the advertising value of the illegitimate distribution channel. It is known that good art actually generally benefits from the illegitimate channel, because people who would buy the physical product will buy it anyway to support the artist. The only art which does not benefit from the illegitimate channel is bad art.

    Now, we all here know these arguments. I find it hard to believe that a modern judge could fail to be aware of these arguments. Is there a possibility that the judge is priming the appeals process with ironic opinion? Maybe to make it obvious to the appropriate court that the law in question is bad?

    --
    Computer memory is just fancy paper, CPUs just fancy pens with fancy erasers; the 'net is just a fancy backyard fence.
    1. Re:understanding the analogy -- cartload of meat? by cdrguru · · Score: 1

      It is known that good art actually generally benefits from the illegitimate channel, because people who would buy the physical product will buy it anyway to support the artist.

      B.S. If I download something, I have it. I do not need to get it again. Why would I buy it if I'm not a guilt-ridden Catholic? (Yes, I was raised Catholic, but I got over it.)

      The result of getting stuff for nothing is not that people buy more. They buy less and take more free stuff.

    2. Re:understanding the analogy -- cartload of meat? by Xaria · · Score: 1

      I disagree. I refuse to buy something I can't sample first (e.g. I don't buy clothes off the internet, unless I can return them if I don't like them). You can't return a CD once opened, in case you ripped it. So how do I know if I like the music? It's not reasonable to spend an hour in the store listening to the whole thing. So I might download and listen to it. If I like it, great, I'll buy it. If I don't like it then I don't want it anyway, so I'll delete it (and yes, I have deleted every piece of illegally downloaded music once I determined I didn't want it).

      The sole exception to the rule above is if I cannot buy it. If it's not distributed in such a way that it is possible for me to purchase it then I might keep it. I don't see how you have to be a guilt-ridden Catholic to want to reward someone who provides you with a service (the enjoyment of music, for example).

  60. Seems open and shut to me by Toll_Free · · Score: 1

    Umm..

    Don't do the crime if you can't do the time.

    IOW, dont' do something illegal if the consequences bug or bother you.

    --Toll_Free

  61. No coward, no way. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is just another step toward outright fascism in our western governments.

    What everyone fails to realize that that Fascism isn't the sole property of the far right. The orientation of governmental ideals converges as a circular thread in the knot of fascism. Both extremes of left and right eventually turn into outright fascism.

    Forbidding someone to take a recording device outside his own home for an entire year due to a first time offense is just a powerplay by an activist judge who wanted to instill both fear of the government's power and, to an extent, the own power which he wields. But even he is beholden to other interest; he has no power than that which the people give to him and tolerate from him.

    If more people can realize this then we can once again bring reform to our governments and establish true equality in the prosecution of the law.

  62. Put-up job? by davecb · · Score: 1

    It's taken a surprisingly long time to actually catch someone using a camcorder to record a movie... since most are stolen from the projection booth. --dave

    --
    davecb@spamcop.net
  63. Where to donate? by rusl · · Score: 1
    Where do we go to paypal donate and pay this guy's fine? I'd happily contribute a dollar to pay off this unjust fine so that I can keep getting the crappy but wonderful cam's I like to occasionally watch for 5 minutes until I am reminded why I don't want to pay OR watch the movie.

    Seriously, this is a downhill battle and I'd love to make the fine into a joke. However, I do want to know what exact movie it was first. I'm not going to contribute if it was High School Musical 3.

    --
    Stupidity is its own reward.
  64. possibly, but not necessarily by Trepidity · · Score: 1

    I agree he's probably not an amateur, but that doesn't necessarily mean he's selling his recordings professionally either: the sorts of groups that put out pirated movie releases for free online are rather impressively dedicated and organized as well.

    I do agree that if he was part of a professional piracy syndicate jail time would be a reasonable option, but we already have laws for that. He doesn't appear to have been even accused of being part of any sort of for-profit criminal endeavor, let alone convicted, so I certainly wouldn't want him put in jail on mere suspicion.

  65. Many Big Green Guys and Gals by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    You don't want to make me angry, you won't like it if you make me angry.