Anti-Piracy Dog Uncovers Huge Cache of Discs
sgt scrub writes "I've never thought about sniffing my CDs before buying them but that is all about to change. According to this Yahoo! news article, dogs can be trained to tell the difference between a legit copy of a DVD and one from those pesky pirates. From the article, 'A DVD-sniffing anti-piracy dog named Paddy has uncovered a huge cache of 35,000 discs in Malaysian warehouses, many destined for export to Singapore, industry officials said on Wednesday. Paddy was given to Malaysia by the MPA to help close down piracy syndicates, which churn out vast quantities of illegal DVDs. The dog is specially trained to detect chemicals in the discs.'" We ran a story about anti-piracy dogs being trained in Ireland a few years ago.
just great, instead of training dogs to help guide handicapped people, they use them for useless stuff like this.
Way to go, humanity!
Any sufficiently advanced incompetence is indistinguishable from malice - Grey's Law
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I plan to coat all of my real DVD's in steak, that should distract 'em!
So the dog go off on any dvd-r so it will go off even on blank disks?
How about just data only disks with no movies on them?
...to scare the kids.
So apparently recording agencies are able to do anything except record good music. They can bribe judges, hire lawyers, buy congress, complain, make commercials and now train dogs. You would think that with all this money they could come up with a working business model other then abusing the legal system.
Taxation is legalized theft, no more, no less.
Who knew that the evil bit had a smell?
If you have something that you dont want anyone to know, maybe you shouldnt be doing it in the first place -Eric Schmidt
On the rare occasion that a pirated DVD winds up in my house, the smell is very distinctive pretty quickly.
Mainly because it spins once as fast as it can be ripped and then stinks of burned plastic when it comes out of the microwave.
That dog would have no problem finding my house.
He's getting rather old, but he's a good mouse.
a very clever solution.
Strangely enough, I've had a conversation or two with some friend and have confirmed with those handful at least that (at least new) cd-rs smell something akin to celery.
If you find it odd that I'm smelling cds, please note I have poor vision so am usually holding the cds close to see the plastic covering often found on binding the cds in the spindle together so i can remove it.
Mostly 'tested' on Memorex brand cd-rs.
Just keep the dog away from my "backups".
Hi,
Has probably something to do with detecting watermarks.... At least they're fond to set new "watermarks" everywhere.
Yours, Martin
The next logical step would be to cross-train bomb-sniffing and drug-sniffing dogs to detect pirated DVDs as well. I would imagine the training is similar, and I see no reason a dog couldn't be trained to react to three separate categories of smells.
Does anyone have information on how the dog distinguishes between the CDs physically? I would assume that there is some chemical difference in the materials that the CDs are composed of. Does anyone have a link or info on this?
that hop into bed with the RIAA and MPAA, but i dont see china or other countries allowing this anytime soon.
we're also assuming there is readable evidence on the disks which is not, say, encrypted by GPG.
i thought we all used torrents these days anyway?
Good people go to bed earlier.
If they train a dog to sniff out Bittorrent packets, I'll be truly impressed.
Some of the movies made recently reek so bad I would worry about them permanently damaging the poor dogs nose.
If everyone stops buying and producing pirated DVDs, the dogs will no longer be useful and MPA will kill them to save on dog food.
The dogs don't smell the bits on the discs and determine if they spell out "Pirate!" or "Legit.". The dogs smell out optical discs and thats it. Then they take the dogs and go to a shipment/warehouse/whatever that isn't supposed to have any discs in it, and let the dog loose. If they find discs, chances are the discs are illegal in some way. And it turns out that people who smuggle pirated copies don't have them clearly marked on their manifest.
So yeah, the dogs find discs. Officials check to see if there are supposed to be discs here. If not, they probably just sniffed out illegal discs. You know, because if they were legal discs, you'd just put them on the manifest.
Every time I hear of copyright infringement being called theft or piracy it just bugs me. If you think it is, you're wrong and the law backs up the "slashdot accepted definition" perfectly. The piracy that is most targetted are illegal copies FOR SALE. These are the same illegal copies that the DVD CSS does not prevent. These are the same illegal copies that never needed the DMCA.
This story illustrates precisely what piracy is when it comes to copyrighted media.
25,000 copies of BOLT.
7,500 copies of Lady and the Tramp
2,500 copies of Reservoir Dogs
I guess it's time to pack discs in coffee grounds.
And for the pirates....to buy shitloads of blanks and place them all over to throw the sniffing dogs off their trail.
I think the MPA is just barking up the wrong tree here
No, the dog cannot smell the difference between copyright infringement, and regular baked CDs. (Often mistaken with piracy, despite the lack of taking ships with the use of force and the lack of raping.) This looks like they just made a premise to allow them police to search any house which happens to have written to rw cds/dvds, however, the bbc story implies that these dogs are for searching for more mass-production of cd/dvd writing.
The reason the dogs can tell the difference is because pressed and burnt dvd's aren't made the same. Pressed uses less layers and different materials. Burnable uses inks that is what probably gives them away as "pirated."
:P
That and being a pirate/biker myself (pirate by blood, my great grandfather was a Spanish pirate in Campeche!) we stink. So apparently we need to improve our hygiene! BTW have you seen Anakata lately? Now do you believe me about hygiene...
My abilities are only limited by my imagination
Yeah I guess chasing down pesky armed robbers, rapists, and wife beaters was too hard.. Man even todays generation of DOGS has it easy.
Laws are rules for the court, but merely a bottom bar to hit for life. Think beyond laws in your actions always.
All you need is a black Sharpie marker and it throws the dogs off.
must be the smell of rum
Politics is Treachery, Religion is Brainwashing
Commercial music is designed for easy marketability, like most other consumer products. Examples :
(1) Apples exist in numerous different varieties all over the wold. We don't eat the best tasting ones, not by far, we eat the ones that still look red after being shipped.
(2) Potato chip companies made chips without added sugar for years because taste tests shows people preferred potato chips without sugar. But then some clever bastard noticed that people eat more chips if they add sugar. So now they ignore the taste tests, make bad tasting chips, and trust the people to buy 2x more chips.
Why should commercial music be any different? I mean, they just only care if you buy it, so they make what successfully gets people to buy it.
The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
...aren't these the guys we _want_ the MPAA/RIAA to go after? These are the commercial infringers who are operating outside of the law for profit. I'll be happy to argue with you guys (i.e. - on your side) all day about personal use not being an infringing act, but this - imho - is exactly what the copyright laws are written for.
Is it just my observation, or are there way too many stupid people in the world?
They're just local cache for TPB!
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
The story doesn't say the dogs can tell the difference between a legit DVD and an illegal copy. I'd guess the dogs are trained to find DVDs, period. If said DVDs are in crates stacked in some warehouse where they shouldn't be, then the dog has found some pirated DVDs.
But really, what legitimate reason do you guys have for disliking this - other than a general hatred of the MPA? Unlike many/most of the tactics used by that organization and its spawn, this seems reasonable. But so far in this discussion I've seen a lot of silliness and/or venom being contributed, but very little intelligent thought.
#DeleteChrome
Why don't they train these dogs to hunt down some REAL pirates.
Oh, I forgot, THOSE they just capture, then release!
Damn, governments are stupid....
If you've never been modded as "flamebait" or "troll," you've never tried to argue a minority viewpoint here!
I just opened a spool of CD-R's, DVD-Rs, and compared them to Pressed DVD/CD's. The burned disks are QUITE STRONG in oder and its EASY to tell the difference even between CD-R and DVD-R at least with the disks I'm smelling. While they may have trained the dogs to smell for all of it, the dogs nose is WAY more sensitive than mine and I can easily distinguish after smelling a few.
Dogs would have ZERO problem telling them apart. It should be fairly trivial to give dogs a sampling of various burned media and then have them sniff them out.
I'm surprised people even think this is even far fetched. Sound pretty straight forward to me. But, then again i'm practical and the first thing I tried was smelling a bunch of media...
That's funny, because my dog's trained to sniff out bullshit. She's getting really yappy right about now, too.
I dare the dog to bust me for 35,000 DVDs worth of output from /dev/random.
Knowledge is how to play a game, intelligence is how to win, wisdom is knowing what game to play.
Just rub your cd's in cannabis to cover the smell...
Do burned ones smell different than blank ones?
But can they smell it if you encrypt the contents? HA!
Maybe they got Ron Burgundy to train the dogs to track the scent of smelly pirate hookers.
...dogs like to smell excrement. How fitting.
They're probably even pressed in the same factories.
Yeah, of course we only run the lines eight hours a day, our workers need to rest!
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Well, the title says "Anti-Piracy Dog" so it must have a means of smelling the contents of the disk
That's not the only thing misleading about the title - 35,000 is not exactly a "huge" number of discs.
According to Amazon, a 10-pack of slim-line discs measures 3x6x5 inches. That's 90sqin, or 9sqin per disk. Multiply by 35,000, and you get 315,000sqin. Sounds like a lot, but that's only 180 square feet. The entire stash would sit neatly on two pallets (stacked 6.5' high) or in 1/15 of a standard shipping container.
The same number of disks stored on 100-pack spindles would fit in a 4'x4'x3' stack, or slightly more than the cargo area of a Yaris. So, kudos to the dog for finding such a small target but deduct points for the overly-enthusiastic headline.
When you have nothing left to burn you must set yourself on fire
That sounds like a name of a mascot/fake_superhero the MPAA uses to explain copyright to children.
Jimmy: "Have you seen the new OMG Ponies movie?"
Jane: "No. Hey, let's download it!"
Jimmy: "Yeah!"
[Whooshing noise]
Jimmy and Jane in unison: "Anti-Piracy Dog!"
Anti-Piracy Dog: "Hi kids. You were about to download a movie. Every time you do that, a pirate throws a puppy into a wood-chipper."
Jimmy: "Is it the cute kind of puppy?"
Jane (nearly in tears): "That's the only kind of puppy there is! Oh no! I don't want cute puppies to die! What are we going to do?"
Jimmy (gravely): "We'll have to buy our movies, and only from authorized resellers."
Anti-Piracy Dog: "That's right, kids. So remember, don't pirate those movies."
Jane and Jimmy in unison, overflowing with cheer: "Thanks, Anti-Piracy Dog!"
Anti-Piracy Dog: "Up, up, and away!"
[Whooshing noise]
"Believe me!" -- Donald Trump
My beagles ate a DVD once. They also apparently like Python, as they ate the cover off of "Programming Python".
next to my vast DVD collection.
This is fine because I burn my cd's with curry powder and paprika.
"i lost my dignity on a slippery wiener"
Because we should be able to reprint books, movies cd's and stock pile 35,000 discs.
So apparently recording agencies are able to do anything except record good music.
This may be more or less true (the RIAA itself certainly can't/doesn't produce anything, and the record labels are more or less businesses that hire talent, not producers themselves), but it doesn't say anything about the relative merits of piracy-sniffing dogs.
Selling unauthorized reproductions of a given work is an action on a completely different order from passing a recording on to a friend or two, and there's even ready distinctions between it and sticking a recording out onto a filesharing network. I'm not particularly sympathetic to the RIAA and labels when it comes to the later, but I don't have any problem with them nailing mass pirates to the wall when they're essentially selling bootleg knock-offs of a real product on a large scale. It makes sense if you believe in copyright at all.
Tweet, tweet.
Since when does idiocy get modded interesting?
They dogs are not sniffing out DVD-R discs, they are sniffing out Pirated DVD's... mass produced in nearly the same way as legit DVD's, with the intent of being sold to large numbers of end consumers, either as a cheaper alternative, or because the real thing is not available in that region yet, often because they are new theater releases.
So you can put away the tin foil, your "Pirated", and then burnt to DVD-R copy of The Hannah Montana Movie is safe from the dogs.
just great, instead of training dogs to help guide handicapped people, they use them for useless stuff like this.
Way to go, humanity!
Tell me why the geek thinks that no one but a geek can multi-task.
Hasn't the skill.
Hasn't the resources.
Service animals have been performing jobs like these for ten thousand years.
The nomad tracking game. The canary in the mine.
What has changed is our appreciation of the animal's senses.
His intelligence.
But the truth, of course, is that the geek only trots out this argument when the nose points towards him.
The nose knows.
FIX YOUR FUCKIN' CODE
I can't get Slashdot to display pages consistently in a single session.
It's definitely a downer.
The geekiest - most FOSS and standards-obsessed site on the web - can't do plain text against a colored background and get it right.
Just get yourself a vacuum bag sealer, then wash the bags in a washing machine with bleach for 30 minutes. Dogs wont smell shit even if put right up to their nose.
Life is not for the lazy.
You guys don't get it. The dog probably can only smell out optical discs and that's it. Once they've nailed a few buildings and established that the dog can indeed sniff out a disc (yet conveniently not prove that it can actually tell the difference between legit and pirated), they move on to the next step.
All this does is solve that pesky problem of not having a legitimate reason to search a premises.
The next step is to use these dogs for homes. All they have to do is illegally get the information behind an IP address, which is obviously not usable in court, then bring one of these magical dogs around the house. It'll be pretty easy to trigger the damn thing to start barking at one thing or another, then voila! Warrant!
It's a play in the bigger game.
I think that was supposed to be funny. Only a true stoner would actually think this was "insightful" advice.
"Whoa dude, that would like, totally work! Far out, man!"
The MPA did something clever here. They deserve props not only for not targeting your 72 year old aunt for "making available" or some such idiocy, but for using a clever way to find the actual, honest to goodness and real pirates. jeez. Any organization that slashdot commenters just don't like are damned if they do, or damned if they don't. If Microsoft open sourced their entire software catalog, slashdot commenters would still find reasons to pull their hair out over it. Have you even heard of intellectual honesty? So, respectfully, and ignoring any 5 digit or less commenter, fuck you goddamn Digg rejects. Go twitter yourselves, assholes.
PADDY is the MPAA's twisted version of the RCA dog, NIPPER.
Have an image with Paddy inquisitively staring at a huge pallet of authentic MPAA DVDs with the logo:
"His Master's Profit"
Another reason for police dogs to bark at my car.
What if they just trained a dog to howl on-key? By expanding their catalog that way they'd probably make more money, although it might take the public awhile to get reacquainted with what that sounds like.
Sniffing for DVDs sure beats sniffing for explosives.
An effective "democracy" creates the illusion the people have a say in their government.
So, let's see...
35,000 discs by...
150,000 dollars maximum damages per infringement equals...
$5,250,000,000 the movie studios could potentially have lost if this ONE SHIPMENT made it to its destination! That's almost as much damage as devastating hurricanes in major urban areas! Wow, I sure am glad they arrested these hoodlums before they could do real damage. I'll be waiting to follow the details of the lawsuit once they're extradited to the USA and their feet held to the fire.
What's that you say? The MPAA and RIAA only pursue maximum damages for outrageous awards in cases against helpless individuals responsible for a few downloads? Oh.
they have dogs that do better than dr.'s that would actually do some good for all people.
If they can train a dog to find DVDs in Malaysia that AREN'T pirated, give me a call.
I've calculated my velocity with such exquisite precision that I have no idea where I am.
there's an app for that.
Can you train them to find bugs too?!
"dogs can be trained to tell the difference between a legit copy of a DVD and one from those pesky pirates"
Are you fucking kidding me?
I can hear the dogs outside...
All the sexy babes want me... to fix their PC.
Good for them, its about time , we should only download and burn ourselves, and not let China in on our piracy movement or help us with it, because that actually does hurt us more then the actual downloading of a movie. If i download a movie, it means I might not really have bought it, for cash, so technically, there is no loss of revenue. If i buy a pirated dvd from China, not knowing it was from China, I was buying that dvd, which it in itself is real lost cash for the movie companies. I applaud there effort.
"...dogs can be trained to tell the difference between a legit copy of a DVD and one from those pesky pirates. From the article, 'A DVD-sniffing anti-piracy dog named Paddy has uncovered a huge cache of 35,000 discs in Malaysian warehouses"
Q: How do you teach a dog to detect pirated DVD's in Malaysia?
A: Teach dog to bark continuously. Take dog to Malaysia.
-- I was raised on the command line, bitch
I seldom see pirated DVDs in Singapore nowadays. If I see anyone selling bootleg DVDs, it's always a surprise to me.
I think most of us who get pirated movies, do it via P2P.
FTA:
The MPA said its member companies lost 6.1 billion dollars to worldwide piracy in 2005. Of that lost revenue, about 1.2 billion dollars came from piracy in the Asian region.
I just hate when they try to make up stats for this.
There's a big difference between pirated movies purchased and actual financial losses.
In a lot of cases, people are only buying the movie BECAUSE it's being sold for $1.00.
If it wasn't being sold for dirt cheap by the pirates in these poor countries, it's not like these people would all of a sudden rush to amazon.com and go pay full price for the DVD. It's nearly impossible to tell how many DVDs you would have sold if piracy didn't exist.
I'm not defending the piracy in these countries, but I can guarantee you that the MPA grossly overstates their losses to make their situation look even worse.
I bet they're going to have to go bankrupt or ask for a bailout soon!!!
Optical media is hardly used now. We have lots of old PCs crammed full of RAID arrays, and warehouses are bloody expensive (sheds are more affordable), you just stick the storage servers and seedboxes wherever they'll fit. You can use stacks of PCs with pieces of glass or varnished wood across the top to act as coffee tables, side tables and desks.
I doubt a dog could be trained to smell the difference between an original Vista DVD and a pirated one. The stench of that OS would overcome any media chemical differences.
"You can't really dust for vomit" --Nigel Tufnel
Do the dogs distinguish between a pirated movie a Linux disc? I'm afraid the police will stop my Linux distribution network. Better use something to cover up the smell from the warehouses.
No ascii art.
Remember the death threat against the dogs that outed a cache of discs in CHina last year? (or 2007?)
Well, i'm surprised that we haven't news reports that fake caches filled with cyanide burned out Woofie's nose...
OTOH, why bother with CN... that could get the global authorities REALLY pissed off. Instead, put dogphrodesiacs in the boxes, and give "man's best friend" a case of the woodies... Stiff, leaking dogs won't look good in public, and they'll leave stains on packages and the delivery agents will have to wear gloves and keep the boxes off their uniforms...
Previously: "Linux... Toward the Sunrise..." Now: "Linux... Toward the-- No, now, part of Every Sunrise"
Lee Kaiwen, Shanghai
Not very readable for most of us!
Or do we need to hack every browser in order to read Slashdot?... ;)
Thank you for your understanding
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