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Legal Group Says Unlimited Broadband Promotes Piracy

bennyboy64 writes "Unlimited broadband plans are all too familiar in many countries; in Australia they're scarce. One ISP offering such a plan between the hours of 8pm and 8am, AAPT, is being looked at as a matter of high interest by a legal group representing the interests of the global film industry, AFACT (the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft). It said AAPT was encouraging users to download copyrighted material. AAPT's advertising states: 'If you want unlimited music, unlimited games and unlimited movies — get unlimited off-peak broadband downloads from AAPT.' AFACT executive director Adrianne Pecotic said: 'In the context of the AAPT promotion, we have a concern that it could be misconstrued to promote illegal downloads and that's something that we'd like clarified.' AFACT is currently involved in what will be a landmark court case with Australian ISP iiNet. It recently claimed in court proceedings that there was a link between iiNet upgrading the service plans of heavy Internet users and the proliferation of film piracy."

12 of 247 comments (clear)

  1. Of course it is by Rix · · Score: 3, Insightful

    People want to pirate. Get over it. It's not going to stop.

    If you're a dick about it, you might convince people who would otherwise pay you some of the time to pay you none of the time. That's it.

  2. Allergy by DaMattster · · Score: 4, Insightful

    I've got an allergy to bullshit. Seems like the telecom companies will stoop to any low just to be able to use bandwidth caps, throttling, and/or anti-network neutrality actions. This positively disgusts me!! Software piracy will not be stopped by this. Perhaps, it will only be impacted by a very, very small margin. Instead of coming to their collective senses that they just need to upgrade the damn network to handle the bandwidth, they piddle on to find any excuse not to spend money towards upgrades. They tout such speeds as 20M down. Whoop tee doo! In Japan they have 100MB symmetric broadband. Why does America, Canda, Australia, and England not want to keep wup with modern high speed broadband as defined by Japan?

  3. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by arbiter1 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    how about cars in-general, they let you carry hundreds if not thousands of pounds of illegal things so they promote the activity to

  4. They didn't say 'unlimited PIRATED movies, music a by popo · · Score: 3, Insightful

    I think some people forget that there is an endless amount of freely playable, listenable and viewable content on the web....
      And one doesn't have to violate copyright to enjoy it.

    --
    ------ The best brain training is now totally free : )
  5. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by Korin43 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Unlimited downloads of music, movies and games hardly implies copyright infringement. Examples: iTunes, last.fm, Microsoft's music store, Hulu, flash games, Steam...

  6. Re:having computer promotes piracy by QuantumG · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Wow, you almost said something pointed there.

    As a matter of fact, "having computer promotes piracy" is kinda right. I'll clean it up for you though:

          having easy and regular access to copying machines makes copyright law seem evil and wrong, and ignoring it seems just.

    There ya go.

    --
    How we know is more important than what we know.
  7. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by srjh · · Score: 4, Insightful

    There's also an increasing number of bands such as Nine Inch Nails and Radiohead who have legally released their own material for free online.

    And the sky didn't fall in.

  8. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by jonbryce · · Score: 4, Insightful

    In Britain, a pretty large proportion of bandwidth is used for iPlayer downloads, which are legal. Youtube is also very popular, and is mostly legal - they have a royalty agreement with the MCPS.

    Most people who don't read slashdot find it very difficult to use peer to peer software and to find reliable downloads that actually are what they say they are without any trojans added.

  9. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by drsmithy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    What that says about human nature [...]

    It says much more about the laws than the people.

  10. Re:having computer promotes piracy by Bob_Who · · Score: 3, Insightful

    It is not some mickey mouse musician trade organizations that are moving us closer to a dictatorship, it is people like you.

    ...a dictatorship? As a result of Mickey Mouse or the Pirates of the Boston Tea Party? And that puts us at the mercy of a despotic autocracy ?

    What a drama queen, scooby doo. Turn off your talk radio. This is sounding like a cartoon idiocracy.

  11. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by nine-times · · Score: 4, Insightful

    That's largely what I came in here to say. It may be true that really fast unlimited Internet access makes it easier and more convenient to engage in certain kinds of illegitimate behavior, but it also makes it easier to engage in lots of legitimate and useful behavior.

    In this case, it may be true that unlimited broadband will hurt media companies by making piracy easier, but it could also help their businesses by opening up all kinds of new business opportunities. The problem they're having seems to be that they're dragging their feet on new business opportunities.

    My big question is, who's paying this "legal group"? Is it the record companies who are trying to keep their old business models? Or is it the ISPs who are looking for an excuse to not provide good service?

  12. Re:What about Interstate Highways? by jesset77 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    And the Grateful Dead, who got the idea from old bluegrass musicians. Free music has been around a lot longer than the internet. The internet just makes it so much better.

    Haha, it's funny when people say "nuh, not only can piracy walk down this street, so also can free or independently produced content!"

    All the while Big Media execs are going "tomaytoe, tomahtoe.."

    --
    People willing to trade their freedom of expression for temporary entertainment deserve neither and will lose both.