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Warez Moving From BitTorrent to Conventional Hosting Services

ericatcw writes "Driven by increased crackdowns on BitTorrent sites such as The Pirate Bay, software pirates are fast moving their warez to file-hosting Web sites like RapidShare, reports Computerworld. According to anti-piracy vendor V.I. Labs, 100% of the warez in its survey were available on RapidShare, which, according to Alexa, is already one of the 20 largest sites in the world. V.I. Labs' CEO predicts file-hosting sites such as RapidShare will supplant BitTorrent, as the former appear better protected legally."

2 of 366 comments (clear)

  1. Re:The future of piracy... by Zontar+The+Mindless · · Score: 4, Interesting

    Everything adapts. Software will be something you rent on the Internet and never resides on your computer.

    In your dreams, and Microsoft's perhaps. On *my* computer? I think not.

    Music? The situation in China has "evolved" to the point where there is no more recorded music sold (or produced).

    Been to China lately? When I was there last April, I saw plenty of Chinese music for sale.

    (And my gf, who is from Canton, has boatloads of the stuff.)

    In the West check your local radio stations... what is selling there is oldies. What will continue to "sell" will be music from the previous century and the Internet will be dominated by garage bands offering stuff for free in hopes of landing a gig.

    I'm sure these guys (whom we listen to in the office nearly every day) will be interested in learning that Miss Li sounds like she recorded her stuff in the 1920s because she actually did...?

    Movies? Eliminate digital distribution (DVDs) and you eliminate the problem.

    Wrong

    and

    Wrong.

    User generated content? Check out YouTube for that, especially ShayTards and Magibon. This is the height of user-generated content and people are starting to discover (realize?) that it is crap. All crap, all the time. No, that isn't going to be the future of entertainment.

    (I am going to burn in Hell for this, but...)

    [citation needed]

    What most people don't understand is we've grown an entire generation that believes it all should be free and will never, ever pay. This is going to require a major adaptation that most "media" and "entertainment" isn't going to survive, but the adaptation will eventually succeed.

    No, only in your fantasy will it really all be free. Someone has to pay, and patronage doesn't work.

    No, what we've got is a generation that views the 'Every conceivable juxtaposition of eyes/ears with content entails a licence fee' model with derision. And rightly so.

    So we all have to pay for what we consume.

    Please tell that to the rich folk who got that way by finding some way not to pay for something (a lot of something). Which would be most of them.

    But wait -- that's what *they're* telling *you*, isn't it?

    --
    Il n'y a pas de Planet B.
  2. Re:Sucks to be American sometimes by misexistentialist · · Score: 4, Interesting

    As has been said many times here, copyright is really only ethical as a means of preventing others from profiting off creators' work. Corporate controlled copyright has perverted copyright by exploiting artists more often than not, while increasing scarcity and decreasing quality of material. People have always shared information, and while p2p reduces revenue, it's more a reduction from "obscenely fucking profitable" to just "fucking profitable".