US ISPs, Big Content Reaching Antipiracy Agreement
Chaonici writes "The word from CNet is that an antipiracy agreement between a number of ISPs (including Verizon, AT&T, and Comcast) and the RIAA & MPAA is nearing completion. Under the agreement, ISPs will step up their responses to copyright infringement complaints against subscribers. If a subscriber accumulates enough complaints, the ISP can throttle their bandwidth, limit their Web access to only the top 200 websites, and/or require participation in a 'copyright awareness' program that explains the rights of content creators. ISPs and rights holders will share the costs of the system. Ars Technica confirms the story with notes from an industry source, who mentions that the Obama administration is 'generally supportive' of the agreement."
What is this, fascism week?
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
"complaints" and "suspected pirate". From what I can tell, to the MPAA and RIAA everyone is a "suspected" pirate..... I wonder if ThePirateBay is in the top 200 website list?
Good, I'll still be able to get to ThePirateBay
Any insufficiently advanced magic is indistinguishable from technology.
The Pirate Bay is in the top 200 websites.
It's about time that other corporate "citizens" (the telco's and ISP's) step up and do their part to help our government enforce the rights of corporate "citizens", like the RIAA and the MPAA, in their fight against the terrorist hordes who threaten their their very existence.
[/sarcasm]
Perhaps this would work with a laymen, but for $20/month you can get a VPN account with an offshore company which allows for torrents. So the monthly cost may go up, but I really don't see this as any kind of impediment to online piracy.
um, Pirate bay is probably in those "top 200 websites"
Cool goatse link bro
Goatse.
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For unfair disconnection in 3... 2... 1...
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ALERT ! goatse :(
ya got me
"ISPs and rights holders will share the costs of the system."
Ha ha! But seriously, customers will share the costs with other customers. RIAA might jack up member fees, but they were probably going to do that anyway.
ISPs and rights holders will share the costs of the system
Naturally, the ISP will pass on the costs to the consumer, and the rights holders will find a way to pad the product price with their piece of the cost, but we all knew that.
Reply to That ||
Aye, Alexa confirms it: the Pirate Bay has a global traffic rank of 89 and a US traffic rank of 97.
Slashdot, on the other hand, would be inaccessible at 1354 (globally) / 775 (US).
I have recently heard rumors that the anti P2P servers have found a way around clients like Peer Block. Can anyone confirm or deny this rumor? If it is true, how is it done?
If there is no God then free will is an illusion.
If anything, this is going to push me into "pirating" more. Limit my freedom just because some asshole corporate fuck thinks it's "fair"? Fuck these mother fuckers. I'll advise EVERYONE I know to NEVER do business with Comcast, AT&T, or Verizon from here on out.
Just because of this, I refuse to buy a movie or song ever again. 100% piracy from now on.
It's seriously time for a pro-freedom ISP that encrypts everything, logs nothing, and is crazy fast. Anybody have access to some VC capital to make this happen?
How about a campaign to complain that the CEOs of these companies have been downloading illegal files?
I don't recall the fine print of my TOS, but I would really wonder whether or not the contracts signed allowed for this bullshit, and whether or not such things would hold up in court.
This is my signature. There are many like it, but this one is mine.
Most ISP will go bankrupt within a week.
The UN recently declared internet access to be a basic human right. I wonder what they would have to say about the government colluding with corporations to curtail the basic human rights of citizens of the United States.
Oh, who am I kidding. They probably won't have anything to say about it at all.
This sig has been stolen. Return it to its original user for a reward.
Want more of this bullshit? Vote against net neutrality! KEEP THEM GUB'MINT PAWS OFF MA INTERNET CONNECTION! If the government could regulate my Internet connection, that will like, make them feel more entitled to think about starting to regulate content, or some junk. Do you want some ELITES who think they know better than you telling you what you can and can't browse!?!?
Oh...wait...shit. Well I can vote with my dol...oh you can't get an unfiltered connection anymore? Fuck. Well I'll start my own ISP!
Selling my rusty '90s Japanese cars...OK, got $5,000, guess I can put another $5k into it from my savings, just $1.99M to go before I can get this business off the ground. See, free-market capitalism allows me to solve my own problems! FUCK YEAH!
"When information is power, privacy is freedom" - Jah-Wren Ryel
So someone will just rent a big pipe from a company that's not signed up to this, split it and sell it on (full encrypted) to downline customers. Sounds like a business model to me...
Another thought - do corporations realise that their 'net feeds will be deep packet sniffed to look for copyright infringing material? I wonder how much they will like the ISPs no longer being just a bunch of tubes...
As long as their members are held to the same standards... If they abuse fair use, for example, they're required to pull their products, participate in "copyright awareness" programs, and they can only visit the top 200 websites.
I've got the 'choice' between Frontier DSL and Time Warner. I will drop my $60/mo 30 Mbps down service if Time Warner starts doing this and Frontier doesn't. I've gone legit with Netflix, which I've had for a few years now, but that doesn't mean I'm going to let some corporate lobby like the RIAA decide whether I'm allowed on the net this week. I have absolutely no faith in their investigators, nor do I believe that they'll have any reason to tell the truth.
In fact, they'll probably have notices or even lockdowns sent out to random groups of people each week just to "remind" them that they're watching.
The right to protest the State is more sacred than the State.
Personally, I think we're on the downward side of piracy anyway. Of course the President would be on-board with this because the frivolous complaints against 10k people at a time are a misuse of the courts and a waste of time.
I think piracy is on the way out anyway. Things like iTunes, Netflix,& Hulu make it really easy to get almost anything legally. I don't think regular folk will like getting the first warning letter one bit... Having a warning system in place will get people warned their actions have consequences sooner... Just knowing somebody takes notice is enough to get many people to stop. I think most people have "grown up" and are sick of all the spyware, viruses, and hacks from torrent sites anyway.
As long as my ISP notifies me that I'm getting close to my "complaint limit" before I actually hit it, I don't really see a problem. I'd rather this than be indicted in a lawsuit. And, given the option, I'd sit through that "'copyright awareness' program" any day. It's bound to be amusing.
Okay, I'll ask the obvious question: How do we fight this? We know that there's little choice between ISPs in many rural (and even some sub/urban) areas, so threatening to switch isn't always practical. It's not a bill being proposed so we can't direct elected officials to vote against it - do we demand our legislators draft a bill to stop it? Is this FCC territory? FTC? Who do we talk to, who do we demand answers from, who do we petition, and how do we get the message across?
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Is there anyone who thinks these ISP warnings can't be kept from triggering by judicious proxy use and encrypted traffic? Or is deep-packed inspection good enough to identify P2P traffic? Even if it could, it surely couldn't determine the copyright status of the stream.
I was going to remark that we would surely see services like Tor and FreeNet grow exponentially in response, but what's wrong with a good old simple non-US proxy service plus traffic encryption? At least when we're talking about cyber-locker repositories if not bittorrent.
Those are my principles, and if you don't like them... well, I have others.
Between actions like this and things such as bandwidth caps it appears that the major ISP's are looking to alienate their customer base. In the mean time, figure it will be possible to DOS someone by placing some complaints against them? How about businesses placing complaints against their competitors? Maybe I should go apply for a business process patent on doing this....
Is it possible that the private sector has realized it needs to stop leaning on the judicial branch of the government as a crutch? This proposal at least seems better than their response to extort settlements from people in courts, so that's a step in the right direction.
The "copyright awareness" program seems like a worthy response. If they assume that their customers are innocent when they decide to take action, a course about securing your wireless connection and teaching their kids about not downloading stuff would be useful. It doesn't seem that unreasonable to then throttle the Internet for customers who ignore the awareness program. However, there WILL be hell to pay if they start blocking everything but the top 200 websites.
In the end, it's there goddamn network and they can do whatever they want with it. If these "antipiracy" networks are unpopular, other "more expensive" options will form in niche markets. Customers will *probably* be happy to pay more to companies who provide the premium service of not being the Internet police for the RIAA/MPAA.
Full disclosure... I'm not a pirate. I'm a strong supporter of Creative Commons. I believe the real path to freeing our culture isn't going to be achieved by ignoring copyright infringement laws, but rather by ignoring artists who continue to release their work with restrictive copyrights.
Let me pay HBO et al directly for a stream of their content. Quit locking things up into the deprecated business model.
Really, it is out. Look, it is there, sitting on the windowsill licking its... well, that is just rude... but it is out of the bag in any case. No you can't put it back in the back. Or the case.
Whenever now some new story breaks about the latest means of illegal filesharing and the industry moving against it, I am near instantly asked by non-techies how to do it themselves.
Educate them? What, that artists like Britney Spear would starve to death without your hard earned money? Yeah, I am sure most of the people I know, some of who have trouble making end meet month to month give a shit.
Content production has always relied on the artificial limitation of availability (we only print X amount) to keep the price up. With digital reproduction, this limit has gone. Worse, the cost of distribution is approaching trivial. I can share a movie for a couple of cents. How in the world are you going to persuade me to pay MORE for a SINGLE movie then I pay for my internet connection that can give me hundreds of them?
And yet, movie ticket sales are on the increase. Gaga earns millions. Clearly all this piracy isn't actually affecting anyone. Where are the starving artists, where are the movies that should have been made that are not made (no, the ones that should not have been made but were made do NOT count instead).
It reminds me of the anti-piracy messages in shows like Futurama. Yeah, you sold me, I felt very bad for downloading the entire series... oh wait, I didn't. The cost of purchasing series is just to high, i am not going to pay that much for a piece of plastic. As for watching it on TV, the commercials are just to long, not just the ones that make money, WHY one EARTH do TV stations struggling to keep viewers watching commercial breaks ADD to the length of the breaks by advertising their own station I am WATCHING?
Talk about oversell.
The content industry either re-invents itself or has to just accept the year after year profit increases they been suffering at the hands of pirates (oh, you thought they were making a loss? Nope, in fact investing in music back catalogs is now considered a risk free investment for pension funds).
Educating me? I am educated thank you very much, I know the costs of printing a plastic disc and the cost me of funding the superstar lifestyle of an artist versus the cost of me not funding it.
No more music? I could care less. If all the artists of the world want things to change, let them strike. Every single one of them against me not paying for their work. STRIKE. See if anyone gives a shit. Do you?
MMO Quests are like orgasms:
You may solo them, I prefer them in a group.
it looks like in the article is says they will throttle bandwidth and/or limit your web access until the file sharing stops. it also says that these would be for the most grievous offenders. I'm not siding with the agreement .. i really think is stinks, I'm just sayin.
My biggest complaint is that my service cost is going to go up because of this.
F*ck the RIAA and the MPAA. It's about time we take this crap in our own hands and set off some bombs at their offices. Blow their ass of the face of the earth and we won't have to deal with their bull sh*t. I say the more we kill the better. Lets start at the top and work our way down...maybe they'll get the message after we blow first 10-20 people into little pieces of ground dumb ass.
Since US ISP's apparently are too glad to turn over name and address information when confronted with an *IAA letter, perhaps they can take it a step further: hand over the billing details.
When this cozy integration goes through, since they're already operating on guesses and the whim of 'investigators' as to your pirating, perhaps they should take the liberty of automatically debiting or tacking on to your bill the cost of the IP they think you got for free.
May as well go for the DP if you're gonna rape customers' rights (is this a rthis hard.
http://www.seomanagement.com/index.php/Information/Top-200-Websites-by-Visitor-Count.html Top 200 websites still means you can get to adultfriendfinder, victoriassecret and Limewire.com
Because of the "agreement," does this mean the RIAA and MPAA can no longer demand payment of damages for pirating? If so, or even if it assumed by consumers, this may have the impact of increasing the amount of pirating happening among the ISPs that enter into this agreement. As far as I can tell, it still isn't the job of the ISPs to police their networks and the penalties really don't seem that bad, especially if they provide me a warning. I'm also not sure why there is a cost associated with the agreement, unless it is for the hardware and staff required to carry it out. If any money is going to the RIAA and MPAA then it would seem like it even further legitimizes the download of music/movies as how could that be interpreted any other way then a license fee for the downloads?
What reasoning?
Is there any reason that this wouldn't be considered collusion in a court of law, with all the companies consorting together for business practices that hurt consumers? If one did it and others didn't, competition, and the one doing it fails. But with all of them negotiating to do it together as an industry.....
Answer: It won't.
Most people who are hardcore infringers are already using things like seedboxes for uploading & downloading torrents. How do these idiot lawyers expect these agreements to impact VPS's hosted in countries like India? Rent 100gig of disk space & bandwidth from another country for $20/month or so, run all your torrents there, then use rsync via ssh, scp, etc. to do an encrypted transfer to/from your home. Even with deep packet inspection the ISP couldn't possibly know that you're copying copyrighted material to/from your seedbox.
Punishment without trial. Lovely.
I'm broke, can't afford to buy CD's. They are insanely rich, and want to be richer. When they pay off my car, i will give a shit about their "rights."
When all of the business are in collusion, the consumer has no power.
Have an opposing view? Let us dig through our proxy logs to see if you've downloaded any MP3s from Rapidshare or the like.
an increase in tunneling usage in the future...
I should have been a lawyer. They have so much power. Apparently they can just write letters to companies to do their bidding regardless of anyone else's rights.
So, now we have a situation where, if there are enough copyright complaints, let alone valid ones, the ISPs must comply. No due process at all---it's all about the all-powerful squeaky hinge.
Trooper: This usage is covered under fair use.
Ben: The copyrights are for sale if you want them
Trooper: Let me see your writ.
Luke fumbles around looking for a signed writ.
Ben (in a controlled voice): There is no fair use
Trooper: There is no fair use
Ben: These aren't the rights you are looking for
Trooper: These aren't the rights you are looking for
Ben: We can stop his business
Trooper You can stop his business
Ben (to Luke): Move along.
Trooper: Move along. Move along.
-----
Welcome to the USA. Former jurisdiction of the US Constitution.
You said it yourself. You'd go dialup or slow link.
And no need for large hard drives any more: you can't fill an iPod with your 450,000 tracks because that would bankrupt a small nation.
When BluRay needs internet to work, you won't buy Blu Ray.
When your TV is over internet, no TV.
No Blu Ray, no TV and no internet, how the hell will the companies be able to sell you stuff??? You might actually buy only what you need and buy it in the shops!
Really, I've gone that way. I don't listen to radio much, no TV, no internet 'cept at work, about 3 DVDs a year and never a bluray. No TV means that when I did have internet broadband, I didn't know what was on internet TV so never bothered to look.
And I've found that I'm actually quite wealthy now. Thinking of going part-time instead.
I'm dropping off the purchases and the corporations interest in controlling what I get from the media is what's doing it.
ISPs everywhere: get a backbone!
Aren't "US ISPs" and "Big Content" sort of... one and the same?
RE: "The Obama administration is 'generally supportive'"
Well, that shouldn't be a surprise, considering Joe Biden was (before becoming Vice President), and obviously still IS, the biggest entertainment industry shill in the US government.
>ISPs and rights holders will share the costs of the system.
ISPs and rights holders will PASS ON the costs of the system TO THE ISP CUSTOMERS.
ftfy
I'll switch over to satellite internet, or, hell, back to dial-up before I go through any retarded, "Copyright Awareness," program. I already have to sit through too much fucking compliance training at work. I'll gladly burn in Hell before I am tasked to sit through it at home.
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Because it seems like everyone on Slashdot is trying to rationalize stealing. And while some of the posters make some good points about the unfair strategies of the entertainment industry, and most users (including myself) will continue to pirate, it's still stealing in some sense of the word.
and iTunes and Netflix and Youtube and of course any indie websites. Isn't that the real idea behind these measures? To force us to go back to the store for overpriced Content?
Piracy is not the cause of declining MPAA/RIAA importance.
attempted copyright
How about a campaign to complain that the CEOs of these companies have been downloading illegal files?
I hope this goes directly to the top a Anonymous' / LulzSec's todo list if this crap is implemented. I strongly believe many lulz would ensue if they get bombarded with bogus takedown notices against the ISP CEOs. Also add every major **AA player to the list.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
What we do with our net connections is not the isp's business, we should all be routinely using https and vpn connections anyhow. That we're not already is pure complacent laziness on developer's parts. Maybe this will light a fire under their asses.
It's a sad state when your country's economy relies on a nebulous concept such as "copyright". Whatever happened to actually making and selling goods? The US should not be banking their future on Hollywood and the music industry.
http://geti2p.net/
Not matter how the crack on on illegal downloads it's not going to help record sales until the sign better artist
And yet, movie ticket sales are on the increase. Gaga earns millions.
Lady Gaga and the giant companies behind her will be just fine. And, so will the brand new tiny band who needs exposure--piracy is free advertising to them.
The people who piracy really hurts are the middle-class artists, who are well-enough known within their genre to make a decent living, but not huge marketing forces like Lady Gaga. They will play audiences of several hundred to several thousand, relying on a combination of show gate, merch, and album sales to make a middle-class living as artists.
Piracy is truly hurting these kinds of bands right now. If you don't believe me, go to a show and talk to the band. They have no interest in suing anyone because they like their fans and do not want to alienate them. But if you ask if piracy is affecting their livelihood, the answer is clearly yes.
It's emotionally satisfying to hate on Lady Gaga and industry fat cats, but music and movies are just like any other industry--most people are not super rich, they are just regular folks trying to make a living at their chosen profession. Yes, real middle class people are getting hurt by piracy.
Build a man a fire, he's warm for one night. Set him on fire, and he's warm for the rest of his life.
Maybe this is exactly what we need, newbs need to depart the "deep web" in some way shape or form, technical loss of freedom is one way of doing it. Encrypted bittorent traffic + ipfilter.dat really shouldn't be an option in my opinion, and soon may not be especially if shit like this flies (thnx Lulz Sec for opening the door, though some may cry) So here's the plan gentlemen: 1. a law passes that allows the ISP to mess with your traffic 2. Those to whom its applicable buy a server outside the border, somewhere the internet laws are a little more non-existant (Russia? Japan?) find your own country rofl. 3. Self-explanatory profit. Look for a detailed guide upon law passing, until then keep speculating and feeding big brother your thoughts.
MPAA and RIAA have won a few battles, but have already lost the war. They changed the length of copyright, but that didn't stop infringement. They bought the politicians, but that didn't stop infringement. They tax Canadians for media purchases (for now), but have lost the war with VCR's, compact disks, DVD's. They won the battle against Napster, but still lost the war against online infringement. They used DMCA takedowns and have abused the U.S. DOJ to redirect DNS, but can not stop people from going to their favorite infringing sites. They have attempted to force ACTA upon other countries through treaty.
They will lose this war too, and this is how. People will start to use encrypted DNS services on ports other than UDP 53. After a secure lookup, they will use HTTPS, or even encrypted TOR to access the infringing content. Encryption at the data layer prevents deep packet inspection from analyzing encrypted streams.
The whole fight is nonsense, but media is one of the few remaining exports from the United States. Here is how you can make a difference: 1) Cut the cable. 2) Only access content that is legally free (I use the library, Crackle, Hulu, antenna, etc.). 3) Create your own content and release it under the Creative Commons License. 4) Let the major studios wither financially.
I made this same statement in response to an article at The Register, in the last week.
Can you imagine the shitstorm that would happen if Google granted international access to proxy.google.com:80 (or :443)?
I can, and I know that some websites would have to start blocking access from that (those) proxy(ies), or at least forward them to a page that simply says "we don't allow proxy via google".
I personally think that they should do this. even if they have to run them all in countrycode TLDs.
not only must the humanity of the world put up with the SENMACE control over their governments, but now they must allow their ISPs to limit their access to the top 200 sites.
No where in the constitution does it say they can do this, does it?
Copyright Awareness Program... Visit the "Max. your download speed" course! Seriously... Put a bunch of people who have been torrenting/downloading in a room, und guess what will happen... I am looking forward to see the results of these brainstormings!
Top 200 sites.... OH my... This runs foul of freedom of speech in an armful of ways. The current top 200 includes four .gov sites.
Thus this cuts one off from whitehouse.gov
for example.
It blindly cuts people from the likes of sarahpac.com
and barackobama.com. It cuts folk off from
libraries, bus schedules, and I see zero .edu sites.
It may fly for a while and even when squashed there
will be no penalty.
Insanity...
we now live in the socialist state of America the (USSA) the US govt follows the will of big business of not the will of the people!! so why is everyone so surprised, after all it's not about your rights anymore no no no it's all about money folks
I don't recall the fine print of my TOS, but I would really wonder whether or not the contracts signed allowed for this bullshit, and whether or not such things would hold up in court.
Every internet service TOS I've ever read contained a clause prohibiting using the service to violate copyrights. In addition, most TOS contain a clause that allows them to drop you as a customer for any reason.
Check your TOS. I'm certain it will specifically call out copyright violations as unacceptable use.
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