Movie Studios Want Automated BitTorrent Warnings
daria42 writes "The lawsuit filed by movie and TV studios against Australian Internet service provider iiNet appears to have taken a new twist, with the studios using early judgments in the case to attempt to push other ISPs towards what it has described as a 'standardized automated processing system' for BitTorrent copyright infringement notices that would integrate with the ISPs' networks and automatically forward messages to customers when they were sent by the studios."
"...but it's too much trouble to do it ourselves. You do it for us."
Just notify EVERYONE. They're all dirty pirates, right?
Can we also have a warning for *AA affiliates exec? It should be triggered everytime they approach a public statement, it should say "If you're about to talk about piracy, please consider the fact that you're about to make a fool of yourself. Again."
Write boring code, not shiny code!
Do I have to go all indie or CC?
Then they can get on their knees and work on my torrent !!
the world is slowly going all fascist.
why don't we just put everyone in jail and be done with it already.
if you want to do, see or say anything you have to apply in writing. you will be let out of your cell only if your activities are pre-approved.
Man, this is starting to sound more and more like the local parking enforcement and red-light camera issued tickets! Guilty without need to present evidence and little to no contesting rights. Next thing you know, the studios will have enforcement troops.
First it is automated warnings, then it is automated lawsuits and then it is automated executions....
Seriously.... between tools like MakeMKV and Handbrake, it is trivial to rip a DVD these days. And on the crappy connections that they want to sell us (I'm on a 5mbit DSL with torrent traffic shaping turned on so I'm lucky to pull more than 100kbit), it's faster to simply rip the DVD to your local hard drive. Since I've already paid for the privilege, where's the incentive to actually go out and buy a DVD, now?
These people do realize that pirates are actually their best customers, right? The whole try before you buy thing? Yes, some folks will do it simply because they can, but I simply won't buy a DVD unless I've seen the movie, because I want to make sure I'm not paying for a crappy movie. That either means I download the movie, or I've seen it in theatre. If they don't want my business, that's their call; I'll just give the money to the local rental store, instead.
I admit, I don't use bittorrent, but I am curious since I hear so much about it and piracy and tv/movie studios whining about bittorrent. Which brings up my question, just how much of bittorrent (and large ISP's) traffic is pirated tv/movie studio content? 0.1 percent? 5 percent? Is this such a big deal?
Most Respectfully Yours Mark Allyn Bellingham, Washington
...studios all seem to think that it's the ISPs' duty and responsibility to do their job for them, for free. Ask them where to send the bill, I say.
"We don't even want to bother figuring out their email address."
The ideal ISP response to this would be to agree and then send the studios a bill at, say, $10000 per notification to cover "costs". Hollywood accounting works both ways...
If they want to reduce piracy, they need to provide more incentive for purchasing a £10, £15 DVD or bluray. At the moment, the price/entertainment ratio is appalling. I buy some stuff, I prefer to buy than pirate, I like a physical collection, but when movies come out more often than not at £15 there's no chance in hell I'd go out and buy them.
In its letter to Exetel, AFACT noted that it was also sending the ISP a comprehensive spreadsheet detailing “a sample of up to 100 instances per week” of alleged copyright infringement actions taking place by Exetel customers. The letter stated that a high degree of detail was contained in the spreadsheet — including the date and time of the alleged infringement, the IP address on which it occured, the name and detailed of the file shared online, the name of the AFACT member company holding the copyright and more.
Yeah there is no way this could be abused. We're just supposed to trust the figures presented by the "AFACT". Look piracy has gone up 2000%!!
I'd like royalties for 60 years on every house I've ever worked on.
Most important question is
"How much money can we get from that percentage?"
I'd expect the figure to go the other way, i.e. 5 percent or less is legitimately copied content. Ignoring trackers for very specific uses - such as Blizzard's tracker for distributing WoW patches, the bulk of the torrents would almost certainly be infringing content.
Just notify EVERYONE. They're all dirty pirates, right?
Yeah. That's how America works these days.
Treat everyone as a terrorist - search them at airports, train stations, on the road, etc - ever been for radiation therapy? Look out!
Everyone is a potential meth addict - gotta show your driver's license to get 10 pills of Sudafed!
Everyone is a drunk driver - that's why there are road blocks where they stop everyone to see if they're drunk - sucks when you're working weekend nights and you're automatically considered a drunk!
On the internet? Well, you're pirating and downloading child porn unless proven innocent!
...the movie studios will want an automated settlement system that adds on a few grand to your ISP's bill and is automatically deposited in the account of their choice, likely the 'Christmas bonus' account
Really, It's YOU who gives them the money to screw you....
Hard to say but considering that many games push patches down with it now... world of warcraft must generate a lot of traffic. If one were to open it up to all p2p traffic, there is a lot of legit traffic now. There's also many linux distros that distribute ISOs with bittorrent.
Someone needs to tell these movie studios that their kids games use this technology.
If the movie studios want it, and it is not directly related to the making of movies, oppose it. This will save lots of time in the end.
Yes!
Make copyrighted material "the new pariah!"
"Eew! You watched THAT? Yeah maybe it's an okay show, but you can't show me your favorite clip!"
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
I hate the *AA. They sodomize anything and everything around them, and on top of that, most of what they produce is utter trash. I've completely weened myself from RIAA music, and that wasn't hard at all as there are plenty of fantastic and truly independent musicians out there and their music is easily accessible. Movies/TV are another thing, the girlfriend can't get enough, but I've cancelled cable TV and haven't been to a theater or bought a DVD in ages. We have Netflix, so I'm still guilty, but I would absolutely love to cut the cord entirely. I'd love to see a streaming service that was all indie content, I'd ditch Netflix just so the MIAA wouldn't get paid. Maybe that's extreme but I truly believe that you vote with your dollars and you should approve of the people you support with them.
I wish we were strong enough to collectively boycott their products until they got their act together, actually it's too late for that, until they finally collapse like the hulking outdated business model they are. I'd like to think it's only a matter of time--that you can't run a successful business by treating your customers like criminals, that your customers just won't put up with it. I sure hope that's the case.
Yes, actually I am on a personal quest to spread my hatred of *AA far and wide to everyone that will listen, I'm glad you noticed and I hope you'll join me. I haven't even gotten a letter or anything, their behavior is enough for me.
Every single article about the movie studios has the word "WANT" in it
You think publishing houses will be any better if you allow them as much influence as Hollywood has gained?
A hugely successful film makes a huge loss on paper according to the hollywood accounting rules.
What utter tosh. According to them no film can ever make a profit. So why are the MPAA members living in multi million $ mansions?
Why don't they run their business according to the same accounting rules that the rest of us have to follow?
The answer is simple. The money that is actually made on a file in then used to grease some sweaty palms in places like DC to keep the status quo in place.
I will keep torrenting until their house is in order. Ok?
I'm surprised the IRS hasn't already caught on to this.
If media companies they pick your IP they demand over $20,000 for every shared track which can be bought for a single dollar on iTunes, no matter if it was you who downloaded the song or someone else.
So, in return make Hollywood execs personally responsible for 20,000 times the amount of money companies are hiding from taxes through Hollywood accounting.
All emails must be scanned and flagged if they contain 4 words in a row that match any book in print?
that what movie studios distribute utter crap anyway.
" will likely not have central trackers of any kind (perhaps it will rely on something like DHT), and will generally make it much more difficult to identify individual users. "
IIRC DHT uses a bootstrap node too. If MPAA can't find the users, then the users can't find each other either.
I've been thinking about this for years. I'm sure it's been developed.
A "Piracy" warning while downloading Free software.
Another sign ..... that bribery works to get what you want out of the legal and political system. No surprise.
What would be interesting is every American gave $1 to fight this lobby group. $300 mil would hire a nice team that could rid the MPAA and RIAA in short order methinks.
and the less money they take in, the more they'll blame "the low life scum sucking free loading pirates." I often wonder if it has ever occur to them that maybe (most of) their product suck donkey balls?
ELOI, ELOI, LAMA SABACHTHANI!?
perhaps so, but that's only because it's an efficient method of transfering files. Anybody want to guess what the percentage of ftp traffic was pirate stuff before bittorrent came along?
The thing is that a BT tracker does not announce or even admit what files it tracks. The only way to get it to talk to you at all is to give it the crypto-hash of the file you want. This means any kind of detection what is offered by a tracker has to look into the data streams of the clients and recognize patterns of known files there.
A possible countermeasure would be that the tracker also gives an encryption key to each swarm participant and all data gets encrypted individually per swarm participant. Then even deep packet inspection is worthless.
Most ACs are not even worth the keystrokes to insult them. Be generically insulted by this and ignored otherwise.
I'm sorry RIAA, MPAA ,whateverAA no one can afford your shit anymore, if you haven't looked out front your door lately a lot of people are barely able to afford their food let alone some shiney discs you sell. I mean the USA is in big trouble right now so is half of europe, if we have a choice we're going with dinner > DVD thank you very much, please just go and fade away you're no longer relevant anymore.
This is what these have become now. leeches. nothing more. at an age where their middlemanship is not needed, they are not only forcing middlemanship on entire society, but also requesting control of very important lifelines of the society for ensuring their profit.
from this point on, it is insolence. not even self interest. because society, the people, does no retribution to these people in person, and they can buy out laws to defend themselves from law, their insolence has reached such a level.
Read radical news here
TO BIG ISP's. First tracking. Now bit torrent warnings. It will never end. Why are you creating tools of your own enslavement? Put down those twitch games, read a history book and learn to play chess.
The Control Freaks will never stop. This will eat into your bottom lines. Stop them at the bun. Hire a bunch of lawyers and lobbyists. Do it now. It will be cheaper in the long run
TO NERDS: Invent a card that sells for about 29.95 that hooks to an antenna on my roof. True peer to peer over RF. True Decentrailized. Nothing anybody can do about it. Actually, I think this just exists, all that is need is for the public internet to become too restricted.
If I only download 50%- I don't necessarily have a usable 50% since I have scattered bits. Even 95% or 99% may not be a usable file. Moreover what if something is named either coincidentally or intentionally to sound like a movie or other copyrighted work. I believe they need to prove that a) you downloaded 100% of the file b) it is a copyrighted file (actual physical verification of the contents) c) that your ip is really your computer d) your computer really had you at it.
What about making it affordable to not pirate? In Denmark an average movie ticket costs $17 US, if you want the 3D version it can cost you up to $25. It's too expensive to buy a movie if you are only going to see it once, but rentals are a pain too. They cost ~$7 for a not-old movie, they cost time and they are usually on DVD with stupid unskippable commercials before the movie starts.
That raises the question: Why would I want to pay that much for a much worse product? Any downloaded move has, as dictated by scene rules, no anti-piracy propaganda/commercials before the movie. They are more readily available, and I can download a DVD movie in about 20 minutes and spare the trip to the video store.
Content should be more easily available, then I wouldn't pirate it. I stopped pirating games after I got steam, maybe their model is a good solution?
Bittorrent will not die easily, and if it does a replacement is inevitable as long as it is such a pain to get content.
This whole thing is our own fault. Why? Because decades ago we stopped electing statesmen who understand that the marking of a good leader is a servant mentality, and instead we vote elitist career politicians into office.
Until we start voting sensibly and kick out every last bought-and-paid-for politician, we will continue to have no one to blame but ourselves.
The Christian Right is Neither (Christian nor right). See: Matthew 23, Matthew 25, Ezekiel 16:48-50
Another spam window to click away.
We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
Using bittorrent is similar to using a pickup truck with a gun rack (yeah, I know, an almost-car analogy) -- it doesn't really matter what percentage of the traffic is pirated media. Just like we don't want people poaching wildlife in their pickup truck, the media companies don't want people stealing their product (which isn't the content, it's the viewers) by torrenting the media.
Actually, now that I think of it, "poaching" is a much more accurate term than "pirating" for what people do with corporate media content.
So, what happens when people hack this and kick the studios and their employees offline?
In my years at RIT, I heard a lot about something called "the Hub", which sounds like this kind of thing.
[Since I lived off-campus (and thus was away from the on-campus network most of the time), I didn't feel the need to find out more.]
* RIT also has a innocuous "Hub" that's a printing/copying shop
I listen to both RIAA and non-RIAA stuff if I like the music, tangential business/politics nonwithstanding.
Why do that when you can have adhoc wifi at the least.. or just carry a mini switch and some extra cat5.
---- Booth was a patriot ----
... the Copy protection companies should be paying the American taxpayer about $70 Trillion dollars -- because our FBI has been busy going after kids downloading MP3 files rather than the Crooks on Wall Street.
>> Until the Copyrighters want to PAY for our entire FBI cost -- I don't think these agencies should be in the business of procuring profits for corporations -- they should be going after fraud and abuse of power.
>>"ad space available -- low rates!!!"
Ignoring trackers for very specific uses - such as Blizzard's tracker for distributing WoW patches, the bulk of the torrents would almost certainly be infringing content.
Should we also ignore the linux distro ISO files? the creative commons media? the public domain content? all legitimate uses? If you are looking to see what percentage of the traffic is legitimate, I recommend you don't start by ignoring trackers for legitimate uses. Unless of course you want to make *IAA style statistics...
I don't know what the actual numbers look like, but you won't find the truth by ignoring the parts that don't fit your preconceived notions.
But we don't go after poachers by mandating lower speed limits for pickup trucks, or outlawing them completely. We go after poachers by catching people in the act of hunting without a permit.
Similarly we shouldn't go after copyright infringement by throttling or blocking bittorrent traffic.
A million dollars and a pony
and I will give you the exact same answer life gave me, fuck you
That's called packet radio. It's regulated into idiocy- no encryption allowed even. Highly possible though, look it up.
"People don't want to learn linux" hasn't been a valid excuse since '03.
The CT part stands for "Copyright Theft" but that's grossly misleading... You're not stealing the rights, you're infringing on them. You're not stealing the content either, you're copying it.
They apparently refuse to learn! - Pure stupidity! :(
"For every complex problem, there is a solution that is simple, neat, and wrong." -- H.L. Mencken (1880-1956) --
But we don't go after poachers by mandating lower speed limits for pickup trucks, or outlawing them completely. We go after poachers by catching people in the act of hunting without a permit.
Similarly we shouldn't go after copyright infringement by throttling or blocking bittorrent traffic.
I knew this was a good analogy... that's exactly the point. Socially, torrenting copyrighted works is similar to poaching. Following the analogy, blocking/throttling torrent traffic is similar to putting up a fence. It doesn't stop the problem, but it increases the barrier to entry... both for those breaking the law and for legit users of the space.