File Sharing In the Post MegaUpload Era
An anonymous reader writes "This report looks at file sharing in the post MegaUpload era. The main finding — file sharing did not go away. It did not even decrease much in North America. Mainly, file sharing became staggeringly less efficient. Instead of terabytes of North America MegaUpload traffic going to U.S. servers, most file sharing traffic now comes from Europe over far more expensive transatlantic links."
It's not like the people who've been pirating for the last ten years are just going to say to themselves "Hey, let's go back to the way it was in the 90's and forget that we've gotten used to not paying for our movies and getting them instantly!" just because of some raid. And as long as there are pirates sailing the high seas, *someone* will be there to sell them boats.
SJW: Someone who has run out of real oppression, and has to fake it.
I'm more annoyed at the wording - "In the post ____ era, the world will never be the same."
My first Journal Entry ever, in 8 years! http://slashdot.org/journal/365947/aphelion-scifi-fantasy-horror-poetry-webzine
We need to waste more taxpayer money going after what amounts to jaywalkers. We need to show the world that the US government truly polices the world!
Also, having ads on a website is the exact same thing as selling the content on your website.
Blame Napster for making file sharing main stream. Back in the day when we had to walk uphill to school both ways the only way to pirate stuff was to be a geek or know someone who was. In the glory days most piracy happened on BBS'es, IRC and USENET. The former two were generally only available to those "in the know" while the latter was mostly used by people seeking pornography (who remembers working on PCs and finding gigabyte sized Free Agent cache directories?)
In the end even the RIAA/MPAA types know that they will never stop piracy. Driving it further underground and returning it to the domain of the technically informed would stem their perceived losses though. I'm not sure if this is an obtainable goal with the internet being what it is but you can bet they will keep trying as long as they draw breath. The only thing that will stop this is the rise of meaningful (read: cheap and easy to use) online services that make piracy more trouble than it's worth. A lot of people think that iTunes did this for music, though I would argue that Pandora has done more to negate music piracy than iTunes. I don't think you can directly translate Pandora into movies though.
I want peace on earth and goodwill toward man.
We are the United States Government! We don't do that sort of thing.
I now accept requests for files over the phone or via hand-written letter and I deliver them on a USB stick, multiple foppy disks, or cassette tapes, whatever you prefer.
My file sharing will not be stopped
Honestly, I never even thought of Megaupload-like sites as "file sharing". If that's file sharing, then every website is sharing with you lots of html, css and image files. I'd rather call that "File publishing". You upload a file to a server which is then published to the world. "File sharing" to me implies some form of P2P technology where users literally share local files and bandwidth with other member of a network.
Check out my cross-platform apps
Other filesharing sites (filesonic comes to mind, but there are others) have either disabled file sharing, or changed it in such a way as to make it less convenient, never mind efficient.
on computers since there were computers, 1 website is not going to stop them, all websites will not stop them, what will stop them is a change in how things are done.
If people are "too cheap" to buy your product maybe your product is too expensive.
If people are getting pirate copies of your software to avoid the iron fisted DRM bullshit, well maybe get rid of your DRM bullshit.
If people are downloading your movie to watch once then never again maybe you should make it easier for people to watch.
just a thought that no one making this shit wants to hear
So at Skyfile.co we have seen a huge amount of US users since January 19th, not sure that many users that use File sharing sites like ours for legal sharing needed to go outside of the US to do this.
Instead of having a local place where they could have probably got some information on traffic, it is all external to their operations AND it is hammering the backbone and international lines more than ever.
THANK YOU FBI, YOU JUST INCREASED MY PING BY A FEW MILLISECONDS ON US SERVERS.
Eh, it's the only way they will win, win by making others have lag. Cheat hax noobs.
I like how the picture in the article most likely contains a link to either a virus, malware instead of the actual movie. We all have seen these in the links before -- 100% complete , full download, real version , etc. I wonder what the percentage of these files they claim are movies are the actual movie, and not some scam to download supposed codecs.
Isn't the real question whether litigation remains the dominant way of a dying industry to fight the status quo (i.e. files being shared)? File sharing is here to stay. About the syndicates I'm not that sure... .
I hope I didn't brain my damage.
In the end it will come down to what has always been the backbone of sharing on the internet newsgroups/private ftp's and the servers that host them. That said I haven't had any problems for the better part of the the last decade and a half getting anything I wanted & somethings I didn't from one of the oldest parts of the internet.
If the RIAA/MPAA really wanted to increase revenue, they would start bootlegging a low res version their own movies, and sell slices of time of the movies to advertisers, anyone remember when Movies where on Film in the theater and the 1/30 second image of a bucket of popcorm flashed by ? Let me insert subliminal adverts into the low res version and the distribute it freely and widely.
3 weeks = an era
American business outsourcing at its best - it cost Americans jobs and moved them overseas.
I am not a pirate and have never used MegaUpload for anything, so I don't really know what kind of content was on it, but I kinda see irony there - stopping copyright infringement is supposed to create jobs here...
If there's something to see here, I'm missing it.
Carousel is a lie!
After all, people keep telling me on Slashdot that the pirates are not to be counted as lost sales since they would not buy it anyway. If there was no way to pirate Windows I assume it follows people would just switch to Linux !!
Traditional military strategy has been to go for the command and control infrastructure. The morons in DoJ just don't realise that its a useless strategy when dealing with the internet. Your enemy is far more mobile than you are, and they will simply relocate, or re-distribute to overcome the assault.
/politicians and police don't understand the internet
Looking back at the stuff I "pirate" it's really kinda funny. It's mostly TV shows that are no longer on the air. Shit I would watch on Hulu if they had it. It baffles me that the TV networks are so bad at this concept. Put a show that's been off the air for 5, 10, 20, 50 years or more and slap some modern advertisements on it and you can do what you've ALWAYS done and make money off of advertising. Off shows that you've already paid the production price... it's practically free for fuck sake.
You get targeted ads, a clear picture of what people are interested in watching, and you're continuing to make money off of your legacy. But no they only want to put the last 3 to 5 episodes off the current season. So stupid. I pirate less because of sites like Hulu. Their business model, making money off adds, doesn't even have to change. How can they fucking not see it? So. god. damned. stupid.
No mater how much Governments try to stop this, others find better ways around it. When they put a stop to Napster and Limewire, Bit Torrent was invented. Someone will find a new way to share files that make it impossible to control, or until our Government becomes a complete Totalitarian and controls everything!
-- By all means let's be open-minded, but not so open-minded that our brains drop out.
Economics defeats moral arguments every single time. People pay money to see their favorite bands play a live concert, because live concerts are an experience that cannot be burned to a disc or downloaded from a website. People pay money to see movies in a movie theater because you cannot download the experience of being in a movie theater. Concerts and movie theaters make money because the experience you are buying is scarce.
Copies of music and movies are not scarce resources anymore. We no longer require specialized industrial equipment to make those copies, and it costs almost nothing to make a copy. With an effectively unlimited supply, we should expect copies of music and movies to cost nothing; the industry needs to find some new scare-but-demanded way to enjoy entertainment, or focus more on the ways they have left.
Palm trees and 8
In our village we have a surviving section of a Roman road, and a small, protected wood of ancient hardwood. They are open to the public all the year round. The preservation committee has enough cash to go to the High Court for an injunction against people who might try to damage them, but almost every year we get some moron trying to destroy the road by ploughing it up with a Range Rover, or trying to vandalise the wood. We are prepared to defend both, but we have to be.
The problem is that a nasty minority spoils things for the majority. Security at the Glastonbury costs a fortune because of the people who try to destroy the security fence - which is needed because those same people used to break in and try to wreck the festival.
This isn't a rant against file sharing. I think the recording industry is its own worst enemy - it is purely entrepreneurial and entrepreneurs should never have special rights over real property. But, at the end of the day, the real answer is drastic: if you don't want performance to be free, do not encode it digitally and accept that restraint.
But perhaps that's what you meant?
From scarped cliff or quarried stone she cries "A thousand types are gone, I care for nothing, no not one."
That's why we need to sink those boats. Filesharing services of all kinds need to be shut down; they're only ever used for piracy. These fagets need to be stopped. People deserve to be paid for what they create, not ripped off by a bunch of hippie information-wants-to-be-free fagets.
I deeklare whore or speling. Keel the heapy fagets. Keel edukation. Everyones have to pays for everyrthink.
It's only fare.
Posting TV shows is still piracy from what I understand.
i agree that decentralized operation of the network is a key component, but in my opinion, as many have pointed out, anonymous operation is equally critical. there have been several studies thus far on using anonymity tools such as TOR and I2P with the bittorent protocol that show that the user swarm real IP's can still be logged. this is the real flaw. it means that users cannot necessarily be blocked when using these technologies, but can be tracked via public IP and therefore still put each user at risk for possible litigation(i.e. sued). This should be the next primary focus of applications such as this. freedom from persecution should be equal to freedom from censorship. ask users of blogs in other countries who are arrested for there public opinions if they consider the technical means to share information as more important then being protected when doing so. the same principle should apply to these applications.
in my opinion there are 4 areas of equal importance that should be vital to the success of free information:
1. free operation( decetrilization, anti deep packet inspection, anti port blocking ect.)
2. user identity protection( anonymizing operation, hiding of user public IP, anti tracking tech ect)
3. intermediary protection( forced end to end encryption.anonymizing supper peers, list hubs anti trace routing to protect VPN operators or private anonymity hubs like Tor supper peers, and protection for ISP's needs to also be considered as country's are leaning not just on sites but providers as well)
4. public pool poisoning( MPAA RIAA bad peers poisoning the network and introducing malware to install tracking software on intermediary and end users computers thus breaking all protections or making the network unusable due to bad content or no content(null actors)).
any application that focuses on these 4 areas will be a success as long as each are given equal consideration and implementation. without any one of these considerations, the network will ultimately fail either due to technical or legal external pressures.
Movies could be produced for far less than what is typically spent on them, and at a reasonable quality level. What makes a movie like The Matrix great is not the special effects or the bogus accounting, but the story that it tells, and that story could be told on a lower budget, with good acting, good directing, and good camerawork replacing much of the technology that is thrown at movies today. Movies are indeed part of our culture; special effects need not be.
Palm trees and 8
Oliver's law of assumed responsibility: If you're seen fixing it, you will be blamed for breaking it.
Watch out Hollywood, the VCR is going to cripple your business model!
I used to have a viable business model, then I took a VCR in the knee.
You know, that's not funny, my business model was raped by a VCR once.
the preceding comment is my own and in no way reflects the opinion of the Joint Chiefs of Staff
And as long as there are pirates sailing the high seas, *someone* will be there to sell them boats.
And here I thought pirates just took the boats :)
The MPAA currently can only compete on one of these points -- cost.
Actually the MPAA can effectively compete on all the other points EXCEPT cost...they can do everything you list, better than any pirate, except give it away for free. The fact that they are ignoring all the other points and trying to compete on cost is why they are having such a hard time. If they released content commercial free, at the same time as (or even in advance) of broadcast in multiple DRM-free formats for a low cost the chances are that they would attract customers willing to pay for the simple convenience vs. searching dodgy websites for content of unknown quality which is only available after broadcast.
Right or wrong, Piracy will not stop because of this sort of regulation. The very nature of our media technology is too versatile for them to be able to stop it. They can throw up road blocks but in the end they will only hurt honest file-sharers (although it seems often that they are even after them). But if they want to stop Piracy they will have to change the culture. You can legislate till doomsday but that will not change people.
~theCzar
This report looks at file sharing in the post MegaUpload era.
That sounds like my "post the last pubic hair I lost" era. What fucking era? They punctured a killer whales skin a few centimeters with a pin. And the whale is still alive? News a 11:00!!
The main finding â" file sharing did not go away. It did not even decrease much in North America.
No shit, Sherlock. Who the fuck is naive enough not to realize that Megaupload, although very large was a mere 1 of hundreds of such sites and that this method is one of a huge number of methods used?
Mainly, file sharing became staggeringly less efficient.
Not for the file-sharer, it hasn't. The impact is almost non-observable.
Instead of terabytes of North America MegaUpload traffic going to US servers, most file sharing traffic now comes from Europe over far more expensive transatlantic links.
You mean that the world can fucntion without the mighty US? Shocking!
I'm not willing to pay $3 to watch a 27 year old movie. I'm ESPECIALLY not going to do so on top of an $80/year subscription to have the 'privilege' of paying those kinds of ridiculous fees.
Nope, Netflix at $8 or $9 a month is about right for just about everything I want to watch. When I can't find what I want to watch there, Hulu Plus for another $8 a month fills in the holes. (Although I'm finding that my faimly just doesn't care as much about Hulu Plus as I thought they might be.)
Then there's all the free or cheap movie resources of all kinds to fill up your evenings, specialty channels, streaming music, news, private channels created by the community, and more galore!
Forget using your MythTV box for anything other than a basic media center for serving up your ripped DVDs and CDs. Drop your cable TV subscription and get yourself a Roku instead. :-)
BitTorrent.
Well, Im just gonna buy my own Congressman and make my own site. They can keep their Congressman and their dum RIAA DRM. My Congressman can beat up their Congressman anyway. He costs more!
"Computers are a lot like Air Conditioners" "They both work great until you start opening Windows"
Would this (http://dl.tribler.org/download.html) be something like what you're thinking of?
RSS over IRC with magnet links for the DHT. EZTV and some others to the RSS over IRC thing.
Wow, Megaupload must have been more mega than I thought. What filesharing network did they use, Bittorrent? Gnutella? Ed2k?
Don't pay people for movies that you like
Pay people to make movies that you like
So do something else. Study Latin, perhaps.
Confucius say, "Find worm in apple - bad. Find half a worm - worse."
Give me one good reason to expect that anyone should ever have some sort inalienable right to have absolutely everything that they might happen to desire, for whatever reason, simply because they have the ability to do so?
Because there are massive and immeasurable overall benefits to society and our culture from all this free copying of information.
I myself have become an expert in a number of subjects thanks in large part to my 1TB drive full of torrented ebooks, not to mention probably 10x as much information I have read and absorbed just reading articles like this on slashdot and other web pages. Right now I have a few illegally copied ebooks open on my computer. Design and Equipment for Restaurants and Food Service. Interior Color by Design. Ultimate Restaurant Design. A couple ebooks on accounting and one on marketing. I'm studying up in preparation for opening a restaurant in 18-24 months.
I went from not really listening to music at all as a kid, to having a 200GB collection of music, which has enabled me to after years of practice to become an incredibly good singer and musician. Maybe one day I will start an incredibly kick ass rock band and tour the world. Or maybe I won't, since I have a thousand other equally-as-good options available to me (i.e. restaurant, one of several irons in the fire), which is the inevitable result of sitting in front of a computer for 6-8 hours a day doing nothing but illegally reading, listening, learning, and watching.
NONE of this would have been possible without piracy. I am from a lower middle class rural family and there is no way I could afford to buy 98% of this information, nor could I ever possibly hope to be exposed to it by the people I grew up with or met in life. My family and their associates knew nothing about managing money or business, and nobody ever taught me a damn thing about any of that. My dad didn't really teach me anything how to be a man and how to attract, and judge women, because he didn't know himself. I learned all that stuff myself from reading free and illegally copied information off the Internet. As a direct result I have become a 100x better person than I was even 10 years ago. I will make vast contributions to society in my lifetime and do my part to make this world a better place.
And I am just one person, amongst seven billion.
But no, I guess it's better to let the rural poor remain ignorant and intellectually/culturally disadvantaged, than to take a chance that some rich media conglomerate's profit line might not rise as quickly as they like. Better to have masses of ignorant people who cheer on warfare, taxation, and imprisonment, than armies of intellectuals who understand they're being misled and lied to, by special interests at the expense of society. Right?
"File" sharing is essentially copying a sequence of bytes. And as any geek will tell you any sequence of bytes can be interpreted as a number. Granted for a long sequence of bytes this could be an absolutely HUGE number but it's still a number.
So how can you stop people sharing numbers ?
I live outside the us. Even though I can pay I don't because it might be weeks or years before a tv show, movie, or music becomes avaible in my market to buy. Even with sat tv, I might never get see certain shows broadcast in the states and europe.
So, I am forced to download or go without.
http://minus.com/
just as good, requires a basic login. Has the same functions.
RetroShare lets you share directly with friends in a network of friends-of-friends. Encrypted tunnels give you privacy for file sharing, IM, email, and forums. And since you're not friends with Disney or Sony, none of your friends are going to sue you for the messages you pass on these channels.