Australians Urged To Spoof IP Addresses For Better Prices
angry tapir writes "Choice, a prominent Australian consumer advocacy group, has urged Australians to obfuscate their IP address to avoid geo-blocking and use US forwarding addresses to beat high IT prices. Australia is currently in the middle of parliamentary inquiry into the country's disproportionately high prices for technology. Choice also suggested setting up US iTunes accounts and using surrogate US addresses for forwarding packages from American stores. Choice has noted previously that Australians pay 52 per cent more for digital music downloads on iTunes compared to US users."
This is how I ended up buying Battlefield 3 premium on Origin for a fraction of the cost (1500 INR (=22 EUR) instead of 50 EUR) by pretending to be from India.
That's the sound of the USTR laughing his way to the bank.
https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Price_discrimination
It's just another hilarious way intellectual property law is used to make money through abusing international borders.
I live in Denmark, and recently spent 30 minutes to try and buy an english e-book online.
Found it at 3 different retailers (US, UK, Australia), that refused to sell it to me (add it to the basket), because of my location.
Then found it at 2 additional retailers, that allowed me to add it to a basket, then accepted my credit-card information, before refusing to actually sell it to me.
Then I got sort of mad and decided to break a 15 year old principle on not pirating stuff. Went to google, and had the ebook literally 30 seconds later! 10 seconds later on my device, and I could start reading.
What on earth are they thinking!
Oh, and I then later wrote the agent for the writer in question here in Denmark, and in the UK to offer payment. I have not heard a word from the UK agent, and the Danish one just confirmed that they do not sell the english language version of that writer in Denmark as an ebook.
Fools, really. And, they are probably, as I write this, banging on the door to the parliament, requiering stricter copyright laws.
Fools.
Regional differences in pricing stem from pre-globalisation economics. With no overlap between regional markets, prices would be set on a per-market basis and never the twain did meet. In a post-globalisation Internet-levelled playing field, regional price differences make no little sense for purely-digital products, except where national sales-related taxes differ. The only reason to maintain these regional price variations to artificially inflate profit margins at the expense of the consumer.
In theory, the libertarian free-marker doctrine should cause this price difference to level out fairly quickly once the market starts to take advantage of (and offense to) these cross-border variations. Let's see if that theory works in practice...
Anyone want to bet on legislation increasing to prevent cross-region sales instead?
is spending time in discussing iTunes and Amazon prices?
That's a nice country, indeed!
Sent as ripples into the electromagnetic field. No single photon has been harmed in the process.
Choice also urging retailers to ditch Australia's strong consumer protection laws.
Well no more, I can order just about anything and get it shipped here for less. I order games from the UK for half the price of local games, DVD box sets that retail for A$75 I purchase for 11 pounds (AUD$17), My Canon Ixus 230 came from Hong Kong for A$100 less than here, I bought myself a laptop from the US, US$899 (A$840, a very favourable exch rate at the time) and got it shipped over tax free (personal imports under A$1000 are not subject to GST, note this is now A$900), Asus didn't even sell this model here but the previous model was A$1400. Even retailers are getting in on this very sweet action, JB HiFi and even Harvey Norman are selling "direct import" cameras and games and giving the middle finger to distributors.
You think in this environment the distributors would have learned and instituted fair pricing... Well they haven't and as much as the bang on about it, no one in parliament will lift a finger to protect them. Suffer in your jocks you smarmy, self centred bastards. Now we just need to allow more used cars to be imported, an Australian Nissan 350z costs A$30-40K, an imported Japanese Nissan 350GT costs A$20-30K imported and they are practically the same car (the 350z was down-tuned compared to the 350GT) but you are only allowed to import cars on the SEVS list (Specialist and Enthusiast Vehicles) which were never available for sale in Oz so I couldn't buy a cheap JDM Honda Integra Type R.
This is how I ended up buying Battlefield 3 premium
My sympathies sir, I too bought Battlefield 3 before realising how crap of a game it was.
Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
Books in Canada are marked with two prices; one for a sale in Canada and one for a sale in the US. Despite the fact that the Canadian dollar is worth about the same (sometimes more sometimes less depending on the day) as a US dollar, the cost difference is usually significant. There's no real reason for it. The difference is a hangover from when the difference between the two currencies was large. Retailers see this as a profit boost.
Many other products are generally more expensive in Canada vs the US - cars in particular. Border towns in Canada see a huge flux of people cross-border shopping as a result.
Now and then someone complains, the retailers whine about OH NOES, IT'S DIFFERENT IN CANADA - LESS PEOPLE - SHOULD COST MORE. Yeah - always fun comparing the huge price discrepancies between Amazon.ca and Amazon.com for the same product.
AC
There was a report last year from the Productivity Commission which is "the Australian Government's principal review and advisory body on microeconomic policy and regulation. It is an independent statutory authority in the Treasury Portfolio and responds to references from the Treasurer. "
This specific report is for the Retail industry, but there is a very good chapter on online and price differences, which includes some parts talking about things like Apple's Price Discrimination. For those interested, the report can be found here Economic Structure and Performance of the Australian Retail Industry. The price differences part is Chapter 6.
I'll quote some relevant parts:
I don't need to test my programs.. I have an error correcting modem.
Willfully misrepresenting material facts in order to obtain a financial benefit to which one would not otherwise be entitled is a fraud crime.
Here we have the same problem, but in our case it affects anything and everything that comes from overseas. I have to pay three times what you Americans pay for an SSD, ridiculous is not it?
... Why businesses can freely look around the globe a place to produce things, while we consumers are forced to buy our things in a very restricted manner (You can even import, but only if you pay double or even triple) and for much more than we should? Capitalism and free market for large companies, Dictatorship for consumers?
Incidentally, interesting question
Religion: The greatest weapon of mass destruction of all time
So we get iTunes downloads cheaper, you have bank accounts that actually pay meaningful interest rates. Maybe we can work out a trade?
Damn_registrars has no butt-hole. Damn_registrars has no use for a butt-hole.
Steam does this - although generally not Valve who are good about this but more big big publishers who are sharing the service with Valve. Luckily with US contacts, I can be 'gifted' games at US prices.
It's disgusting and it's bullshit, if you're willing to sell a game, or a song or a book or fuck even a physical product to an American for X price and I produce the same amount of money for you and I take care of the shipping (or downloading the fucking bits) then frankly, fuck you for trying to charge me more.
This is much worse for console using folk on PSN and the 360, sure I have a US PSN account but I don't WANT to have to buy PSN 'money' in US format from gift cards just to get games at reasonable prices and then be left with 3$ or 13$ or whatever in 'change' on my account.
Honestly this bullshit just stops me participating entirely.
About the only reasonable thing of late is PC parts in Australia, due to the proximity to Asia and the AU$ being strong so long (and of course PC parts, high turnover) for the most part, CPU's, RAM, HDD's and so on are very very close to the US. Mind you if you are picky and want something high end or obscure like high end SAS controllers and stuff like that, sorry buddy, 4x the price.
So as I started with,... they wonder why we steal shit.... sigh
If the refusal to sell a title were enough to confirm that there is no foul in pirating the same thing, then the copyright owner and distributors would RUN to ensure the titles were sold worldwide.
Choice is really highly respected in Australia. This makes this an extremely mainstream issue, not just of geek interest.
http://rocknerd.co.uk
I started bypassing the GEO-Blocking from Australia 6 months ago. previously I was paying $125 a month for foxtel (Australian pay TV). I now stream Netflix, Vudu and Hulu giving me access to a movie and TV library many times the size for a fraction of the cost. I have no objection to paying for my content, I do object to the extortionate rates they try and charge us here though. I order my games internationally as well as camera gear and many other items retailers here believe we should pay 100% markup for just for the privilege of shopping here.
Actually, this is still capitalism... or the free market or whatever you like. #1 The sellers do whatever the market will bear. #2 The buyers do not want to bear it while they have alternatives. So what's the end-game here? Well? I suppose it depends on whether or not the government was getting tax revenue from these higher prices. If they were, then you can bet there will be some sort of legislation against the use of proxies or similar methods to avoid price fixing scams... or "tax avoidance."
But if this is a bunch of sellers who came to realize "hey! they expect to pay higher prices anyway, so let's make sure they do!" then to hell with them. They will lose.. they will lose without government backing. But that's kind of the way it works everywhere isn't it?
This is another great example. Here are cars being built in Canada and being sold for much less after being shipped to the US than they can be bought for in the same city they are built in.
http://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/ottawa/story/2012/06/12/ottawa-car-price-disparity-border-shopping.html
Using Canadian dollars for Canada and US in USA, but currency has been around par for the last couple of years.
As an example:
Honda builds the Acura MDX in Alliston, Ontario Canada, but to buy one from the dealer in that town costs $9,660 more (MSRP) than going to Honolulu, Hawaii USA to purchase one.
Honda says that there are different market conditions and the costs of marketing in two official languages.
Or how about Toyota that also builds Corollas in Ontario. But they charge a Freight and PDI of $1,465 in Canada versus $760 in the US.
I find the tone of this discussion quite interesting. The general theme seems to be that the price in Australia is higher than The One True And Just Price, and how dare these evil companies take advantage of the Australians. However, I'd wager there is not this level of disgust when a company sells something to some people for a price less than The One True And Just Price (e.g. books in India, coupons at the grocery store, etc.). It seems like people's perception plays the largest role in whether they find price stratification objectionable--if a company "starts" from a price, and offers lower prices to some people, then it's okay, but if they "start" from a given price and insist on higher prices from certain people, then this is outrageous, despite being the same behavior.
If foreign companies are going to continue to steal from me, you can guess the rest.
My choices..
I can wait until the Australian networks play my favourite programs. To be advised when.
I can wait until the local distributers sell the DVD sets.
I can set up a VPN and parcel-forwarding from the USA.
I can get them for free within 24 hrs of US screening via bittorrent. Legally difficult. But fast.
Here's a funny one. If I go to Bali and buy a pirate DVD and bring it home, that's legal. Or 100 different pirate DVDs. Legal.
Bali return airfares from here cost about A$350 return on special. Option 4 wins.
It seems like there is some international consensus emerging that it is a bad idea to tell the internet your presonal details http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-politics-20082493
Korma: Good
This isn't an intellectual property issue, this is about giving the music business back to the musicians and destroying the music industry for good.
The musicians don't want to be in control of getting their songs sold or booking performances. They want the "industry". The only one's that don't are because they are already part of the "industry" themselves so they protect it. Face it, music is full of people who would be homeless and broke despite their talent if someone else wasn't there to force feed them marketing, sales, multi-million dollar contracts.
There is a relative handful that would thrive in the absence of said industry but most would be lost so for that alone we are stuck in the stone age when it comes to the music industry. Don't fool yourself, the vast majority of artists are willing to ride the Titanic to the bottom.
I wouldn't touch anything apple even with a 20 feet barge pole.
I purchased with my address spoofed as being in Russia and got a game from Steam for $17 AUD. In Australia, the game is $99 AUD.
Same game, same date, etc. It really pisses us off, down here...
It's only the purchase point that needed the IP in Russia, too. From then on, I could resume non spoofing to download it and play it. My address remained as being in Australia the whole time, too.
Of course technology costs more down in Oz. it has to be manufactured to handle the fact that electrons spin widdershins down there.
Some mornings it's hardly worth chewing through the restraints to get out of bed.
When you have a minimum wage that's so high, combined with rent that's ridiculous, how do you expect retailers to make money!?
Us Auzzies can't have our cake and eat it. We want our precious snowflakes to earn $20 an hour cleaning tables, yet complain when the restaurant charges $20 a meal....
We want our property prices to increase by 5-10% a year yet complain that property is too expensive to buy.
Us landlords are happy putting up rent 10% a year but complain when we're taxed on the income
And, because we complain, the government lets us avoid a chunk of tax by negatively gearing.
Summary, stuffs expensive here because wages are too damn high.
Canada has traditionally had a large price discrepancy between US and Canadian Priced items. With both the USD and CAD being close to parity for the past few years, the price of many items haven't changed.
Couple with this insane shipping charges (I am not even talking about import duties) from the US to Canada (when it's usually very cheap or free within the USA) and it adds salt on the wounds.
Also noticed that depending on whether you have a Canadian or US Amazon account prices differ. Had Amazon "adjust the price" at checkout time. No thanks.
Solution?
Create a separate US account (even via a Canadian IP, no proxy/US VPN required although that may help for some) with a US address -- I use a shipping and receiving place 1-mile from the Canada-US border (I'm in Montreal) -- others ship stuff to friends in the US (this assumes you are part of something like 80% of Canadians who live within a 1 or 2 hour drive from the US Border).
Items made in the USA or Mexico are exempt from import duties, so you don't get dinged for customs fees (thanks NAFTA!). Otherwise expect a 20min stop at the customs office to pay your import duties (honesty pays, they keep records on the naughty folks).
And Canadian retailers keep wondering why people go to all this trouble.....
This is the same reason why people bypass DRM and other restrictions -- STOP FUCKING WITH CONSUMERS, as they will take the path of least resistance or go where they can get what they want for how much they want. I wouldn't drive across the border if the cost of acquisition was comparable.
I don't know about the laws in your country but I know that this contributes to high prices in many countries. Many countries restrict or ban the international megastores in an attempt to protect small 'mom and pop" stores. In many cases the megastore can sell an item at a price equal or lower than the small retailer can even buy it. In these cases tyhe government (and theoretically the public) has decided that local ownership is more important than the citizen's standard of living. Unless a retailer has a local presence in you country, it makes no sense for the retailer to refuse to sell you something. They are greedy bastards and would not hesitate to sell another unit if they could legally do it. If they won't sell it to you, it is because someone else is making it illegal or contract breaking to do so. I used to buy books from Canada because the Canadian publishers edit the books better. A few years ago my vendor notified me that they could no longer allow me to buy Canadian books because of new government regulations concerning intellectual property rights. It seems that the US publishers objected that the Canadian versions were violating copyright laws protecting US publishers.
You're right in one part, it's capitalism all right, best laws money can buy.
If you take out the government interference in the market (patents, copyrights, and all the protectionist laws that go along with them) you suddenly find that the market bears a lot less abuse.
(Assuming that Dominos is in both places)
Refusing to sell to you because you're in Saltaire and/or charging a different price between the two and not allowing anyone not a resident of Bristol to buy at the Bristol shop (you can pick up your pizza, you know, you won't get charged for picking up) would be illegal, though.
Then again, they're talking about products that don't get eaten. You may have missed that. Or you eat your DVDs.
And yet due to protectionist legislation, it can often be difficult or impossible to import certain models to Canada to bypass the price fixing. In fact it is completely illegal to import any new vehicle from anywhere other than the US in to Canada, and even from the US you are only allowed to import the models that the manufacturer decides are importable and only with modifications listed by the manufacturer (and in some cases that only that manufacturer is allowed to make) (not to mention that the manufacturers have told their American dealerships not to sell to Canadians.)
Price differences like that would quickly be fixed by the free market if the market were allowed to be free, but lobbying has prevented it.
So how come it costs more to download a file from iTunes when iTunes doesn't even need any physical presence in the country?
But there can be no loss if someone refused to sell.
It's insane. If they really had a common market for IP, then you could subscribe to (for example) the cheapest Premier League package of any country in the EU and watch it at your house. But you can't. It is priced country-by-country and the sellers do not compete across country lines.
Same with downloadable music or games.
It's surprising the EU isn't working to fix this.
http://lkml.org/lkml/2005/8/20/95
As an ex-pat living in Oz with a growing family, if you think the mark up on games and electronics is bad, try baby products. We bought a stroller off Amazon, had it shipped from the US (~$150US), and it was still several hundred dollars cheaper than buying it online here in Oz. Compared to the in-store prices here, the discount was ~$500. And don't even get me started on the racket they have going on carseats... Even though the crash test standards are the same as NZ, here in Oz you have to have a special type of (annoying) shoulder harness clip, just like the cheap car seats back in the US. So the car seat we bought in the US, which is certified for use in NZ and has passed all the requisite tests is not approved for use here in Oz. Why not just use it anyway? Well, if you get in a wreck and your kid gets a debilitating injury, you'll get to pay for a lifetime of care out of pocket, because using an un-approved carseat will void your insurance coverage. Oh, and the LATCH system is not legal here, I guess because it's too simple to use or something.
please point out all the Australian Steam employees? how about all the Australian iTunes employees? your ridiculous argument only makes sense for physical stores and even then it justifies a few percentage points of difference not the 50-100% premium that is regularly charged.
This also works on bookdepository.co.uk which offers 'free' shipping but changes the price based on your IP location. Obviously you have to trust the proxy site with your password which may or may not be worth a couple of dollars.
Same thing with Aussie cars. It amazes me that the Australian engineered and manufactured Chevy Camaro SS (with a V8 engine) in the United States is cheaper than a Holden Commodore SV6 in Australia. For those who don't know, it's the same car underneath.
I live in Perth, Australia. I can't buy book from the best independent ebook store on the net (IMHO) - Diesel Ebooks.So my solution is that I have a US address in my paypal that I set to the shipping address when I want to download ebooks. I think its a KFC in downtown Houston from memory. Then I PAY for my ebooks and download them. Highly illegal of course but FUCK YOU region blocking. The other reason I do it is because I DON'T want to buy from the evil empire of Amazon or Apple. They are the most active in fucking you over for a percentage that they didn't earn.