Slashdot Mirror


Movie Piracy Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions of Dollars' (theaustralian.com.au)

Film television piracy and illegal downloads are partly to blame for Australian broadcaster Ten Network's woes, according to Village Roadshow co-chief executive Graham Burke. From a report: He said piracy had cost Ten "hundreds of millions of dollars" in potential advertising revenue because of lower ratings resulting from pirated versions of films supplied by 21st Century Fox under an onerous output deal with the Hollywood studio. He said copies of Fox's Leonardo DiCaprio movie The Revenant and The Peanuts Movie were stolen last year and shared illegally via a piracy website. "Piracy is a much bigger channel and an illicit economy than the three main commercial networks combined. It is ripping off viewers from legitimate, taxpaying enterprises," Mr Burke said. "The product that Ten is buying from 21st Century Fox and is now arriving have been pirated out of sight."

119 comments

  1. And film blocking causes MORE damage by gurps_npc · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Australia's refusal to let their citizens buy/watch foreign films has cost them billions of dollars.

    Hey, you gotta point out both sides of the problem.

    --
    excitingthingstodo.blogspot.com
    1. Re: And film blocking causes MORE damage by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Let's agree to stipulate to $500m in losses to the ozzie film industry for the moment.

      How much did the ozzie consumer benefit by having all media available for "free"? I'm guessing over $500m.

    2. Re:And film blocking causes MORE damage by mjwx · · Score: 5, Informative

      Australia's refusal to let their citizens buy/watch foreign films has cost them billions of dollars.

      Hey, you gotta point out both sides of the problem.

      Ex-Australian here. The problem is twofold.

      1. American companies treat Australia like the recycling bin, old crap goes in and not a second thought is given. We regularly get things months if not years after other countries and are then expected to pay a premium for it. We got sick of it and then figured out ways to get around it such as grey importing and piracy. Aussies are actually a rather smart bunch (well some of us). So by the time these movies are shown on TV, everyone's already seen them.

      2. Chanel 10 (CH10) is stuck in the 80's way of thinking before we had the internet with all the pirate bays, netflixes and VPN's. They signed a deal thinking the good times would never end.

      The problem is, CH10's money spinners are crappy reality TV shows that have so much fake, overhyped drama that the E! network is openly jealous. People are moving on from these as well because its more of the same crap. Their other money spinner was The Simpsons, which is now on pay TV.

      Also it should be noted that the article appears in The Australian, which is ironically the most unAustralian publication you can find. The Australian is owned by Newscorp who's been waging their own war against piracy because Foxtel (cable TV) has been steadily losing customers as well. So I wouldn't just take what you read in The Australian with a grain of salt, but a shot of tequila and slice of lime as well.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    3. Re:And film blocking causes MORE damage by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Their other money spinner was The Simpsons, which is now on pay TV.

      I believe they still make a bit of money selling Neighbours to the UK.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  2. What is this about? by chipschap · · Score: 4, Informative

    TFA is paywalled but the summary is incoherent. Pirating is costing them advertising dollars? They have an "onerous" deal with with the Hollywood studio?

    I tend not to sympathize much with big media, but could we please have a summary that at least is reasonably easy to follow and describes what's going on in coherent terms?

    (Yes I know, this is up to the Slashdot "editors"...)

    1. Re:What is this about? by ezdiy · · Score: 1

      Simulcast.

      I think this is syndication network complaining that content they buy is "outdated" because of hopelessly outdated market segmentation stratagems (NZ and AU getting especially short end of the stick).

      Anyone relevant moved to simulcast, these people are dinosaurs.

    2. Re:What is this about? by H3lldr0p · · Score: 2

      I'm curious about the "stolen" part of his statement.

      Is the article about actual piracy? Were physical copies were taken in transit to be sold at street markets? Because that's seems like a legit worry. But then it turns around and says put on the internet. Which isn't how that works at all. You don't need to actually steal anything to make a copy like that.

      Maybe he's just a confused, ignorant twat who can't figure out how the world works these days.

    3. Re:What is this about? by Calydor · · Score: 5, Insightful

      So much this.

      It's as if media companies don't understand that with the internet, we have friends all over the world and see news from all over the world.

      Let's take Game of Thrones as an example. If you could only watch Season 4 today, how much of it would you know just from what your friends and news sites have talked about? Can YOU talk to your friends in other countries about it, considering they're currently waiting for Season 7 to be released?

      We have developed a network that allows essentially instantaneous planetwide communication - and somehow think that delaying entertainment for months and years is a GOOD idea that will not be circumvented by any means available.

      Including illegal ones.

      --
      -=This sig has nothing to do with my comment. Move along now=-
    4. Re:What is this about? by mrbester · · Score: 3, Funny

      No, he's grizzling that the number of dollars he pulled out of his arse that he expected to get from advertising wasn't realised. Therefore it must be the fault of piracy and not some dodgy calculation on a fag packet that was taken as prophecy.

      --
      "Wait. Something's happening. It's opening up! My God, it's full of apricots!"
    5. Re:What is this about? by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Even without the internet, I see little purpose to delaying distribution. Maybe with DVDs because of varying regional prices and not wanting say, American buyers to purchase their DVDs from South Africa for $2 rather than the $25 they charge at home (though customs officials have been watching for that kind of thing for years now anyway.. for better or worse.)

      But theater releases and TV broadcast? What's the point? Most companies from what I've seen want all the dollars right this second and to hell with the future. So why is this the one instance where they decide that absurdly long delays are useful? I just don't get it.

    6. Re:What is this about? by Altrag · · Score: 1

      Sigh. Another "copyright infringement isn't theft!" ramble. Yes, you're technically correct. No, nobody gives a shit about the specific terminology used. If they make that mixup in an official legal scenario (new laws, court proceedings, etc) then clarifying is definitely a good idea. But some random news reporter? Yeah doesn't really matter.

      That said, this isn't even the typical piracy rant. This is like a meta-piracy rant. People download shows and therefore the don't watch them on cable TV, so the cable provider's advertisers stop paying to show their ads. Is the theory. I mean it completely ignores all of the other reasons people don't bother with cable TV anymore (high prices, low quality, Netflix exists, etc.)

      I mean if they wanted to do something more useful than just whining, they could say.. set up their own streaming service. Charge maybe $5/mo with ads and have a $15/mo no ads tier or something. Of course they'd have to get a green light from Fox and whoever else supplies them with the shows in the first place (and I admit, that probably wouldn't be easy as Fox and other studios tend to like reveling in the 80s as well) but they could at least attempt to modernize rather than just crying about the world changing around them.

    7. Re:What is this about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The TEN Network, an Australian publicly listed TV outlet, went into voluntary administration this week. Of course this will be spun as the fault of someone else, because we cannot acknowledge that the major shareholders (all other media interests or having open intent of using media ownership to sway elections) might have simply bled it dry. Indeed, within days of the announcement, Murdoch and Gordon have formed a carefully crafted association in order to pick over the carcass without triggering compulsory acquisition provisions. They will, I predict, use bailing out the enterprise as a wedge to get the Aust Govt to remove some or all of the anti-monopoly provision applied to media ownership.

    8. Re:What is this about? by ezdiy · · Score: 2

      But theater releases and TV broadcast? What's the point? Most companies from what I've seen want all the dollars right this second and to hell with the future. So why is this the one instance where they decide that absurdly long delays are useful? I just don't get it.

      Netflix and anime licensors can afford to simulcast because they're for the mostly a hegemony, not immense, fragmented market.

      Not so with generic TV, two things happen there:

      • 1. You have hundreds of thousands businesses who air whatever they could afford for that given year and they can budget. And they simply couldn't afford the series once it got big, they didn't have syndication agreement when it was pre-boom and cheap etc.
      • 2. Retardation on part of seller comparable to DVD regions. Suppose 1. didn't happen, the rights owner is outright *dick* who thought it would hurt their DVD sales in that area and whatnot.

    9. Re:What is this about? by tlhIngan · · Score: 2

      Even without the internet, I see little purpose to delaying distribution. Maybe with DVDs because of varying regional prices and not wanting say, American buyers to purchase their DVDs from South Africa for $2 rather than the $25 they charge at home (though customs officials have been watching for that kind of thing for years now anyway.. for better or worse.)

      But theater releases and TV broadcast? What's the point? Most companies from what I've seen want all the dollars right this second and to hell with the future. So why is this the one instance where they decide that absurdly long delays are useful? I just don't get it.

      True. And in fact, movies and TV shows ARE distributed digitally these days (the reason movies in the past were delayed was because you only had so much film stock going around, and typically the film stock gets moved around).

      The big problem is, and always will be, money. The only reason we have delays is because of distribution rights, and companies pay a LOT of money for exclusivity. A company like Netflix can easily send a movie or TV show worldwide on release, but unless Netflix matches every region dollar for dollar, the studios will take the higher paying distributors over the lower paying Netflix any day. And if those distributors lose exclusivity, they won't pay quite so much money for it - exclusivity means a lot more money than without, obviously

      The only real way to break it is to either devalue the exclusivity deals tremendously, or step up to the plate and beat the distributors

    10. Re: What is this about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yes, that.

    11. Re:What is this about? by dwywit · · Score: 3, Informative

      This isn't cable - it's one of the three major broadcast TV networks in Oz.

      We have similar problems with cable/satellite providers - "package" subscriptions vs. a la carte, and while Netflix provides a good service reasonably priced, it has nowhere near the content of Netflix in the USofA.

      Ten, Seven, and Nine have all been struggling for years. Nine made a strategic deal with Microsoft (NineMSN) which hasn't really paid off, Seven made a strategic deal with Yahoo (Y7), which, well, you see where we're headed.

      Ten had a couple of 'big' shows, but they were reality shows - Big Brother, and Master Chef, a cooking show. There's only so much of that crap that anyone can take, even avid fans - it gets stale very quickly. The rest of the content is 99% crap. The execs at all of those networks have shown that they just can't break out of the the broadcast model - "We have the content, you'll watch it when we decide and you'll watch as much advertising as we can pile on, damn the awkward breaks in a show's tension, and we don't want you recording it to watch later, because then you can skip the ads, and it wrecks the ratings surveys, on which we base our advertising rates."

      Broadcast networks should have seen the invitable when VCRs became popular, but no, they had to cling to obsolete business models.

      Ten will be sold to some overseas investment corporation, and might survive, but unless it changes its thinking substantially, it'll be gone inside a decade. So will the others.

      --
      They sentenced me to twenty years of boredom
    12. Re:What is this about? by vlad30 · · Score: 1

      If I was a stock holder in the Ten Network I would look at the board member who sold them the programming from his company at an inflated price i.e. conflict of interest, and now wants to buy it out while pushing for changes in media ownership laws. Also this network is essentially a reality TV crap, rerun movie and TV shopping (2 of their 5 Multi channels dedicated to this plus late night infomercials etc), so piracy for this content is near non existent.

      --
      Your'e all thinking it, I just said it for you
    13. Re:What is this about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Mmmm ... Graham Burke never misses an opportunity, to pursue copyright claims and IP to the max ... and to feed avidly at the public pot.

      Government/taxpayer funds have pretty much provided Village Roadshow's investment in any number of Hollywood and other foreign films, which is why you see the VR label so often in the credits when you see a film nowadays. Naturally VR gets a full share of the pie ... despite putting up little or nothing from their own coffers.

      According to Burke, this is free enterprise at work ... according to his critics this is corporate welfare on a scale that dwarfs the imagination. (e.g. $21 million for Pirates of the Caribbean: Dead Man's Tales - and how that qualifies as an Australian film or supporting the Australian film industry in an effective and efficient manner is open to debate.)

    14. Re:What is this about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "We have developed a network that allows essentially instantaneous planetwide communication "
      And this network of ours has turned into the most effective weapon of mass destruction the world has ever known. And this weapon has us all marching towards the next world war while distracting the masses with arguments over the difference of stealing versus piracy. But piracy is just a flimsy construct used by those trying to justify stealing. And just because you can steal something doesn't legitimize the theft.

    15. Re:What is this about? by BlueStrat · · Score: 1

      We have developed a network that allows essentially instantaneous planetwide communication - and somehow think that delaying entertainment for months and years is a GOOD idea that will not be circumvented by any means available.

      Including illegal ones.

      Well, of *course*! That's the point!

      The only power government has besides taxation is cracking down on criminals who break the law. Well, the government wants more power over people so it makes more of them into criminals. Then with selective enforcement suddenly millions of people have a legal Damocles Sword hanging over their heads with government holding the rope. Well, holding the rope without letting go only as long as you toe the line, comply, and keep your mouth shut.

      Pick up that can!

      Strat

      --
      Progressivism (aka US 'Liberalism'): Ideas so good they need a police/surveillance-state to enforce.
    16. Re:What is this about? by Mortimer82 · · Score: 1

      As someone actually living in South Africa, why on earth would you mention a specific country in your argument to make yourself not only factually wrong in this case, but also appearing highly misinformed?

      Cost of movies in South Africa (Logan as an example, as per https://www.takealot.com/all?q...):
      USD 10,08 (incl tax) - DVD (at supposed 18% discount, converted from ZAR 129)
      USD 13,20 (incl tax) - BluRay (at supposed 22% discount, converted from ZAR 169)
      USD 27,26 (incl tax) - 4k (at supposed 18% discount, converted from ZAR 349)

      Amazon US:
      USD 14.99 (incl tax?) - DVD
      USD 11.99 (incl tax?) - BluRay
      USD 19.99 (incl tax?) - 4K

      The only $2 price I have ever seen are maybe bargain bins for older movies, or dodgy pirated DVDs sold by street vendors (which I haven't seen in a few years now actually).

      Netflix (now offered here), is charged in USD, at exact same rate as in the US, however, thanks to exclusivity bullshit by local network here, some shows like House of Cards are not available on it.

      Based on comments I see on Slashdot, it seems that many people assume that regionalisation and geoblocking of online services is just so that the same thing can be sold "cheaper" in certain markets. Sometimes that's true, for example, I used to work for Blizzard EU CS, and they deliberately isolated Russian servers as they paid lower monthly subs. However, in most non-third world countries, like Australia/NZ, Western Europe and South Africa (not technically 1st world, but for a lot of consumers here, it kind of is), the reason for regionalisation is a legacy of before the internet, where companies got exclusivity arrangements on media from the overseas publishers.

      Before the internet, there was value to having these middlemen who made their money by importing media and making it available. With the advent of legal media distribution over the internet they realised they were becoming obsolete, so they used their pre-existing legal arrangements to prevent publishers from selling direct to consumers in their markets, forcing those markets to still pay them a cut. To summarise, these days consumers in all markets outside of the original publisher's, are essentially paying a kind of "tax" to shmucks from these "distribution" companies for essentially doing nothing.

      As you can see above, we here do not really pay less, but also annoyingly, we also get less content available as local distributors often can't be arsed to make some content available here, or the content we get is delayed. Hence people use geoblocking circumvention services such as VPNs to to get around this complete bullshit.

      As a final comment, when us South Africans see comments like yours, it reinforces our belief that most Americans don't really know anything outside of their own country.

    17. Re:What is this about? by vivian · · Score: 1

      If the TV networks didn't stuff so much advertising time into the shows, then perhaps viewers would stay tuned in.
      I have seen average advertising time go up from about 10 min per hour to now 25 min per hour - so 2 hour movie takes 3 1/2 hours to watch - and worse, they tend to pack the second half of the movie with more ads compared to the first half, so getting to the end of a movie takes for ever and destroys the climactic scenes with too many breaks.

      I get that free to air tv has to have advertising to pay for content - but the problem is that if they have a race to the bottom for advertising rates then they will by necessity have to pad out shows even more with advertising.

      If they want to survive against competition from the internet, they have to all get together and have a strictly enforced small percentage of advertising time (say, no more than 10 min per hour - including advertising for their own tv shows) and charge advertisers a higher rate for the much scarcer advertising slots, instead of trying to stuff more and more advertising time down viewers throats.

      Then they will get the eyeballs back.

    18. Re:What is this about? by Mortimer82 · · Score: 1

      You're right about the exclusivity issue, but what you quoted from the parent post was highly inaccurate in their quoted prices, see my comment here: https://yro.slashdot.org/comme...

    19. Re:What is this about? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Banning you ass speaking is not theft of your speaking or even of your speaking slot, it;s an infringement on your right to speak.

      Copyright infringement is not theft, and the only way to steal copyright is to plagiarise and claim you own the original, stealing the copyright itself.

      Which, oddly enough, is what the copyright cartels want to do with PD stuff: if they repackage, they get to claim copyright anew over the original author.

      Copyright infringement is piracy (in your parlance), but neither is theft. And complaining that people keep correcting morons is like complaining to teachers when they correct your 1+1=4 maths result every time.

  3. Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions of.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    assuming all those pirates would pay if they couldn't download ... which is a terrible assumption...

  4. They're not keeping up with the times by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    They should start streaming their shows on the internet. And in the meantime, we need to protect ourselves better from the tyrants who want to censor the internet.

  5. Pretty hard to prove its pirates by mr.dreadful · · Score: 4, Insightful

    Given how much Hollywood is struggling with ticket sales, why would stations rebroadcasting 2nd or 3rd run movies expect to not be affected?

    1. Re:Pretty hard to prove its pirates by redcliffe · · Score: 1

      It's complete bullshit. No one would watch those shows even if they were on channel 10.

    2. Re:Pretty hard to prove its pirates by Kartu · · Score: 1

      Hollywood is... not struggling with ticket sales:
      http://www.the-numbers.com/mar...

      They have crossed 10 billion total box office revenue mark back in record 2009 then 11 billion in 2012, and are still roughly in that ballpark.
      Average ticket price is also going up steadily.

  6. What a sense of entitlement! by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That Graham Burke signed a "onerous" deal with Hollywood studios. But does not blame the bad deal they signed, but expect Australians to bail them out by keeping their ad revenue coming. Just suck it up buddy, when the deal comes up for renewal, make realistic projections and offer what these movies are worth.

    --
    sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
    1. Re:What a sense of entitlement! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Graham Burke has nothing to do with it. He doesn't work for Ten Holdings, or Hollywood but has simply found another opportunity link piracy to something that is almost certainly unrelated.

      There are several theories including Murdoch owning shares pressuring the federal government to relax media laws so he can purchase the network. Currently you can own/controlling share only one traditional media type of Newspaper, radio or television and the legislation may be up for review.
      Another theory is Ten paid way too much to CBS & Fox overvaluing the contracts (onerous) and maintaining those contracts would cause them to collapse so filing for voluntary administration will allow them to get out of the contracts without penalty.

  7. Incoherent statement from media exec by marcle · · Score: 1

    Exactly how do lower ratings result from pirated versions? Is that because the public learns just how crappy the movie is even before it's released?

    1. Re:Incoherent statement from media exec by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Usually that's exactly the case. Extremely good movies can actually be helped by spreading the word around through piracy, but a movie that someone was not going to go see in the first place can - due to "hey it's free and I have two hours" - suddenly instead become a source of warnings.

    2. Re:Incoherent statement from media exec by jonwil · · Score: 1

      Whats likely happening in this case is that people are watching illegal copies of the new TV shows before Ten actually gets around to showing them (because Ten are stupid and only show the new episodes of good TV shows many months after they have already aired in the USA). Then when they finally show up on Ten, everyone has seen them and doesn't care anymore.

    3. Re: Incoherent statement from media exec by snickers · · Score: 1

      The other problem watching a movie on one of the free to air commercial networks in Australia is the ads. There are so many that it makes watching any movie on FTA a frustrating and painful experience. Ten's issues are nothing to do with piracy.

  8. piracy didn't "cost" you millions of dollars... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    netflix and VPNs did.

  9. Re:Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions o by sunking2 · · Score: 1

    So you're ok with $1M, or $50k, or even $10? Dollar value itself shouldn't matter, assuming its greater than zero.

  10. Buyer beware by WolfgangVL · · Score: 4, Insightful

    "Piracy is a much bigger channel and an illicit economy than the three main commercial networks combined."

    And your dumbass got in bed with those commercial networks anyway. How much more are they charging you than the other countries? How much longer must you wait for content? How much are they holding back? Did they offer you a higher price to get it sooner? Are they force-feeding you their commercials as part of the deal?

    Pirates refused the bullshit terms. You did not. Now cry.

    Chump.

    --
    You are being ripped off every second of every day, so that advertisers can help rip you off even more tomorrow.
    1. Re:Buyer beware by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 2

      Pirates refused the bullshit terms.

      And so should governments, who are there for the people rather than the studios. Up until recently our government did exactly that. The rule was: if you are not offering your content here (in a more or less timely manner, and under reasonable terms), then people are free to pirate it; the government would not prosecute downloaders. Seems like a great way to exert some pressure on the studios on behalf of the populace.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    2. Re:Buyer beware by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      the government would not prosecute downloaders.

      Copyright is a civil law, not a federal one. The government couldn't prosecute pirates - ever, however they could make it easier for the studios to identify and sue which they refused to do.

    3. Re:Buyer beware by mjwx · · Score: 1

      "Piracy is a much bigger channel and an illicit economy than the three main commercial networks combined."

      And your dumbass got in bed with those commercial networks anyway. How much more are they charging you than the other countries? How much longer must you wait for content? How much are they holding back? Did they offer you a higher price to get it sooner? Are they force-feeding you their commercials as part of the deal?

      Pirates refused the bullshit terms. You did not. Now cry.

      Chump.

      Pirates didn't refuse the bullshit terms. People did, now they're just labelled as pirates because they don't want to sit through 60 minutes of annoying ads to watch a 90 minute piece of dross that was released 6 to 12 months ago. People are no longer beholden to networks that treat them like a product, times change, change with them or get left behind.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
  11. Piracy isn't the problem, it's the symptom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    People wouldn't be pirating movies and TV shows if they could access them with a reasonable delay, when it suits them and without being constantly disrupted by advertising. You'd think with the success of Netflix and similar services these networks would have gotten the hint, but instead they're clinging on to their dead business model. These relics of the past are headed for the grave and nobody will miss them. The next generation will be dumbfounded that in the past you had to be sitting on your couch at a pre-determined time to watch your favorite show.

    1. Re:Piracy isn't the problem, it's the symptom by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      The next generation will be dumbfounded that in the past you had to be sitting on your couch at a pre-determined time to watch your favorite show.

      Forget the next generation, it's been happening for a few years already.

      I'm in my 40's and what you described is exactly how we grew up. I still can't believe we did that for decades though, I'm so used to Netflix now that I would never go back.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    2. Re:Piracy isn't the problem, it's the symptom by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Me too (54 now). The only time I sit down in front of the TV at a 'predetermined time' is to watch sports since its a live event. I could record it or watch it later using other means but it loses some excitement knowing its already done even if I don't hear the results.

      I do remember the 'bad old days' though I don't know that I'd call them all that 'bad'. I remember that shows my parents & us kids liked were 'events' & somehow 'special'. Now that doesn't mean I'd want to go back, just saying that thinking about it in comparison to the plethora of options today doesn't make it 'age well' but it wasn't all 'bad'.

  12. News flash - Holywood Accounting finds losses!!!! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    You really have to take these kinds of stories with a grain of salt. They are usually followed up with a cry for more control of IP and less freedom for the general populous.

    Sadly it is hard to take any numbers about profit and loss from the Entertainment Industry seriously. For example; According to Lucasfilm, Return of the Jedi, despite having earned $475 million at the box office against a budget of $32.5 million, "has never gone into profit". (https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hollywood_accounting) There are many other notable stories like that. Babylon 5's accounting comes to mind. (http://www.creativemovieaccounting.com/examples-of-hollywood-accounting.html)

  13. All While they were making... by Zurkeyon3733 · · Score: 1

    Tens to Hundreds of Billions... WAAAAAA, Cry me a river. Rich ass POSs. When you make under 40,000$ a year and have a few kids and it costs over 100$ to go see 1 movie for the 4 of you. AND you have to sit through the likes of Ghostbusters, or some other lame, unoriginal drivel you exceedingly talent-less hacks come up with... Come talk to me about being cheated out of your money. :-P

    1. Re:All While they were making... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Steve Jackson? Love your games! :)

      But... if by 40,000$ or 100$ you mean $40,000 and $100, puh-lease... use the symbols correctly!

      And why are you paying so much?

      I saw Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 for $13.

      In 3D.

      And then Wonder Woman for $9.

      Both were a couple of days after opening night.

      And both where enjoyed while drinking cold Coke and crunching away on Maltezers and chips (or potato crisps, as they were from a packet, not hot & freshly fried).

      Your local cinemas DO have cheap days and/or free memberships that give large discounts, as well as allowing backpacks (full of snacks and drinks) in, don't they? Why pay for vastly overpriced cinema snacks and admissions when it is not (at least in my locality, ymmv) necessary??

      Am I missing something here?

      DethLok

    2. Re:All While they were making... by Zurkeyon3733 · · Score: 1

      "And why are you paying so much? I saw Guardians of the Galaxy Vol 2 for $13. In 3D." You must have missed the wife and x2 kids I also have to pay for... And, that is WITH us sneaking in our candy... (Which NO theater "Allows" anywhere near me...) Not everyone can do the "cheap" Matinee days either, as its typically like a Tuesday, or some other day when I have to work late. Most people schedule events like this into the weekends as they have that time available. You know, the day that the matinees "Aren't" available... So, yeah, my comment/argument still stands :-P Steve

  14. STOP MAKING EXPENSIVE MOVIES by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Well shit, if your losing millions of dollars. Why pay 50-100 million to make a movie? LOL What a shitty investment or accounting fuckery.

  15. Only Some; the rest are gay paedobears. by Grog6 · · Score: 0

    n/t

    --
    Truth isn't Truth - Guliani
  16. I see what you did there by Phusion · · Score: 1

    Ok, this comment reads as boilerplate response from someone under 40 to someone over 50--- while I AGREE, I have been downloading music, movies and TV since 1997 or so and if I like a band a lot, I'll go to their concerts, buy their shirts and tell my friends about them. If I really want to see a movie, I'll go to the theater, tell my friends if it was good etc etc-- anyway, I'm a filthy pirate, but these guys don't think of it this way. They don't care if the copy was digital, they don't care that nothing physical was stolen, they feel like a bunch of kids have figured out how to rip them off wholesale, how to keep watching their content for free and it's costing them millions! -- that's what we need to pound into their heads, not the fact that nothing physical was stolen, that there are no/few options for cord cutters, that these shows/movies are released in other countries and they need to reach parity with those release dates in order to succeed.

    --
    640k ought to be enough for anyone.
  17. I don't even own a tv anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't even own a tv anymore. They are losing money because of Netflix mainly and their crappy business model

    1. Re:I don't even own a tv anymore by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool. I read your comment on a large flat screen. Life is weird like that.

  18. stop advertising - it cost US money! by kiviQr · · Score: 1

    First of all they show you a movie that was cut to fit allotted time then they waist 30% of your time by adding ads. All of this is on top of the bill you get for your cable/internet provider.

  19. Bollocks by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The rapid shift by people to legitimate streaming services such as Netflix and Youtube is whats hurt you.
    They get to watch what THEY want, when THEY want, as often as THEY want all without adverts.

    The disruption is here, you know, we know it. And there is nothing you can do about it, broadcast TV as a medium is dying, thats right your whole business and business model is dying.

    Blaming piracy keeps your advertisers happy and your shareholders happy because it distracts them from the truth, YOUR BUSINESS is going to DIE leaving both of them with nothing.

    Apart from the 6 o'clock News, we not watch about 4-6 hours of broadcast TV a week, the rest is Netflix, and when the adverts come on we get up and do something else, go to the toilet , make a cup of tea, play with the dogs, clean up the kitchen, talk to each other and the TV gets muted because the adverts are now just considered p!ss me off annoying breaks in the program I was watching. Hell some of the ads are so annoying they cause me to actively avoid the advertisers product.

    So.... sod off, we KNOW you are using piracy as a vehicle to get the government to protect your broken business model so you can extract as much money out of your dead hose as you can.

  20. Choices by sunderland56 · · Score: 1

    My viewing choices for a new movie are....

      1) pay $$$ to watch a crappy pirated version
      2) pay $$$ to watch it at the theatre with 200 random ill-mannered strangers
      3) pay $$$ to buy an official DVD and be forced to watch countless ads
      4) watch it on netflix for free, no commercials, with people I know

    Uh.... explain to me why I need to pay money again?

    1. Re:Choices by Altrag · · Score: 1

      You pay $$$ for crappy pirated versions? I think you aren't doing it right :-/..

    2. Re:Choices by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wait, you have Netflix WITHOUT the monthly subscription? And to top it off, you actually have to PAY for PIRATED content? Oh my god, where the hell do you live?

    3. Re:Choices by sunderland56 · · Score: 1

      Depends on whether you're buying pirated DVDs from that shady guy beside the 7-11, or downloading and burning them yourself.

      And, I already *have* NetFlix; watching one more movie doesn't raise the cost at all. I pay $9.99 a month so others in the family don't beat me up for cancelling NetFlix; so anything I watch myself is free.

  21. Re:Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions o by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    assuming all those pirates would pay if they couldn't download ... which is a terrible assumption...

    Don't they all have treasure chests or something?
    Or are we talking about the ones who only speak Somali?

  22. Of course piracy. by neilo_1701D · · Score: 2

    Of course it's piracy that has brought Network 10 to it's knees.

    The absolute shit they show has nothing to deal with it, of course.

    It wasn't so long ago that Network 10 was actually a very profitable station that never did well in the ratings. Then the powers-that-be decided ratings were more important, shoved their profitable shows to 11 and proceeded to watch their profits implode. But let's blame the consumer for piracy rather than facing the uncomfortable reality that they blew it.

    1. Re:Of course piracy. by sheramil · · Score: 1

      It wasn't so long ago that Network 10 was actually a very profitable station that never did well in the ratings.

      When was that? 1972?

      Still trying to think of a good show made by Ten. All I come up with is https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/...

    2. Re:Of course piracy. by neilo_1701D · · Score: 1

      They had a string of US hits: The Simpsons, Seinfeld, Friends, ...

      Neighbours is still popular.

  23. Who actually gets that money? by rsilvergun · · Score: 2

    Just about every gov't around the world has been cutting taxes on top earners for 30 years now. Meanwhile cutting services under the banner of "Austerity".

    Movie industries are small, high profit operations. They employ relatively few people in middle class jobs. So tell me Australia (or US, or Japan, or Germany, or every other movie industry on earth bitching about piracy), if you're not gonna pay into civilization why should I care?

    --
    Hi! I make Firefox Plug-ins. Check 'em out @ https://addons.mozilla.org/en-US/firefox/addon/youtube-mp3-podcaster/
  24. Stolen eh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would expect they made no money at all if their only copy of the movie was stolen. I'd be mad too!

  25. Re:Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions o by tbannist · · Score: 1

    So you're ok with $1M, or $50k, or even $10? Dollar value itself shouldn't matter, assuming its greater than zero.

    Why not? If they lost $10 to online copyright infringement, I don't think anything should be done about it, because any attempted solution would be more expensive than ignoring the "problem". Frankly even at half a billion dollars, I'm sceptical that anything should be done about it. Refusing to have the government address the "problem" might encourage the networks and studios to treat Australians with a little bit more respect and stop expecting them to pay to see movies 6 to 12 months after everyone in the Northern Hemisphere has already seen them.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  26. And on a related note by Weaselmancer · · Score: 3, Informative

    I just got sued by Kroger's. Every time I drove by and didn't purchase something they considered it a lost sale.

    --
    Weaselmancer
    rediculous.
  27. more on last gasper generated 'stories' by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    from madison.ave.gov.. phewww.. cease fire stand down... sing along.. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=65EoK4OelZU .. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lRjItDLnAwc

  28. 100% bullshit by Lumpy · · Score: 1

    The movie industry banging the bullshit drum again.

    I lost $329 Quadrillion dollars last year due to the movie industry stealing the right to use the word "the"

    --
    Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
  29. Good! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I for one love Australian TV and there is absolutely no legitimate way for me to get most of it outside of Australia, they're even worse than UK/US for restricting access outside of their country. So they can adapt or fail.

  30. 93 million dollars per second by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Seriously, that's how much pirates cost Hollywood.

  31. The Wiggles... by number6x · · Score: 1

    Media corporations in Australia have inflicted The Wiggles on the rest of the world.

    Because of this they owe the world untold Trillions of dollars in damages, copyright infringement is a small, civil, crime compared to the Wiggles.

    Besides, these are Australian dollars we are talking about, not real dollars (sarcasm intended).

    1. Re:The Wiggles... by sheramil · · Score: 1

      Media corporations in Australia have inflicted The Wiggles on the rest of the world.

      Because of this they owe the world untold Trillions of dollars in damages, copyright infringement is a small, civil, crime compared to the Wiggles.

      That was retaliation for Sesame Street. YOU fired first.

      As for the original article... I defy anyone to point out a television show produced by Channel Ten (originally Channel Zero, btw) that anyone would go to the trouble of pirating.

    2. Re:The Wiggles... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Media corporations in Australia have inflicted The Wiggles on the rest of the world.

      Because of this they owe the world untold Trillions of dollars in damages, copyright infringement is a small, civil, crime compared to the Wiggles.

      That was retaliation for Sesame Street. YOU fired first.

      As for the original article... I defy anyone to point out a television show produced by Channel Ten (originally Channel Zero, btw) that anyone would go to the trouble of pirating.

      CH10 aren't complaining about the crap shows they produce being pirated, no-one in their right mind wants to watch Masterchef, the Project or whatever crap they're pedalling. That's the crap that's making money.

      CH10 are complaining that they signed a rubbish deal for international films that aren't paying for themselves like they did before the internet was a thing. Of course coming from the (un)Australian, they've got a "piracy is the root of all evil" slant instead of telling us CH10's execs signed a crap deal because Newscorp and Foxtel are both owned by Murdoch and Murdoch needs the government to protect his business model.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    3. Re:The Wiggles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Murdoch needs the government to protect his business model.

      Like green energy subsidies to prevent green projects from going broke. Only we *like* green companies getting taxpayer-paid grants and subsidies and then going bankrupt while the execs (who happen to be BFFs/campaign contributors with those who have power/influence over grants/subsidies) skate away with millions taxpayers could have sent their kids to college on, or paid for that operation the insurance won't cover for little toddler Suzy.

      Why do those who push for green-energy government grants and subsidies hate little Suzy and want her to die?

    4. Re:The Wiggles... by mjwx · · Score: 1

      Like green energy subsidies to prevent green projects from going broke.

      Need to check your facts buddy, the Clean Energy Finance Corporation was making money where as coal needed government support.

      Hey, but people like you never let facts get in the way of political bullshit.

      --
      Calling someone a "hater" only means you can not rationally rebut their argument.
    5. Re:The Wiggles... by scdeimos · · Score: 1

      I defy anyone to point out a television show produced by Channel Ten (originally Channel Zero, btw) that anyone would go to the trouble of pirating.

      You are the first person ever to call it "Channel Zero." If you lived in Australia then you'd know it was called "Channel Oh", then "TV Oh" before becomming "Channel Ten". https://www.youtube.com/watch?...

    6. Re: The Wiggles... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're both wrong, like. It's political fights:

      But you're both also right...

      Facts below:
      Renewable energy: $7.3 billion (45 percent)
      Energy efficiency: $4.8 billion (29 percent)
      Fossil fuels: $3.2 billion (20 percent)
      Nuclear energy: $1.1 billion (7 percent)
      In addition, Dinan testified that the U.S. Department of Energy would spend an additional $3.4 billion on financial Support for energy technologies and energy efficiency, broken down as follows:

      Energy efficiency and renewable energy: $1.7 billion (51 percent)
      Nuclear energy: $0.7 billion (22 percent)
      Fossil energy research & development: $0.5 billion (15 percent)
      Advanced Research Projects Agencyâ"Energy: $0.3 billion (8 percent)
      Electricity delivery and energy reliability: $0.1 billion (4 percent)[27]

    7. Re: The Wiggles... by AutodidactLabrat · · Score: 1

      In the meanwhile you've ignored the 300 billion spent in the ME ANNUALLY to keep oil flowing via war and preparation for war...without one dime paid by the Oil Companies who profit from the sale of the ultra subsidized product.
      And I'm talking about Iraq AND Afghanistan (, with its valuable pipelines!)AND Nigeria AND Saudi Arabia AND...

    8. Re:The Wiggles... by Pseudonym · · Score: 1

      Like green energy subsidies to prevent green projects from going broke.

      Haha, let me introduce you to the fiasco that is the Carmichael Mine, also known as the Adani Coal Mine. I don't know how things work in the US, but in Australia, the industry needs government assistance to dig up coal that nobody wants.

      --
      sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f(q{sub f{($f)=@_;print"$f(q{$f});";}f});
  32. Re:Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions o by sunking2 · · Score: 1

    The movie industry shouldn't have to do anything to control the distribution of their own product. Just because you can do something easily doesn't make it morally, or legally right.

  33. No it didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    No, privacy did less than a few $100 worth of damage. Those who pirate would have never purchased to begin with.

    1. Re:No it didn't by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Untrue.

      I have downloaded content that I simply unable to buy. I own hundreds of DVDs.
      In many cases I have downloaded a movie to see if it is any good, and then bought the DVD. Likewise for TV series, seen it, liked it and bought the DVDs.

      However what needs to happen is the price needs to come down. I can binge watch entire seasons of TV on Netflix for NZ$12 including everything else I watch that month. NZ$12 is the benchmark, and the cost of making a DVD and shipping them in bulk all around the world is probably the same or less than having server farms to stream the content. The content creators have already recovered their costs by selling it to Free to Air TV or subscription services like Netflix, the DVDs are just 99% profit.

      Because of this I look in 2nd hand shops, I pay NZ$2-3 for a DVD there, I am NOT going to pay NZ$49.95 for one season of GOT, at best its worth NZ$12.

      Producers thing they need to make higher profits, well look at the other end of the production chain, perhaps those actors are not worth US$1 million per episode , perhaps actors, directors, etc etc etc wages need to be adjusted downwards to what the rest of us get paid.

    2. Re:No it didn't by bhepple · · Score: 1

      Agreed. As for setting a benchmark price, I recall the heady days of the high street video shop (sadly gone). Sure you could pay $5 for a recently released film but if you stock up on Cheap Tuesdays, you could get it for $2. Older films for $1. I used to rip them to disc, take them back the next day and watch and delete at leisure. So that's my benchmark - I would pay $2 for a new film, $1 for an old one, accept the costs of distribution myself (my ISP monthly fee) and expect the company to be able to make a healthy profit by not having the expense of high street rentals, staff etc Instead, at least here in Oz, we can't stream stuff legally for a reasonable fee. Heck, I'd even accept $5 for a new movie (I rarely watch 'em anyway) as long as I could watch the old stuff for $1 a go.

  34. Whoe still advertises on TV??? by melting_clock · · Score: 1

    There has been a huge shift in advertising dollars to the Internet, away from TV and newspapers, with no sign that this will change anytime soon. The 10 network mentioned in the article has probably lost 90% of their advertising revenue to this fundamental shift. Viewers lost to Netflix, and other more convenient and legal streaming services, is likely to be far greater than the loses to piracy.

    It doesn't help that the crap shown of the 10 network, like stupid "reality TV", is just not bringing those that still watch TV over from the other TV networks. From my perspective this is illustrated by the two movies discussed in the summary which they would have to pay me a lot to watch. Their network has made some very bad programming and management decisions for several years and that is now catching up with them.

    I'm in my 40's and watch a hell of a lot more Netflix and Youtube than I do the TV networks. Being in control of what I watch and when I watch it is important. It also helps that I can watch those services anywhere that my phone has a signal...

    1. Re:Whoe still advertises on TV??? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hell I often wonder if 10 are actively trying to drive viewers away. I'm old enough to enjoy flopping on the couch at the end of the day and watching whatever but recently I've moved to Netflix (seriously should have done years ago, but anyhow) because of the utter, unwatchable crap being churned out by the networks. Seriously you could make a more watchable channel by downloading a bunch of cheap (or copyright orphan) shows and movies and putting them on random repeat, or handing the studio keys over to the guys at channel 31 to show Aunty Peg's video of her holiday in Adelaide or those weird goth chicks who used to introduce the silent movies on Thursday nights.

  35. Our vassals ... by PPH · · Score: 4, Insightful

    .. aren't shopping at the company store.

    The idea that any entity (corporate or otherwise) own a market is ludicrous. Markets are made up of people and, although I don't know the particulars of Australian law, President Lincoln freed all of ours.

    --
    Have gnu, will travel.
    1. Re:Our vassals ... by 140Mandak262Jamuna · · Score: 1

      President Lincoln freed all of ours.

      He only freed all the slaves in the confederate states. West Virginia, Delaware, Kentucky, Maryland and Missouri were slave states that did not join the confederacy. The slaves there were not covered by the emancipation proclamation. They were eventually freed after 13th amendment made slavery illegal in all of the USA.

      --
      sed -e 's/Chuck Norris/Rajnikant/g' joke > fact
  36. Potentially vs Realistically by nospam007 · · Score: 1

    A kid asks his dad "What's the difference between realistically and potentially?"

    The father responds with "Go ask your siblings and your mother if they would have sex with a celebrity for a million dollars."

    The boy asks his mom "Would you have sex with George Clooney for a million dollars?"

    The mother responds " While I am a married woman, that is a lot of money. He is also a very attractive man."

    The boy asks his sister "Would you have sex with Brad Pitt for a million dollars?"

    "Well of course! " she exclaims.

    Finally he asks his brother "Would you have sex with Tom Cruise for a million dollars"

    And he hums and haws about it "I dunno man, well... That is a lot of money. Yeah alright I'd do it."

    When the boy sees his father again the father asks " Did you figure out the difference between potentially and realistically?"

    "Yes father, Potentially were sitting on $3,000,000. Realistically were living with two whores and a fag."

  37. Ten Network can't blame pirates by jonfr · · Score: 3, Interesting

    This former network CEO (I'm not sure about his position in this former company) is wrong. The reason for this is just streaming, just Netflix or something else. Torrent alone is not a factor in this at all. For instance TCM Nordic closed down on 1st June due to drop in viewing and this is not first time that Turner Network close down television stations. They have closed down Silver and Showtime (I think it was) in the Nordic countries (where I live) due to drop in revenue and viewing of those stations (all where subscription cable television only stations, either included in a package or part of an extra channels people where able to buy).

    Television networks are going out of business the same way newspapers did few years ago and nothing is going to change that fact. Blaming it on piracy is stupid and not according to facts or data on this matter.

    None pay-walled article.

    https://torrentfreak.com/pirat...

  38. The real problem is the lack of GOOD acting by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'm tired of poor acting, lousy plot holes, and cookie-cutter themes. I don't pirate movies or TV shows but I also have no reason to see them. I cut my cable and I'm about done with Netflix too. Too much useless content when I've got better things to do with my time.

    If I want entertainment, I can always fire up YouTube. Plenty of stuff there and the content is, IMO, better than most of the drivel being crammed down out the door into movies and TV.

  39. complete bullshit by gravewax · · Score: 1

    Ten looking to blame anyone but their own incompetence for their failure. Management need to look no further than a mirror, massively overpriced content deals with US suppliers, poor local content combined with excessive spending on that poor content. piracy could be non existent and Ten would still have gone bankrupt.

  40. Boo-hoo by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Copyright infringement is not new in Australia; when 'Game of thrones' was released, many people watched an infringing copy instead of paying for cable.

    ... ripping off viewers from legitimate, taxpaying enterprises ...

    Translation: The pirates have better shows than us. Consumers do not have to 'buy' your product. If someone offers the same product (free viewing) with greater speed and comfort, guess where the consumers are going?

    Every network has to deal with pirates releasing shows for free. Australia has to deal with sky-high licensing fees at the best of times; agreeing to a deal which would incite more copyright infringement is more than bad business, it's idiotic.

    ... pirated versions of films ...

    Films aren't the bulk of Ten's content. More important, Ten rarely offers first-run viewing, so the audience has seen a movie at the cinema, on NetFlix, on other FTA television networks; of course consumer numbers will be lower.

    ... deal with the Hollywood studio ...

    Ten shows only US content, avoiding even British re-runs, which is counter-productive since they depend on re-runs (including movies) more than any other network. Hollywood knows they've got a monopoly, so they will gouge their Australian customer more.

    ... The Revenant and The Peanuts Movie ...

    These haven't arrived on FTA television in Australia: Is he suggesting that Ten paid sky-high fees for these movies and cannot charge equally high advertising fees because copyright infringers have already enjoyed a free viewing? Firstly, The Peanuts Movie is a dog, Ten shouldn't have paid good money for that. Next, Ten has always depended on first-run sit-coms such as Seinfeld and The Simpsons to get consumer share. Why does Ten now think consumers have to watch their movie content?

  41. They dont understand by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    80 percent of cord cutters did it for price.
    It is not ppirates that are ever going to go out of business, It is you who have riced you out of business and it is to late to turn back now for you.

  42. Grant Denyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ten fails because of that ice head grant Denyer.

    Because ten really need to put his shitty show on EVERY FUCKING CHANNEL IN THE MULTIPLEX SIMULTANEOUSLY.

    I'm not joking. 10 11 12 13 all show the same fucking thing - grant mother fucking Denyer.

    Ten is a massive failure, and the market doesn't really need ten. They only do trash/reality tv. I fail to see their place on the market. If it shut down tomorrow, NOTHING WOULD BE LOST.

    The only survival strategy is changes to media ownership laws - and I think these laws should stay as they are.

    Ten can fuck off. And take Denyer Hildebrand Buttrose Rowe and all those other incompetent/douchbag media types.

    1. Re:Grant Denyer by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To be fair, 10 and 13 are the same channel but one is in HD.

      Everything else, yeah, channel 10 sucks.

  43. solution seems obvious by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    stop your tv channels from fucking buying the hollywood product, dumbasses....

  44. Saving face by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    His comment is to save face. He borrowed a ton of money to pay top dollar for shows the other Australian TV shows would have skipped.

    His blind inexperience then goes on to ignore facebook. Facebook nowadays is more entertaining than ch10 with its tv shows telling their audience what to think.

    No wonder the country switched that channel off.

  45. Re: Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I made a fart app and charge $1,000,000 for it. Nobody has paid me, but the built-in telemetry shows that 10,000,000 people have installed it.

    Clearly I've lost $10 trillion to pracy!

  46. Missing a Step by CanadianMacFan · · Score: 1

    So their thinking goes

    - Pirates release a movie on the Internet
    - It gets bad reviews
    - They lose money

    There's a step before that in which Hollywood makes a crap movie. You don't see them complaining about this happening with the blockbusters (I still think they are crap but that's a different post). It doesn't matter if people have seen the movie before if the movie is one that they like. Make a movie that they really like then they'll watch it more than once and putting it out on the Internet will be good advertising for it. If Ten Network wants to blame someone then fire the person for picking their movies.

  47. Oh....okay.... by kelanos · · Score: 1

    Movie Piracy Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions of Dollars'

    Goood

  48. Typical Ten by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    2 years ago, channel Ten secured the rights to MotoGP and Formula 1 in Australia. They boasted that we'd see every race live and uncut. Instead we wait 2 or 3 days, and then we get an edited version, where the lap count jumps from 20 to 50. Ten has no respect for its viewers. That's why it is under administration.

    Why watch an edited and delayed version of the race when you can find an unedited version on the 'net? Less eyes = lower ratings = lower advertising revenue.

    No surprises here.

  49. potential by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    think about it

  50. Re: Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    They don't have to do anything. Specifically, they dont have to distribute it in the first place. They can make a movie, save it to disk and store it in a locked vault offline.

    I shouldn't have to be careful what links I click because they think their shit is worth billions. Maybe we will have fewer commercial films as a result. I don't care. Creative people, and narcissists, like most of you tube content now will make more than I can ever consume, much less the hundred/thousand (print!) plus years of media backlog that already exists.

    Go ahead, take your ball and go home. We don't care.

  51. As ususal by uvajed_ekil · · Score: 1

    As usual, they are using bad math. One instance of piracy does not equal one lost sale. Since the dawn of media and software piracy, "pirates" have taken advantage of easily available titles to consume much more than they ever would if DRM worked and they had to pay for everything they copied/downloaded for free. To state it another way, if I couldn't download an average of 200+ albums a year, I would still only buy the handful I buy now. The same is true with movies and software, due to the limited disposable income most people have and the spotty quality (i.e. value) of newly released titles. The RIAA, MPAA, and software publishers have been grossly overstating their "lost" sales since the 90s, because they can, and because their math is rarely questioned.

    --
    This is a hacked account, for which the owner can not be held responsible.
    1. Re:As ususal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      As usual, they are using bad math. One instance of piracy does not equal one lost sale.

      I am fairly certain that the math they use is one instance of piracy equals 100 to 1000 lost sales.

  52. Meanwhile in reality by dbIII · · Score: 1

    Meanwhile in reality it's a hostile takeover bid in action.
    A couple of guys on the board who own other media companies blocked an effort to secure finance.
    They will buy it at file sale prices very soon.
    They would have done that already but there is a pesky law that needs to be changed first and that's planned for next week.

    So extremely grubby business practices with a bit of help from people in politics that they donate to and nothing else - not even "movie piracy".

    I just cannot remember how many times movie piracy has been blamed when something else is the cause, it must be a parrotty error.

  53. "$100mils dollars" under an onerous output deal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    So where does "piracy" figure in? With 0% unauthorized viewings instead of $p%, there does not magically appear more advertising revenue. Instead, you need to convert all of the $p% into legitimate viewings. But that assumes that there is no tangible reason for the $p% and people just randomly view illegitimate copies without an actual incentive as soon as they are available.

    Which is hogwash.

    The truth is that the network made a bad deal not supported by the interest in the movies. That some people could be brought to look at the movies when not being pillowed with ads and rape threats and admonishments and invasive snooping does not mean that they would have been willing to undergo all of that given no alternative means of viewing the oversold crap.

  54. Wrong problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Problem is not piracy.

    Problem is legal market not working consumers best interest in mind. based of what i have heard, somehow Australia get massive time lag before newer content gets there. So clearly consumers want to leverage modern technology to be up to beat with rest of the world.

    They should fix legal content system and remove the lag, so consumers have a choise.

  55. No, movie piracy gained them cash by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Since it's shown that pirates buy more movies and shows than average, the larger number of pirates garnered the Australian Netowork several hundred million dollars.

    Antipiracy cost them millions and saved them nothing and cost customer loyalty, losing them more hundreds or many hundreds of millions, the majority of their losses.

  56. Fuck 19th Century Fox by bigtreeman · · Score: 1

    I'm still waiting to buy a legit copy of GoT from last season here in Oz.
    Fuck 19th Century Fox, come join us in the new century.
    The Channel 10 melt down is to push our ass licking politicians to relax the media ownership regulations
    so Murdoch can buy all newspapers and free to air broadcasting.
    He already has his puppet Michelle Guthrie running the ABC into the ground.

    --
    Go well
    1. Re:Fuck 19th Century Fox by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      GoT season 6 has been available in stores for, literally, months, mate...
      Unless you want 4K?

  57. worth watching, non? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    do aussies have a local TV show worth watching?
    'cause i got this thing called "internet".
    so i guess it costs "a ton" to send this (good?) stuff to my country but then there's this other thing on the internet called skype or something
    and maybe they can tell some local guy working at my ISP to connect one or more of these 4 TB USB harddisk and drop some local ads that get injected if i connect ... should cover the transmit cost?

  58. The whole industry attitude is wrong. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Until the paid service approaches the quality and cost of a pirate service, this will be a common theme. We're considering cancelling netflix at the moment because the available shows are getting stale in the UK and hardly any of the shows we like are on it. A lot of the shows are also at least a season behind. Its literally the only service available I am willing to pay for, I had better before and I'll have better after, but I will try even if feebly to pay for my viewing.

  59. Re:Cost Australian Network 'Hundreds of Millions o by tbannist · · Score: 1

    The movie industry shouldn't have to do anything to control the distribution of their own product.

    Clearly, we should never expect corporation to treat their customers like their actual people, how foolish of me to suggest that not-being-an-asshole would improve customer loyalty.

    Just because you can do something easily doesn't make it morally, or legally right.

    Morality and legality are completely separate issues from difficulty. Although, if a law is easy to break, that law will broken far more often than one that is difficult to break. However, my point had noting to with morality or legality. I'm pointing out that the problem is easily solved by the people who created it, the media companies themselves. They should stop being angry that people want their products and start providing them in a timely manner. Time and again, we have seen that copyright infringement is dramatically reduced by one thing: providing good, easy, and legal access to the content. In contrast, yelling at people about the morality and legality of downloading doesn't seem to have any noticeable effect on the rates of copyright infringement. It would be simply be stupid for the Australian government to spend any money on investigation and enforcement until the media companies have stopped creating the problem in the first place.

    --
    Fanatically anti-fanatical
  60. remaerk by webetutorial · · Score: 1

    you articale looks good if you need more research then go on http://www.webetutorial.com/

  61. Blah, blah, blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Were it not for the filthy pirates, movie industry would be making thrice as much as the whole world's BIP. So they say.

  62. Grahem Burke is a thrice convcted tax fraud by Dan+B. · · Score: 1

    No one should ever trust what comes out of his mouth, having three times been convicted by the ATO of tax avoidance schemes.

    But FWIW, the issue is the contract Ten has with Fox, or as others like to point out in Bourke's word...
    "The product that [Murdoch AUS] is buying from [Murdoch USA] and is now arriving have been pirated out of sight."

    The sale of "Product" was a means to an end to the real goal; to shift profits internationally through transfer pricing arrangements. Those economics don't work anymore as the content is moved digitally and through more streams, some legal, some not.

    IMO Boo Hoo for the owners of Ten. Fire Sale your interests and let the local content owners thrive in a local market without the imported profit sucking garbage from across the Pacific.

    --
    Dan. -- So what if it's spelt wrong, nobody's perfect