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Studio-Defying VidAngel Launches New Video-Filtering Platform (yahoo.com)

Last December VidAngel fought three Hollywood studios in court for the right to stream filtered versions of movies. Now fogez reports that "they have come up with a new tactic in their attempts to bring filtering choice into the streaming media equation. Instead of leveraging the legal loophole that landed them in court, VidAngel is now going to insert themselves as a filtering proxy for services like Netflix and Amazon." From the Hollywood Reporter: Its new $7.99 per month service piggybacks on users' streaming accounts. Customers log into the VidAngel app, link it to their other accounts and then filter out the language, nudity and violence in that content to their heart's desire... "Out of the gate we'll be supporting Netflix and Amazon and HBO through Amazon channels," says Harmon, adding that Hulu, iTunes and Vudu will follow... Harmon says it remains to be seen if the studios will fight VidAngel's new platform, but his biggest concern is how Amazon and Netflix will respond. He says his company has reached out to the streamers, and he hopes they'll raise any concerns through conversation instead of litigation... "VidAngel's philosophy is very libertarian," he says. "Let directors create what they want, and let viewers watch how they want in their own home. That kind of philosophy respects the views of both parties."
The original submission describes the conflict as a "freedom of choice versus Hollywood."

201 comments

  1. Stupid People by Albert71292 · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If people don't want to see or hear things they find offensive, just don't watch those movies or TV shows. Stick with G-Rated fare.

    --
    "A Bird In The Hand Will Poop On Your Wrist"-Benny Hill,1982
    1. Re:Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 5, Insightful

      Obviously there's a market for filtering, as VidAngel as other companies that have come before them have done quite well before being sued into oblivion. For example, my kids wanted to watch, "The Martian." I didn't want them hearing the foul language, so we watched it using VidAngel. I was satisfied, and the kids enjoyed it. How does that make me a stupid person?

    2. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Problably the naive idea that they haven't already heard those words from their peers?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    3. Re: Stupid People by guruevi · · Score: 2

      You're putting your kids in a bubble away from the rest of the "normal" world. They'll hear foul language eventually, why not guide them through while you're there? When they go to prom, will you tell them to be abstinent or do you give them a condom?

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    4. Re: Stupid People by jedidiah · · Score: 4, Insightful

      That may be true. That doesn't mean that he has to contribute to the situation if he doesn't want to. This peculiar anti-liberty attitude seems to be inspired by a certain sort of bigotry that isn't applied in an equal fashion.

      If you're not defending people you personally despise, then you don't quite get this freedom thing.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    5. Re: Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      I'm not sure where you live, but my children are in elementary school, and most likely haven't heard a lot. Why not try to protect them? At some point, they will enter the real world with all of its horrors, and they will adapt. But shouldn't a child get to be a child at such an early age?

    6. Re: Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      And what's wrong with putting elementary school children in a bubble? Shouldn't any responsible adult try to protect their children?

    7. Re: Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      And yes, I teach my children abstinence. It may shock you, but high schoolers can abstain from having sex.

    8. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You can also abstain from eating food, drinking liquids and going to the bathroom but that doesn't mean you should.

    9. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      That's almost a definition problem. What does it mean "to be a child"? It it "not being a child" if many, if not most children are like that?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    10. Re: Stupid People by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 3, Insightful

      They can. Few do. Teach abstenance, but what does a responsible parent do for a fallback position? Would you rather tell the kid about condoms/birth control, or about the morning-after pill, or about adoption services? You have a duty to your child... but also the potential grandchild.

    11. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 2

      Whose freedom are we talking about? The child's, or the author's? The freedoms of a parent end both where the freedom of the child begins and where the freedom of the author begins. Violating both can be illegal, or at least highly unethical.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    12. Re: Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      You say few teenagers abstain. Can you provide non-biased support for that statement?

    13. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most do. Most just say they don't.

    14. Re:Stupid People by jdastrup · · Score: 0

      I don't think you know what the word stupid means. By your definition, people on a diet are stupid because they don't eat a whole cake, just a piece. If only they wouldn't eat cake at all, then they would be smart.

    15. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They'll grow up and think that there is a right to not be offended, and they'll want to filter YOU.

    16. Re: Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      Food, water, and voiding are required for sustaining life. Sex is for reproduction and pleasure. Try again.

    17. Re:Stupid People by Khyber · · Score: 1, Troll

      "How does that make me a stupid person?"

      You're a stupid person for assigning such power and ability to something like mere fucking words, you goddamned moron.

      You're also a fucking tool for performing copyright infringement, but that's another story altogether.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    18. Re: Stupid People by kqs · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Why not all freedoms?

      Authors are allowed to create whatever they want (or at least, whatever they can convince someone to fund.) I'm allowed to watch whatever I want.

      But authors don't have the freedom to force me to watch what THEY want. You seem to be missing that. If I want to watch the author's movie with the dirty bits cut out, that's my freedom and has nothing to do with the author, as long as their original version exists.

      Note that if this legally holds up, then I would expect similar services to pop up which add swearing and nudity to movies. Seems equally valid.

      Note that I think that trying to protect children from language and sex is pointless and IMO more harmful than showing it to them and discussing the context with them. But people have the right to be stupid, and kids mostly turn out okay in the end.

    19. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      There are numerous studies that show teen pregnancy rates are higher for teens who receive abstinence-only education. That's after controlling for correlated factors. If it were effective at what it is trying to do, the rate would be lower amongst this cohort.

      I don't know your definition of "biased" so I haven't bothered linking to any of these studies, because I suspect you're actually biased against facts.

    20. Re: Stupid People by kqs · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The technical term for parents who teach abstinence is "grandparents". This is demonstrable. Look at the teenage pregnancy stats for various US states. Seriously, look it up. In general, the more conservative, the more pregnancies. It's not that liberal states have less teenage sex, they just have more available birth control and more kids who know how important it is.

      The average time between puberty and sexual activity hasn't changed all that much throughout history. It used to be that kids had later puberty and early weddings; now it is very early puberty and late weddings.

    21. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You know how they call people like you, don't you, "Grandpa"?

    22. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 0

      It's actually an accepted authors' freedom to not have their works adulterated by third parties. It indeed doesn't infringe on your freedom not to watch the work with your children.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    23. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Note that if this legally holds up, then I would expect similar services to pop up which add swearing and nudity to movies. Seems equally valid.

      How about something that strips out right wight and religious propaganda?

    24. Re:Stupid People by bugs2squash · · Score: 3, Insightful

      I was about to click submit on pretty much the same comment, but then I realized that I had done plenty of on-the-fly censorship when reading to my kids at bedtime. Dr. Doolittle for example is a great book but it has some racist baggage that did not need to be discussed just at that moment.

      --
      Nullius in verba
    25. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is a huge difference between claiming "few teenagers abstain" and pointing to research that higher pregnancy rates for teenagers who receive abstinence-only education.

      I'm sure it depends very much on where you live, but where I live the majority (by a very large margin) abstain.

    26. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      What would it filter? Certainly not anything coming out of Hollywood. They don't put any of that stuff in their content.

    27. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1, Troll

      Reproduction is sustaining life as well, actually. And if pleasurable things are bad per se, what else do you ban for that reason alone? Or is that just the usual puritanical tinge of people religiously indoctrinated in childhood?

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    28. Re: Stupid People by RobotRunAmok · · Score: 2

      It's only accepted if the author carves that out contractually. If a studio licenses your book and wants to kill off your protagonist in their movie version of it a third of the way in, he's theirs to slay unless there is language in your agreement forbidding it. Editing movies for time, or using time-compression technology, to shorten them to fit into specific broadcast slots is a tradition as old as TV, as is removing the naughty bits to make a film show-able on an airline. Directors have always groused about their "Art" being "butchered" for TV and airplane, and that's cute and all, but they take the paycheck nonetheless. This is another revenue stream for the studios, another "window," and they will cater to it. And the "auteurs" will make noise, because it makes them feel better about caving in to the Family Values crowd, but cave in they will. Everybody wants to be paid.

    29. Re: Stupid People by Gavagai80 · · Score: 1

      Swear words are useful (for emphasis and getting attention) when used rarely. They're detrimental to your social standing in many groups when over-used. It's perfectly reasonable to wish to reduce your kids' exposure to them in order to send your kids the message that those are not words to use casually every day. The idea is not to prevent them from knowing what the words are, or to prevent them from screaming a 4 letter word when an anvil falls on their foot.

      --
      This space intentionally left blank
    30. Re: Stupid People by HornWumpus · · Score: 2

      Dude, they are using the words, they just don't know what they mean yet.

      Spy on them a little.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    31. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You let your kids watch something that is not appropriate for them by your own definition. Instead of having morals and a backbone telling them no you rather censor and distort reality. You failed them and society with your lack of parenting.

    32. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The point is most teenagers will be abstaining from sex most of the time. This is obvious, because if everyone were having sex 100% of their waking life, they would from not eating.

      Therefore it follows, that most teenagers who are taught sex education with condoms etc, are *also* abstaining.

      Therefore we need to compare the effectiveness of the two methods - given that most teenagers are going to abstain regardless of what we teach them, which teaching methods have better outcomes? The outcomes we are most interested in are teenage pregnancy and STD transmission - rates of which are higher amongst teens who are taught abstinence only.

      These indicators are good, but not perfect, proxies for how much sex teens are having. And since they're the primary stats we are interested in when it comes to efficacy of sex education, it's clear that abstinence-only is broadly a failure.

    33. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's only accepted if the author carves that out contractually.

      That authors have the right not to have their works adulterated by third parties IS the default for copyright. It isn't carved out by the contract, it is the way things are.

      If a studio licenses your book and wants to kill off your protagonist in their movie version of it a third of the way in, he's theirs to slay unless there is language in your agreement forbidding it.

      By your own admission, the studio is licensing, or contracting for the rights. For that, they can get a lot of things, and be given others, but sometimes even that varies. And sometimes the original creator still disavows it.

      Editing movies for time, or using time-compression technology, to shorten them to fit into specific broadcast slots is a tradition as old as TV, as is removing the naughty bits to make a film show-able on an airline.

      And that's done with the express license to do so.

      Directors have always groused about their "Art" being "butchered" for TV and airplane, and that's cute and all, but they take the paycheck nonetheless.

      Nope! In fact, many directors have expressly refused to take the check, donating it, and even demanding to have their name removed.

      Alan Smithee was FAMED for this. One of the greatest directors ever, but never allowed his name to be put on an adulterated film.

      This is another revenue stream for the studios, another "window," and they will cater to it. And the "auteurs" will make noise, because it makes them feel better about caving in to the Family Values crowd, but cave in they will. Everybody wants to be paid.

      The problem here is not the catering, but the unauthorized nature of it.

    34. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Garbage in, garbage out.
      I think that people want to consume some garbage (PG and above), but to limit it in some way (filter out x content). Sure, I'll eat moldy cheese, but keep that fermented apple juice away!

    35. Re: Stupid People by dexotaku · · Score: 1

      False equivalence. How exactly is "foul" language carcinogenic?

    36. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I agree with your first point, but how is it copyright infringement? After I buy a DVD, I can do whatever the fuck I want with it, so long as I do not redistribute the movie. The same should apply for the limited time that I am streaming a given movie.

    37. Re: Stupid People by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

      Sure. It's pretty easy to find good stats on the topic from CDC and NHS going back a couple decades.
      I pulled a few links together, but that's always tricky for people on the Internet... what is your definition of "non-biased"? I encourage you to go search around yourself if you have doubts... there's a whole lot of data, from a whole lot of countries, and it is all pretty consistent.

      CDC numbers for 2015 are here. 41% had full heterosexual intercourse. Rates of oral sex and hand jobs are higher. Numbers for homosexual sex are much harder to come by. The cites for the studies are in the summary report.

      I suppose least biased, most obvious stats are CDC numbers on teen pregnancy and STD spread. Those are relatively low and falling for the last decade, but they provide a minimum threshold. 22 pregnancies per 1000 women in 2015. That's a pretty small percentage (0.2%)... but it is also a record low. Backing up to 2007, back then it was 80 per 1000. 1991 was 116 per 1000, according to US HHS. The trend has been downward as contraception becomes more accessible. Does anyone really think the sex rate has been going down during the same window? :-). The percentages are not evenly distributed. You can find teen pregnancy rates over 1% in some parts of Texas and the southern USA. So that's a bare minimum.

      There's plenty of researchers who work on this, and their numbers largely agree: by the time their 19, well over half, usually around 3/4, have had oral sex. Full intercourse is usually lower. These numbers hold in the USA, in Britain, in Austrailia, in France... I'm less aware of other cultures, but, frankly, humans are humans. I bet the numbers hold... there's a reason we used to get married commonly at 14 (men and women).

      If you want something more direct, go do interviews on college campuses about their HS experiences. You can put your own numbers together pretty quick.

    38. Re: Stupid People by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      How is it NOT? Repeated exposure to foul language increases likelihood of your using it. If you only hear cursing once in a while you are far less likely to use it than if you find it normally used all around you.

      Come on, use even an ounce of common sense.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    39. Re: Stupid People by lgw · · Score: 1

      Fun fact: profanity comes from a different neurological circuit than normal language - it's a linguistic circuit we share with monkeys. Monkeys use it for vocalizations that warn of predators, and perhaps other dangers. So, profanity uses the brain's "yikes, a predator has appeared" circuit.

      I'm very OK with kids not developing that circuit before they're teens (at which point not only is it inevitable, they need it). There's enough to cope with when you're still trying to make sense of the world in basic ways, without adding fear of malevolence and literal predators.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    40. Re: Stupid People by dexotaku · · Score: 1

      Please refer me to the reams of documentation there must therefore be that prove hundreds of thousands yearly are actually killed by harsh language. ;)

    41. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VidAngel already offers a service where you skip all but the naughty bits, if that's your bag.

    42. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We already have that via LaughTrax. The idea that people shouldn't be allowed to censor themselves is a little silly, same way that forcing others to censor is silly. I want boobs and fbombs, you want Diet Action Movie,everyone goes home happy. I fail to see the problem. Studios are just pissed there not getting there media jhizzya payments.

    43. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Wow. You really believe that don't you? Turn off your VidAngel filter for reality. People get horny and fuck. It happens.

    44. Re:Stupid People by Khyber · · Score: 1

      You are a participant in the whole chain of copyright infringement. The streaming company most likely does not have license to modify the movie in such a manner. If you watch it, specifically ordering it with stripped content, you've contributed to the overall act if they provide and do not have license to do so.

      Ignorance of the law is not an excuse, as any judge would say.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    45. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      Fun fact: it's not the words that have this power, it's the emotional response. If you teach your kids that "pineapples" is a word to be used in anger or danger, it will be associated with those situations. Words aren't magic. Or did you think kids who only speak Chinese magically understand what "fuck" means if they'd never heard it before?

      No, what you really want to do is control your kids' thoughts, not their words. That sounds mighty oppressive...

    46. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Pregnancy and STD rates are terribly biased indicators of how much sex teens are having, because if they're using non-abstinance methods correctly then neither of those things will occur regardless if they're having sex or not.

    47. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Most texans have their 'starter' marriage and divorce in high-school. It's how they roll down there.

    48. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are claiming that my isp is committing felony copyright infringement by dropping packets, stuttering, or buffering mid play. Ditto for sending lossily compressed versions. Those are all modifications of the original version.

      Other contributing infringers are every itch, router and modem at every hop.

      As is often the case, you have a preconceived bias for the studios, and twist facts to try and support them.

    49. Re: Stupid People by KGIII · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Do you use an ad blocker?

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    50. Re: Stupid People by lgw · · Score: 1

      Sure, but that's my point, isn't it. It's not about the particular words, it's about activating a neurolinguistic circuit, one predating man as a species, used to alert the group to predators, and the instinctual negative reaction to those words - whatever sound you use, it means "oh shit!".

      Controlling your kids thought when they're young is the job of parents. If you're not doing that, you're not parenting. Teenagers are different, of course, but by then you've had your chance to set their trajectory.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    51. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      If you stream movies on your phone, then by your argument the fast forward button is illegal.

    52. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Except filtering is legal and has been since 2005 except there was no streaming then. VidAngel is pushing the studios to explain in court why they don't grant licenses to allow the law to be carried out or for the wording of the law to be updated to explicitly allow streaming.

    53. Re:Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      Wow, can you stream together a sentence without dropping the F-bomb, or using foul language in general? You come across as extremely limited in your thinking based simply on the words you use.

    54. Re:Stupid People by Trondheim · · Score: 1

      How is filtering a movie distorting reality?? Movies usually don't reflect reality whatsoever. And telling me I failed them and society with my lack of parenting is simply dismissable hyperbole.

    55. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      There is no "freedom", only power

    56. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem here is that extra revenue is being created and the studios and distributors aren't getting a cut. Why they deserve one is harder to see.

    57. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're lying to yourself, broham.

    58. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ignorance of the law is a fine excuse from an ethical standpoint. Saying it's no excuse is just a pathetic lie put forward by a power-drunk judicial oligarchy trying to justify to public opinion the copious blood dripping from their hands.

    59. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No, that's Daddy's profile, don't press that.

    60. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      It's only accepted if the author carves that out contractually.

      Not in my country, it isn't.

      If a studio licenses your book and wants to kill off your protagonist in their movie version of it a third of the way in, he's theirs to slay unless there is language in your agreement forbidding it.

      Even if this were legal, how does it cover third parties? This "VidAngel" is a studio contracting the author?

      Directors have always groused about their "Art" being "butchered" for TV and airplane, and that's cute and all, but they take the paycheck nonetheless

      If they do consent to it, that's their decision. I never questioned the possibility of an author consenting to modifications. Regardless, that just confirms the existence of author's rights.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    61. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      No, but if I were, why would it matter? I'm not a third party either. Not to mention that ad blockers don't modify ads, they just don't deliver them.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    62. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 2

      The adds are an integral part of the website as authored by their creators, just as much as any given scene. Whether it's product placement, or a sex scene ... it's as intended by the author.

      VidAngel don't modify the scenes, they just don't deliver them.

      You're bending over backwards and sticking your head up your ass simply because white Christians want this service. You are sacrificing your ability for rational thought for a hatred programmed into by propaganda.

    63. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      They might be united on some things like diversity, but they aren't completely united. They aren't all true believer progressives, there's a fair few AIPAC members in Hollywood as well. Who won't mind pushing a bit of glorification of the (diverse) US military. Gotta keep people enthusiastic about going to war in the Middle East after all.

    64. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      True, but the dominant powers in the US used to be interested in sharing power with the little people.

      Less and less.

    65. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      They are providing them with a living example of a nicer world, so when they do join the normal world they will realise that's not all the world can be.

      If you have to hand your kid a condom so he'd use it when necessary you've failed as a parent. Giving advice to remain abstinent and having provided enough knowledge of the world and the independence to put that knowledge into practice (ie. buy a condom) are not mutually exclusive.

    66. Re: Stupid People by TuballoyThunder · · Score: 1

      You do know that Alan Smithee is not a real person.

    67. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1
      1) If the recipient modifies a work, it's not the same as when a third party does it and redistributes it. 2) If the ads are "an integral part" of a work why are they changing all the time? Would a court accept it as modifying a work from the author's POV? But 2) is irrelevant because of 1) anyway.

      You are sacrificing your ability for rational thought for a hatred programmed into by propaganda.

      You're talking to those Christians now, right? It describes them neatly.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    68. Re: Stupid People by xenog · · Score: 1

      Yes.

    69. Re: Stupid People by pruss · · Score: 2

      If I buy a book, I don't have to read it all. I can skim to my heart's content without violating the author's rights. If I buy a DVD, I can mute and fast forward to my heart's content. Why shouldn't it be OK to automate this process? It's ok for me to have a list of times to skip and manually skip them. Why would it not be ok to automate the process, say by having servos push the buttons on the remotes and a camera looking at the time display on my DVD player? And if that's ok, why not something less crude?

    70. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your "fun facts" ignore the actual facts of life. I think you must not be a parent.

      When my child hears a nearly-illiterate idiot at school use a swear word, his context says "that's not what I want to be like". If we hear it in a movie at home and I say nothing, his context says "maybe that's OK". So I have to comment on it, or at least make sure I am frowning when he looks over at me (which he does). I better not be laughing, because that's a powerful message that says "that language is OK". When he sees a show by himself, he has only his inner context mixed with that of the filmmaker. Unfortunately, the filmmaker is a professional who has training and experience in crafting a message, and my son is ... what? A 6-year-old boy?

      What I know to be true is that even grown men and women in this country seem to be powerless to resist the messaging that comes from the media. Their inner context isn't strong enough to counteract it, and partly that's because media researchers have been studying for decades how to amplify the power of their messages. They are very, very good at it.

      Once you're an adult, it's your problem. You're responsible for your own choices. But if you're a child, it's not your problem. It's your PARENT'S problem, and it is a huge problem.

    71. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So if you've experienced garbage before then you should welcome garbage constantly? No.

    72. Re: Stupid People by Khyber · · Score: 1

      "As is often the case, you have a preconceived bias for the studios"

      You must not read, because I HATE the studios, thus my bias is against them, not for them.
      Back to school for you.

      --
      Still waiting on Serviscope_minor to wake up to fucking reality and realize that Jessica Price isn't going to fuck him.
    73. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The adds are an integral part of the website as authored by their creators

      No they're not. They're malware-laden rectangles of annoyance placed there by a third-party contracted by the author in hopes of monetizing the content. They're not called "adds" because they're "added" by the author. That's not the correct word.

      You're bending over backwards and sticking your head up your ass simply because white Christians want this service.

      No, we're not the ones with heads up our collective asses here. We're pointing out the stupidity of a service that's wanted by stupid white Christians for stupid reasons.

      Please understand this, because it will help you in life going forward: I don't criticize bad ideas from white Christians because they're white Christians. I criticize bad ideas because they're bad ideas, and they're bad ideas that white Christians always, always, always try to force on others because they're proponents of Sharia Law.

      Once again, as I stated at the start of this thread: This whole filtering thing is a stupid idea for stupid people. If you don't like some scenes, don't watch the movie. Or maybe stop being scared of being exposed to other ideas.

      By the way your kids are going to watch the movie at their cool friend's house and you can't stop that.

    74. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      If your kids are old enough to understand what the movie is about, then they're probably old enough to understand when you tell them "those are words that only adults should use and you're not to use them until you're an adult", then you explain what those words mean. Hiding certain things from children has never prevented them from learning about them, or do you really think that they're never going to hear the words 'shit', 'crap', 'fuck', and so on, on the street? Oh and before you even go off on a rant at me about 'telling you how to raise your children', or 'no responsible adult would do that', or 'that won't work': A good friend of mine of many decades has a daughter who is just now turning 17, and that was the way she was raised; she could make a sailor blush and cringe with language if she wanted to but she doesn't, and there'd never been a single incident at any school she's gone to or from parents of any other kids she's known because she understood what those words all meant and when it was and was not appropriate to use them. Do what you want with your own kids but I'm telling you that trying to shelter them from the rest of the world isn't really doing them any favors.

    75. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 1

      But VidAngel no longer redistributes anything, that's the whole point of using the existing streams instead of streaming anything from their own servers. It's a bunch of software with data which filters content retrieved by users themselves, just like add blocker software.

      So ready to fold? Go full retard, be consistent and also condemn add blocker software? Or just choose insanity and pretend there is some fundamental difference which doesn't exist?

    76. Re: Stupid People by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      If they don't redistribute anything, then chances are that they are in the clear, although court opinion may differ. Courts are often like that. For the record, I've never condemned ad blocker software.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    77. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop it. No really, stop.

      That's enough of this stupid meme. "If you hate what someone is saying, defend it to the death anyway, because THAT is liberty!!!!!!!111"

      No. Just no. Why should I respect the views of people that want to see women permanently relegated to second class citizens? Why should I accept that some people want black people back into slavery? I don't respect the Chinese view that East Indians are dirty savages, nor do I accept the divisions between Sunni and Shiite Muslims. You can take all that cultural relativism shit and shove it up your ass, as it only enables harm. And I will always refuse to accept rhetoric that tries to label a certain group as subhuman. It has no place in a civilized world.

      We are all human. These ridiculous pedantic differences are going to doom our race if we don't rise above it and focus on the shared problems facing the world.

    78. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What business is this of your's? Are you opposed to Adblockers, Privacy Badgers and Javascript kill switches too?

    79. Re: Stupid People by Pinky's+Brain · · Score: 0

      Turning it into an argument about how parents should raise their children, rather than the essential tenets of freedom and the technological parallel of this new technology and ad blocking is kinda dangerous.

      That way lies communism, the greatest mass murdering ideology in the history of mankind.

    80. Re: Stupid People by godefroi · · Score: 3, Insightful

      Ah, Slashdot, never change. I should be able to take apart my hardware and change it up in any way I see fit. I should be able to take apart my software and change it up in any way I see fit. I should be able to do whatever I want with my media, like time shift it, or format shift it, except skipping over the swear words. I shouldn't be able to do that.

      --
      Karma: Poor (Mostly affected by lame karma-joke sigs)
    81. Re:Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      How does that make me a stupid person?

      First there' the silly notion that they've never heard those words, followed by the retarded idea that hearing those words is damaging in some fashion, and we'll round out the hat trick by pointing out that you're raising special snowflakes that will need safe spaces to survive in the outside world.

    82. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why should I respect the views of people that want to see women permanently relegated to second class citizens?

      Nobody is saying you have to. But you should respect their right to express themselves.

      Why should I accept that some people want black people back into slavery?

      For the same reason you should accept that the sky is blue: because reality exists independent of what you want. But I wouldn't worry overmuch since the amount of people that actually hold this opinion is insignificant.

    83. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Reproduction is sustaining life as well, actually. And if pleasurable things are bad per se, what else do you ban for that reason alone? Or is that just the usual puritanical tinge of people religiously indoctrinated in childhood?

      Are you one of those indoctrinated to be anti-religious?

    84. Re: Stupid People by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I don't know about US rates but in terms of my extended family from the 1940s to present time in Communist Poland and beyond, these figures don't correlate. No sex prior to university or even marriage in all cases. No contraception and no STDS and unwanted pregnancies. A single case of teenage pregnancy in a classmate in the 1960s and it ended up being a scandal, because even there such things were not common.

      Abstinence based sex Ed can work, but it has to be tried in the right milieu and here sometimes the grass roots level person knows best.

    85. Re: Stupid People by Agent0013 · · Score: 1

      It's actually an accepted authors' freedom to not have their works adulterated by third parties. It indeed doesn't infringe on your freedom not to watch the work with your children.

      Tell this to every author of a movie that has been shown on TV. They get edited in many ways just to show them on broadcast TV.

      --

      -- ssoorrrryy,, dduupplleexx sswwiittcchh oonn.. -Quote found on actual fortune cookie.
    86. Re: Stupid People by KGIII · · Score: 1

      Is the end result the same?

      --
      "So long and thanks for all the fish."
    87. Re: Stupid People by guruevi · · Score: 1

      You're deluded if you think all your kids are truly abstinent.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    88. Re: Stupid People by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Sex is for sustaining life too... how did you make kids?

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    89. Re: Stupid People by guruevi · · Score: 1

      Google it - depending on how you calculate it's between 50 and 75%. How well do you trust your kids.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
  2. Re:Filter in by bill_mcgonigle · · Score: 2

    Isn't mutual respect a necessary component of a working libertarian system?

    The market will either reward or punish their actions based on what people really think of its value. It's as close to the "true democracy" that most people who want it are ever going to get.

    I know, some people want "true democracy" so they can vote away the property of others, but most people just want to have a sense of input to outcomes (which most voters don't actually have now).

    Aside from that, I don't see how this business model works with end-to-end authentication. Netflix stopped working on rooted phones, so it's not an issue for me any more (there's my market input to Netflix's decision).

    --
    My God, it's Full of Source!
    OUTSIDE_IP=$(dig +short my.ip @outsideip.net)
  3. Freedom? Choice? by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Let directors create what they want, and let viewers watch how they want in their own home. That kind of philosophy respects the views of both parties."

    The directors/writers/etc don't put language, nudity and violence just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the characters, part of the experience, part of the story. If you remove things, it's not worth your time.

    I hate extreme violence, gore and horror movies in general. So I don't watch horror movies. See how easy that was? Now do the same.

    --
    #DeleteFacebook
    1. Re:Freedom? Choice? by aardvarkjoe · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The directors/writers/etc don't put language, nudity and violence just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the characters, part of the experience, part of the story. If you remove things, it's not worth your time.

      Who exactly are you to decide what is or is not worth someone else's time for the purposes of entertainment?

      Why do people like you get so personally offended by the way that somebody else wants to view a movie, to the point that you want to dictate the way they watch it in their own home?

      --

      How can we continue to believe in a just universe and freedom to eat crackers if we have no ale?
    2. Re:Freedom? Choice? by Bite+The+Pillow · · Score: 1

      As long as they let me filter out the clothed scenes, I'm good with it. Bonus points for being gender specific.

    3. Re:Freedom? Choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Lately it feels movies have useless nudity or swearing just for getting a higher rating for a fairly innocuous movie.

    4. Re:Freedom? Choice? by PJ6 · · Score: 1

      "Let directors create what they want, and let viewers watch how they want in their own home. That kind of philosophy respects the views of both parties."

      The directors/writers/etc don't put language, nudity and violence just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the characters, part of the experience, part of the story. If you remove things, it's not worth your time.

      I hate extreme violence, gore and horror movies in general. So I don't watch horror movies. See how easy that was? Now do the same.

      Usually the term "snowflake" is used by conservatives, so I'm kind of confused. They love censoring that shit, not just for the people who want it, but for everyone. And you want to dictate how people watch entertainment in their own home. That sure sounds conservative to me.

      I think you need to re-check the party line and get back in it. You're definitely supposed to be for censorship, especially nudity.

      Remember the towering moral outrage over Janet Jackson's boob? It gave conservatives everywhere a case of the vapours. They cried like, well, triggered little snowflakes.

    5. Re:Freedom? Choice? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You should google "VidDevil", I saw it once and it definitely had that feature. Only showed non-stop filtered video

    6. Re:Freedom? Choice? by MobyDisk · · Score: 1

      The directors/writers/etc don't put language, nudity and violence just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself.

      Somtimes they do. Directors may insert something into the movie just to get a particular rating. This was most egregious back in the '80s, when a PG rating meant lower movie sales than "R". So they often inserted foul language just to get the coveted "R" rating. That is part of why PG-13 was added.

  4. Is this good or bad? by fustakrakich · · Score: 2, Interesting

    We use ad blockers on the internet. Isn't this the same thing?

    --
    “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    1. Re: Is this good or bad? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      In some jurisdictions, not when a third party does it.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    2. Re:Is this good or bad? by gruntled · · Score: 1

      Blocking the ad is not the same thing as altering the ad; people who create things have a right to expect that somebody else can't alter it and tell people they're seeing what you intended.

    3. Re:Is this good or bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It alters the web site. This is absolutely a slippery slope. If filtering swear words from movies is copyright infringement, then ad blocking will surely follow. No, it's their right to do it, but it's wrong to do it, and that has nothing to do with copyright..

    4. Re:Is this good or bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

      No. You can translate a book into English. You can't pay someone else to do it. You can modify your own game console (DMCA exemptions possibly involved). You can't pay someone else to do it. Same thing with filtering content. Although organizations can get away with it because they're generally treated as "an entity" and conceptually have expectations on their right to modify "their" hardware. The same as if you translate a book and have a friend read it. it all falls into the general idea of "personal use" and "first sale doctrine", where the whole idea of copyright only makes sense so long as people have a chance to use a copyrighted work.

      So, conceptually VidAngel could hire people and stream filtered material to their employees. But the inverse relationship is not possible. Right or wrong,I tend to think it should be acceptable so long as all parties are aware that a work is modified, there's a chain of authorship, and each author in the chain can charge as they please per copy--it's clear that you can't market/give away/provide the service of effectively making derivative works.

      Spam filters and blockers get around this because they generally block whole websites. If VidAngel were to provide a service that blocked whole movies based on criteria, that'd probably be legal. But remote ad blocking by a third party would be just as illegal.

    5. Re:Is this good or bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We use ad blockers on the internet. Isn't this the same thing?

      Not even close. This is more like when ISP's would overlay ads with their own ads instead. It was ruled as infringement and they were forced to stop doing it.

      What I find more interesting is that vidangel is doing this without getting permission from Amazon, Netflix and HBO. Instead they are 'hoping' that they will call and discuss it when they realize its happening?

      Willfull violation of a court order, this will get shutdown fast.

    6. Re: Is this good or bad? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      The ad blocker I use is developed by a third party. I suppose the difference that it is running on my computer.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    7. Re:Is this good or bad? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      VidAngel skips the scene or mutes the words similar to fast forwarding or muting, it doesn't alter the content either - ie it's exactly like an ad blocker.

    8. Re:Is this good or bad? by JaredOfEuropa · · Score: 1

      People pay to have ads aired, so they have a reasonable expectation that those ads are shown as is (or not shown at all, in which case they shouldn't be charged either). In the case of entertainment, it's the viewer who both pays for the content and decides what filters to apply.

      --
      If construction was anything like programming, an incorrectly fitted lock would bring down the entire building...
    9. Re:Is this good or bad? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Not quite. Using adblockers in your browser is like skipping the part where Bambi's mom dies by pushing fast forward on the remote.

      If you want a comparable scenario, you'd have to pay some service to act as your proxy to do the filtering for you.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    10. Re:Is this good or bad? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      Can I pay the maid to push the button for me?

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    11. Re: Is this good or bad? by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      If the action takes place on your computer, you're certainly in the clear. Having said that, it's an interesting question if ads are actually a part of the work in the first place. There's nothing creative in sprinkling ads through a work algorithmically. Not to mention that they're different every time.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    12. Re:Is this good or bad? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Nope. It's like fucking your wife, if you want your offspring to be yours, you have to do it yourself, too.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  5. Alternative reality by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Let directors create what they want, and let viewers watch how they want in their own home.

    That's a stupid idea and just feeds into the notion that people can suspend themselves from reality and filter out anything and everything they find offensive.

    And that whole quote about being libertarian is just baloney. How about, instead of paying for and/or viewing the creator's content that you don't approve of, just don't buy or view that content. Pay for content that you do like instead. Voting with your wallet would cause market pressures to squeeze out the content that caters to your distortions.

    And if no one creates content that you like then that's just too fucking bad. Find a different form of entertainment for you and your spawn.

    1. Re:Alternative reality by Trondheim · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Isn't the very act of watching a movie suspending yourself from reality?

    2. Re: Alternative reality by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

      But people CAN filter reality, and we're getting better at it. It might not be healthy in some ways, but to call it a fiction is incorrect. If some techie pulls off the eyeball augmentations that sci-fi has posited for years, it'll be totally viable to filter an offensive person entirely, but we continue to edge in that direction.

  6. Just like Blockbuster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    Just like Blockbuster, who removed the final scene from their copies of Catch 22, thus ruining the movie.

    There is a difference between sex and violence for the storytelling and sex and violence for its own sake.

    The problem is that Hollywood no longer knows the difference, thus creating demand for a product/service like this.

    1. Re:Just like Blockbuster by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      People were calling for the censoring of material before Hollywood existed, there's long been a demand for a product/service like this.

    2. Re: Just like Blockbuster by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

      There is no difference and Hollywood never made such a difference. Sometimes a movie has sex in it. Whether it is integral to the plot or not is in the viewer's mind.

  7. Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Falconnan · · Score: 1

    It's a tricky thing, art. While art is and always has been a commercial enterprise to some degree, it's also intended as a communication medium. In effect, altering the artistic work also distorts the message of the artist(s).

    I'm not 100% against this on principle, but I find it a dangerous road. It's very similar to editing an interview to destroy the relationship between question and answer. Do I think that some borderline films could benefit from a "kids" edit? Sure. Do I think it should happen without the input of the originators of a work? No.

    1. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      To look at it from another angle, it's basically an adblocker for video.

      I have uBlock setup on all my computers at home and at work, so my family and students are not exposed to things unintentionally while they seek the web content they desire. If they want to, they could just click to turn the blocker off. The option still exists to view the full work that the website originator created, while still retaining choice in what they're exposed to. They can choose whether or not they want to be exposed to adult-oriented ads or malware in the 'art' that is the webpage.

      To me, I don't think it should be up to the artist to decide if I can use my remote to skip a scene or mute the audio. All Vid Angel is doing is acting as a fancy remote to fast-forward or mute for you, based on filters you've setup, just like modern adblockers.

    2. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I can tear pages out of books I bought without being sued by the author or publisher, why can't I set up a filter on a movie or stream I already paid for? VidAngel aren't altering the art. They are allowing people to choose how they experience that art within their own homes, the same as if they pushed fast-forward or mute, just more conveniently and without having to know in advance exactly when to hit the button each time. If I watch a movie on DVD, I can fast forward through sex-scenes and mute the volume when they say the F-word if I want, and the originators of the work have no right to tell me otherwise. Even if I were in a theater, I could close my eyes and plug my ears if I wanted to. I'm not altering the art, just choosing how I experience it and choosing to not watch or listen to parts I don't like instead of forgoing the entire movie because of a few spots I don't want to put up with. That is what this service facilitates and makes automatic and convenient. If I have paid for the DVD or the stream so the content creators get their due money (which is the case with this VidAngel service), then why should anyone have a right to tell me I can't apply a filter to watch it in my own home just because they *wanted* me to experience their art in a different way?

    3. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by ScentCone · · Score: 1

      All Vid Angel is doing is acting as a fancy remote to fast-forward or mute for you

      No, they're making money by altering someone else's creative work without permission. Do you get paid by other people to operate your remote and modify movies for them? No? Ah.

      --
      Don't disappoint your bird dog. Go to the range.
    4. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by tepples · · Score: 1

      Do I think that some borderline films could benefit from a "kids" edit? Sure. Do I think it should happen without the input of the originators of a work? No.

      Then what's the appropriate market-based way to ensure that all "originators of a work" offer "input" on their "borderline films" to producers of edited versions?

    5. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      In the US, that might be kosher. In the Continental Europe at least, a third party can't generally redistribute modified works without permission of the author. They'd be unauthorized derivative works and a violation of the "personal" rights of an author (as opposed to the "property" rights).

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    6. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by jdastrup · · Score: 2

      No, they're making money by altering someone else's creative work without permission. Do you get paid by other people to operate your remote and modify movies for them? No? Ah.

      No, they are not altering. Do you ever skip commercials? If so, you are deciding that you are not interested in 100% of what the network is showing you. To compare it to art, VidAngel customers are simply choosing to view one part of the "museum" and avoid another part. Nobody should be forced to walk the entire Louvre if they don't want to. Or, you don't have to walk a full 360' around the Statue of David - nothing is wrong with just looking at the front, or the back, or whatever part you are interested in.

    7. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Aristos+Mazer · · Score: 1

      "To look at it from another angle..."

      Isn't that the whole question? Are we allowed to look from a different angle or must we watch only through the director's lens?

    8. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Voyager529 · · Score: 1

      It's a tricky thing, art. While art is and always has been a commercial enterprise to some degree, it's also intended as a communication medium. In effect, altering the artistic work also distorts the message of the artist(s).

      I don't think this is a problem in this context. End users *know* they are not watching the 'artist intended' version of the film, and the fact that they are watching a sanitized, incomplete version does not preclude them from later viewing the unaltered version, or prevent anyone else from doing so. If I purchased a painting and cut off half of it to then hang the first half in a frame, am I distorting the message of the artist? Yes. Is that my right? Well, I paid for the painting. The painting analogy falls flat because that's a sale, vs. the licensing model that is the nature of DVD sales and Netflix streams. Here's a better example: The oft-maligned Windows 10 telemetry - if I have paid for my copy of Windows 10 Professional, morally (EULA terms aside), must I also allow the telemetry software to run, or is it my prerogative to determine which parts of Windows may run on my computer, and how I will disable them, if I am willing to live with the reduced functionality of such a system? If I am indeed morally wrong for denying execute permissions to Cortana's EXE files, if I allow them to run but block them at the firewall, am I still morally wrong? That is the quagmire being addressed here.

      I'm not 100% against this on principle, but I find it a dangerous road. It's very similar to editing an interview to destroy the relationship between question and answer. Do I think that some borderline films could benefit from a "kids" edit? Sure. Do I think it should happen without the input of the originators of a work? No.

      It sounds to me like you're in favor of director-released 'sanitized' versions of films. I think there's a market for that, and the existence of VidAngel, and both CleanFlicks and ClearPlay before it, show that there is a market for such a product. However, it goes back to the point at which the buyer has jurisdiction over what has been bought. If I wish to watch a specific half of a movie, I see no problem in doing so, as long as it takes place with my knowledge and does not prevent others, including the director, from watching the whole thing as intended.

    9. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by jdastrup · · Score: 1

      Do I think that some borderline films could benefit from a "kids" edit? Sure. Do I think it should happen without the input of the originators of a work? No.

      Wow. So content creators should decide what you watch, and not you. That has got to be the most insane thing I've ever heard. I suppose if you have never pressed FFW or REW for any reason whatsoever, then you're not a hypocrite. We get it, you disagree with the reason VidAngel's customers are fast forwarding, rewinding and muting, but to say that their reason is wrong? Wow.

    10. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know what part of David I'm interested in.

    11. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're not distributing a modified version.

      They're distributing the original version, along with some software and some metadata about the movie. The software can read the metadata, and according to the viewers choices, skip playing back the video and/or audio streams at certain time locations for certain durations of time.

      The original work is provided as-is, and the viewer can choose to configure the software to skip as much or as little of the playback as they wish. The software is merely automating something the viewer could have manually done anyway.

    12. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Ahh... but I am not distributing a filtered version of the movie, I am just applying a filter within my own home and watching it. Just like I wasn't reselling the book that I tore pages out of and drew moustaches on the faces in pictures. And, yes I am in the US as are VidAngel, but I believe even in Continental Europe, you can fast-forward or press mute in your own home, right? We sure did when we lived in Europe.

      Now I do suppose it all depends on how this new filtering service is implemented-- whether it truly just skips/mutes parts on the stream you are receiving like they indicate. That should be perfectly legal since it seems it would be done within your home by you applying the filter, (they are just providing the technology for the filter like the TV manufacturer provided your remote if you fast forward), or whether they are just pretending to do that and really create a modified version of the stream that they send to you instead of the version your amazon (or whatever) service would have sent.

      If they are on the up-and-up, content-streaming services (perhaps pressured by the studios) could block VidAngel's filtering tech through terms-of-use or technological countermeasures, but there should be no legal basis for the studios to claim copyright infringement as unauthorized derivative works or violation of other personal rights since it is happening in your own home and not being redistributed (by you or by VidAngel).

    13. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their original business plan is dead and they know it so now they are trying this.

      The problem here is that while you do have the rights to edit video's that you own, not that you bought for the purpose of editing only to sell back, streams from netflix and amazon don't qualify. Even if you buy the movie from amazon prime, it still won't qualify to modify the stream.

    14. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      So what you are saying is it should also be illegal to re-wind or watch scenes of a movie out of order or skip to watch the end of the movie before you watch the main portion.

      After all that is altering the original vision as to how the movie should be watched.

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    15. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But the law has a very different view of it.

      Even Sony has scrapped their plans for a similar service because the directors cried foul, not because they weren't getting a cut of the profits, but because Sony didn't have the right to modify the directors art without their permission.

    16. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Here's what was actually said:

      In the US, that might be kosher. In the Continental Europe at least, a third party can't generally redistribute modified works without permission of the author. They'd be unauthorized derivative works and a violation of the "personal" rights of an author (as opposed to the "property" rights).

      Totally different from your interpretation.

      I suggest you go back to elementary school.

    17. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      In effect, altering the artistic work also distorts the message of the artist(s).

      The work Fearless Girl intentionally plays off and alters another artist's work, Charging Bull . So distorting the message intended by the original artist, in and of itself, seems to be allowable.

    18. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      That funny. I asked the very same question. I wonder if she would get in legal trouble.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
    19. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Their original business plan is dead and they know it so now they are trying this.

      The problem here is that while you do have the rights to edit video's that you own, not that you bought for the purpose of editing only to sell back, streams from netflix and amazon don't qualify. Even if you buy the movie from amazon prime, it still won't qualify to modify the stream.

      Fuck Hollywood, the studios, directors, actors, every last one of them.

      I have not watched a single Hollywood movie or TV show in over 12 years. They get not a single penny nor set of eyeballs to sell from me. They lost me long ago. I stopped missing them after just a week or two. Kick the habit, it's almost as healthy for you as quitting cigarette smoking.

    20. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

      Are you redistributing the work? If you do, then it is illegal. If not, it's your personal right, just like an owner of a book can scribble his notes into it.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    21. Re: Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by SuperKendall · · Score: 1

      I am redistributing as much as the other application is re-distributing. I am filtering how the movie appears, just as they are. If the application is running locally, how is that different from my own local manipulation of the content?

      Furthermore I am technically "redistributing" the content through my TV where alone can view it...

      --
      "There is more worth loving than we have strength to love." - Brian Jay Stanley
    22. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      All Vid Angel is doing is acting as a fancy remote to fast-forward or mute for you

      No, they're making money by altering someone else's creative work without permission. Do you get paid by other people to operate your remote and modify movies for them? No? Ah.

      Yes, as a matter of fact. My dad used to give me a potato chip or piece of popcorn to get off the couch and change channels, either before our tv had a remote, or if it'd been lost.

      Also, VidAngel specifically ISN'T altering the work. As the service exists now, you login to VidAngel, and then login to Netflix or Amazon. VidAngel then starts the stream, but mutes or skips as your chosen filters dictate. I literally had to go into Amazon and turn off parental controls for VidAngel to work. It's just an AI/Program manning the remote.

    23. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Falconnan · · Score: 1

      No... You should absolutely decide what content you consume. Nor did I call it "wrong". I'm trying to determine if you misread my intention, or if you're just trolling. What I'm saying is, the original piece is designed to convey a message. A third party should not have the right to alter that piece for consumers without the involvement of the original artist or owner of the work. You have EVERY right to skip what you wish. Note, I'm not saying third party commentary is in any way wrong (it can actually be quite enriching), but third party edits of full original pieces is at best questionable practice. "Made for TV" edits of movies have long been a staple of broadcast television (Samuel L. Jackson likely didn't actually say "my friend"), but last I checked, the originators of said pieces are involved. Given the number of movies ruined by internal processes shredding potentially good flicks, I think the concept stands.

      Also, original content creators do control the content that is available. If you, or I, don't care for the content that exists, then it behooves us to become original content creators ourselves. But altering someone else's work against their will is poor form. I'm not sure it should be illegal (we already have enough laws), but it's rarely going to improve a piece. This last note really doesn't apply to Highlander 2, which could only be improved by merciless editing and rewriting. By the gods that was awful.

    24. Re:Art isn't intended to be piecemeal by Falconnan · · Score: 1

      Good points. I would submit, however, that Windows 10 is a tool (read that how you wish), whereas a movie is an art piece. It's a complicated question. With Windows 10, you purchase an OS to run other programs. The movie doesn't run other items. Arguably from a moral standpoint (not sure about legal), you have every right to re-edit a movie for your own consumption. The question is, do you have the right to repackage someone else's work for mass-consumption? Legally, probably not. Morally, not unless it's as bad as Highlander 2.

  8. So I will wind up with by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1

    I will finally be able to watch the nonviolent, nonprofane Reservoir Dogs Kumbaya cut, all 58 seconds of it?

  9. Re: Filter in by K.+S.+Kyosuke · · Score: 1

    Market can't punish all activities harmful to some, especially if they're a niche thing. Even minority support can be sufficient for those.

    --
    Ezekiel 23:20
  10. Nothingburger? by Okian+Warrior · · Score: 3, Insightful

    "Let directors create what they want, and let viewers watch how they want in their own home. That kind of philosophy respects the views of both parties."

    The directors/writers/etc don't put language, nudity and violence just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the characters, part of the experience, part of the story. If you remove things, it's not worth your time.

    I hate extreme violence, gore and horror movies in general. So I don't watch horror movies. See how easy that was? Now do the same.

    You could just as easily go the other way.

    Directors/writers/etc don't subtitle their movies or overdub them. Does that mean I shouldn't watch anime that's been dubbed in English by volunteers?

    Directors/writers/etc don't make fun of their movies either. Does that mean I shouldn't watch MST3K movies?

    This entire issue seems like a total nothing-burger. People are willing to pay money to watch movies in a specific way, that's fine.

    The thing about rights is when you dictate what *other* people can and can't do. Why do we worry about people quietly enjoying modified movies in the privacy of their home?

    1. Re:Nothingburger? by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      I didn't say they don't have the right to do that, I said it destroyed the experience and so makes the whole thing pointless.

      And while I agree with you on the anime subtitles, I disagree on the dubbed versions. People doing dubbing usually lose something in the voice, intonations, tone of the voice, etc. It's extremely rare to have a voice sound exactly the same, so it changes your perception of the characters. And IMHO that makes it a bad thing. But to each his own.

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
    2. Re:Nothingburger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      exactly... to each his own. Just because it destroyed your experience doesn't mean it destroys everyone's experience and makes it pointless for them. In fact apparently it IMPROVES the experience for many people, which is why their is an enormous market for this. To each his own.

    3. Re:Nothingburger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why do we worry about people quietly enjoying modified movies in the privacy of their home?

      The people being worried about are the ones making the money off doing the modifications.

      You do realize this, right? It's about making an income stream off of somebody else's intellectual property.

      Now certainly you can BUY the right to do that, but do you have the right otherwise, when copyright is still in effect?

    4. Re: Nothingburger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You're making it a binary consequence which is a fallacy. It's not a pointless experience if it's filtered it's a /different/ experience that might be the experience that was desired.

    5. Re:Nothingburger? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Directors/writers/etc don't subtitle their movies or overdub them. Does that mean I shouldn't watch anime that's been dubbed in English by volunteers?

      Correct, you shouldn't. Yes it sucks if there are no plans to license it in your region, and me personally I wouldn't care if you did, but technically you are infringing on copyright.

      Directors/writers/etc don't make fun of their movies either. Does that mean I shouldn't watch MST3K movies?

      Don't they limit themselves to public domain movies? If not, surely they are paying someone some amount of money since they are also showing said movie.

      Now, if you had said RiffTrax, well, now I'm wondering. All they are doing is providing a voice track of their voices, so legally they are probably in the clear. So would Vid Angel also be in the clear if they basically did the same? Provide a voice track of nothing but silence, with large beeps intended to correspond with "bad" language in a given movie? Also, some sort of screen filter which is transparent most of the time, but becomes opaque whenever "bad" visuals appear on screen.

    6. Re:Nothingburger? by fustakrakich · · Score: 1

      third party service doing an unauthorized Quick! Hide In Your Safe Space! hatchet job on their art.

      Total nonsense. That's like saying I can't have my car painted a different color the manufacturer does not offer. If I pay somebody to modify something I purchased, I am entitled to the modifications. It's that simple.

      --
      “He’s not deformed, he’s just drunk!”
  11. Use it to watch porn! by Black+Parrot · · Score: 1

    The movies go by real fast.

    --
    Sheesh, evil *and* a jerk. -- Jade
    1. Re:Use it to watch porn! by DontBeAMoran · · Score: 1

      Yep, in and out!

      --
      #DeleteFacebook
  12. Copyright is the law. So is decency. by tepples · · Score: 1, Insightful

    Yet they don't respect creative freedom

    An author is free to create a work. A subscriber ought to be free to create out the parts of a work that the subscriber doesn't want to view, including categories of parts listed by a service provider that classifies parts by category, and especially including categories that other legislation and regulation deem "indecent" or "harmful to minors" (such as 18 USC 1464, 47 USC 231, and foreign counterparts).

    or intellectual property of others.

    "Intellectual property" is a seductive mirage.

    For the moment, let's assume that by "intellectual property" you meant copyright. What have studios done to show that their copyrights deserve more respect than the laws restricting dealing in works that are "indecent" or "harmful to minors", other than just existing?

    1. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A subscriber ought to be free to create out the parts of a work that the subscriber doesn't want to view...

      The subscriber isn't doing this! A third party is doing it and charging for the privilege. The reason the studios are taking issue with this (in theory at least, we all know it's really plain old avarice) is that Vid Angel are taking copyrighted works, changing them, and then re-selling.

    2. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      It's not like there isn't already a method to do what Vid Angel wants to do. You know, the old "this movie has been edited for time and content, and formatted to fit this screen"? So my guess is that Vid Angel feels that the old rules don't apply to them for some reason.

    3. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by tepples · · Score: 1

      including categories of parts listed by a service provider that classifies parts by category

      The subscriber isn't doing this! A third party is doing it and charging for the privilege.

      That's what I meant by this.

    4. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by tepples · · Score: 1

      What is the procedure to obtain a license from a motion picture's copyright owner to produce and exhibit the motion picture in "this movie has been edited for time and content" form?

    5. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A subscriber ought to be free to create out the parts of a work that the subscriber doesn't want to view,

      This is what I would disagree with. Content should be evaluated as a whole, and either accepted or rejected as such.

      What have studios done to show that their copyrights deserve more respect than the laws restricting dealing in works that are "indecent" or "harmful to minors", other than just existing?

      This is a side-step. It's not at all about the laws relating to mentioned restrictions. Those two are separate issues. If this was ultimately about filtering content that effect the age rating of a production, the studios could follow the lead of the porn industry and produce "soft" and "hard" versions of the movies while keeping up the integrity of the story. Digital production and distribution significantly lowers the costs of such efforts.
        However, I suspect the parents would like to cut things like product placement, political, philosophical and religious content and attitudes and other scenes that are outside of age classification systems in US and many other countries.

    6. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by lgw · · Score: 1

      It would obviously be legal for VidAngel to do this with books. Buy the book, white out any profanity, sell it on at a markup. Not sure what the beef is here.

      --
      Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
    7. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by tepples · · Score: 1

      If this was ultimately about filtering content that effect the age rating of a production, the studios could follow the lead of the porn industry and produce "soft" and "hard" versions of the movies while keeping up the integrity of the story.

      What's the free market solution to encourage studios to be willing to produce such family cuts?

    8. Re:Copyright is the law. So is decency. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The theater model is a problem here. People like the social experience of going to movies as a family, for example. If the hard and soft versions could be represented for the proper and willing audiences simultaneously, the market supporting the slight cost increase of the parallel production might be there.

  13. Why the double standard? by Solandri · · Score: 2

    Any other business, people would be all over them for not respecting the wishes of all customers. But Hollywood somehow gets a free pass?

    "The restaurant owner doesn't exclude blacks just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the character of the restaurant, part of the experience. If you force them to allow blacks, it's no longer a unique experience and not worth your time.

    "I hate restaurants which exclude certain races. So I don't go there. See how easy that was? Now do the same."

    If you want to produce art and give it away, you can do whatever you want with it IMHO. But the moment you start selling it, you become a business. And like all businesses, you have to comply with anti-discrimination clauses which prohibit exclusion based on race, gender, religion, etc.

    1. Re:Why the double standard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Last time I checked people who get offended by swearing wasn't a demographic covered by anti-discrimination laws; eve if it wasn't your first point is bullshit. Plenty of companies and products exist that don't cater to everyone without any kind of public outrage, and you'd have to be pretty ignorant not to be able to come up with hundreds of examples yourself.

    2. Re:Why the double standard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The restaurant owner doesn't exclude blacks just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the character of the restaurant, part of the experience. If you force them to allow blacks, it's no longer a unique experience and not worth your time.

      The restaurant owner doesn't offer seafood dishes just for the fun of annoying special snowflakes like yourself. It's part of the character of the restaurant, part of the experience. If you force them to offer seafood dishes, it's no longer a unique experience and not worth your time.

      Now question for you. Why is this situation like your example and not like my example? Because it seems to me that this is less like refusing to serve blacks, and more like simply having a fucking menu that doesn't have any seafood dishes on it.

    3. Re:Why the double standard? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Your brain is fried or something because that made no sense.

  14. Re:It's a scam! by jdastrup · · Score: 1

    You don't understand VidAngel's new business model. Do some research.

  15. Comment removed by account_deleted · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Comment removed based on user account deletion

  16. Re:It's a scam! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    That is how their dvd "buy/filter/sell" service worked, which is what they are still in litigation about. But that is not how this new streaming service they offer works. With the new streaming service there is no "buy" and "sell," just applying of filters to the streams that the user has already paid for.

    I thought the "buy"/"sell" was a bit of a stretch, but it is also important to note that they resorted to that model only after the studios repeatedly refused to license the content for streaming like they license to other streaming services (hulu, netflix, amazon) for the sole reason that they knew VidAngel would allow users to apply filters. There is a law in the US that allows filtering (thus the studios claim in their lawsuit that it is not about the filtering but about the sell/buyback being a ploy to basically sell content illegally, despite the fact that VidAngel tried several ways to license/pay for the content and the studios refused... due to the ability of user to apply a filter).

  17. The Mormon Elephant in the Room by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "VidAngel's philosophy is very libertarian", say the company's founders.

    Not really. The company was founded by Mormons in Provo, Utah to cater to that market. Why? Because the Mormon leadership "discourages" the church's membership from watching R-rated (and worse) movies. This has nothing to do with some grassroots market demand for cleaned-up versions of Hollywood blockbusters. It stems from the practices of a particular cult that has banned R-rated movies, but whose adherents want to watch them anyway and are looking for a loophole to assuage their consciences.

    You can't claim to embrace to libertarianism when the original problem is caused by obedience to a high control group, a.k.a. a cult.

    1. Re:The Mormon Elephant in the Room by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Utah doesn't have higher 'community standards'. It's been proven in court.

      A hero lawyer turned a Utah prosecutors argument against him, Fuckwit DA claimed Utah had higher 'community standards'. Hero lawyer used that argument to subpoena direct TV's porn rental records.

      Guess what? The only parts of the USA that rival Utah's porn viewing is the deep bible belt. They (utah and the bible belt) also rent more of the more depraved porn than the rest of the nation.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    2. Re:The Mormon Elephant in the Room by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Well duh.

      The rest of the nation is smart enough to get their depraved porn for free from the internet, because they aren't dumb enough to pay to filter it.

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
    3. Re:The Mormon Elephant in the Room by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Schhhh. Right now DAs are afraid to raise the argument. Don't cheese it.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
    4. Re:The Mormon Elephant in the Room by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      Who'd have thought that the unreasonable fear of "eeeek, icky pron!" would actually do some good?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  18. just like slashdot by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Quick! Hide all the posts you don't agree with! Ban all users with dissenting opinions!

  19. This is great! by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

    I want to be able to watch television with all the bad dialogue, stupid plots and idiotic characters filtered out.

    --
    You are welcome on my lawn.
    1. Re:This is great! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They have a Jar-Jar filter for Episode One. That alone makes the service worthwhile.

    2. Re:This is great! by Opportunist · · Score: 1

      So ... you don't want to watch TV?

      --
      We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  20. Test by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I'd like to see them filter out the nudity and sexiness out of Cassette Girl. In the end there will only be a few seconds of video left.

  21. Scarface? by matbury6017 · · Score: 1

    Has anyone tried watching Brian de Palma's Scarface through VidAngel? Any other films you think would be fun to watch through their censorship service?

    1. Re:Scarface? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

      Bad Lieutenant. The first one; Harvey Keitel. Most realistic cop movie ever made BTW. Get the unrated director's cut for unfiltered, pitiful, cop depravity.

      --
      John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  22. It's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I ordered the version that filters out swearing and njiggers. It's just like watching TV in the 1960s.

    1. Re: It's excellent! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      What about Sammy Davis Jr?

  23. Metadata means cannot be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The official DVD standard had a 'branching' metadata option where alternative 'cuts' of a movie could be created in realtime using one set of video data.

    There is nothing to prevent a video player from combining perfectly legal non-IP infringing meta data describing a 'censorship' edit, and a movie itself- allowing the user to experience a 'censored' cut no matter how hard the studios rage. All modern media players have enough memory (for buffering) and processing power to do new edits in real-time.

    The audio can be 'blanked' at the moment of objectional language. Scenes removed or even blurring boxes applied to portions of a scene for less visual damage. The method would be similar to an external subtitle file- but unlike accurate subtitles which do infringe written/spoken IP- new edit data is in no sense a 'derived' or 'directly' infringing work.

    VidAngel merely needs a player that accepts the meta-data edit file, and an online resource of meta-data new edits. There is no reason DRM protection cannot still be in full play either. It is the user that will be triggering dynamic censorship of their own viewing, so studios really have to grow up and stop objecting.

    I'd never watch a censored anything- but since I properly understand Human Rights, I have zero issue with the idea of people wishing to censor their own input.

    1. Re:Metadata means cannot be stopped by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is exactly how the new service actually works. The stream comes from Amazon/Netflix, and they use their filter metadata to skip or mute. I know the stream comes directly from Amazon, because I had to turn off parental controls on amazon to get it to work.

  24. Wait, do I get that straight? by Opportunist · · Score: 1

    People move away from TV because networks butcher and cut movies so they can show them before watershed, turn to Netflix and Amazon to finally see them fully and then hire a company that does the same butchering that the TV networks did?

    If stupidity would squeak, some people would have to sleep in an oil can.

    --
    We used to have a Bill of Rights. Now, with the rights gone, all we have left is the bill.
  25. Phantom Edit? by HornWumpus · · Score: 1

    Watch everybody change their opinion...I'll type it in the body, less butthurt.

    Phantom Edit? Is fixing, to the extent it could be, a terrible SW move a public service or an outrage?

    --
    John McAfee 'It was like that time I hired that Bangkok prostitute; to do my taxes, while I fucked my accountant'
  26. Wow, it's fun to watch people squirm by sideslash · · Score: 2

    (Disclaimer: I sometimes watch R rated movies, I don't filter them. I "filter" some movies for my kids by totally disallowing them from watching them, not by use of VidAngel.)

    It is fascinating to see people commenting here who any other day of the week would be pirating movies off torrents, and today are full of righteous indignation when people watch films WHICH THEY HAVE THE LEGAL RIGHT TO WATCH, and apply a viewing filter to it.

    Also fascinating that this is supposedly a tech blog, and here we have people "hacking" movies and TV to suit themselves, and suddenly it's like "Oh noes!!! The evil TV content hackerz are doing bad things by buying something and then modifying it to suit their own tastes!!! If they don't use it exactly like I use it, then they are bad people!!!" (Am I wrong here? Nope, I'm not wrong.)

    Seriously, step outside your own shoes, take a look at yourselves -- and laugh. (I'm certainly laughing at you.) Then maybe consider chilling and adopting a more libertarian view here instead of this Puritanism that wants to force a particular worldview on other people -- in this case, forcing people to consume media with strong language/violence/nudity.

  27. Getting away from these freaks is why I use NF by EmperorOfCanada · · Score: 1

    These losers have been imposing their will through advertisers and whatnot for decades. One of the huge benefits of using Netflix is that they don't appear to give a flying F to these "Moral Majority" freaks.

    When are we going to finally start taxing religions and make these people dry up and blow away?

    1. Re: Getting away from these freaks is why I use NF by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Maybe after we repeal the first amendment.

  28. Re:Filter in by lgw · · Score: 1

    Yet they don't respect creative freedom or intellectual property of others.

    They in no way limit the ability of other to create. The creators get paid the same, either way. The "creators vision" of the show still exists. All is good.

    Some viewers just want to see Han shoot first regardless what the creator wants, and that's their right.

    --
    Socialism: a lie told by totalitarians and believed by fools.
  29. Filters by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If filtering is illegal, then this blog better not filter this fucking comment or I'll sue them too!

  30. Re:Filter in by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "True" or total democracy is not very compatible with the idea that ownership defines saying and merit defines the weight of the saying.This is not anarchism or utopian communism, after all.

    but most people just want to have a sense of input to outcomes (which most voters don't actually have now).

    This is what the people have if an existing component of the international environmental agreements is implemented relating to the use of environment, i.a. zoning and development. Participation of the relevant people and organizations is part of the "good governance" in general.

  31. There's a market by Rastl · · Score: 1

    Personally I think VidAngel needs to die a quick and painful death as a company. Their self-righteous attitude of deciding what is socially acceptable is quite frankly unacceptable to me. But enough about that.

    How will content streamers like Netflix and Amazon take to having a company sit on top of their services and filter content? I think the answer is "not well". This isn't a DVR situation where people can choose to skip parts of the content. It's a third party editing and filtering their content for commercial purposes.

    The other side of this coin is Reader's Digest Condensed Books. Those were/are legal and are derivatives of the original works. Cliff's Notes are another one. I would be interested to know if they pay for the ability to sell modified copies or if they're different enough that they are exempt. But it's the same concept - the edit the content.

    1. Re:There's a market by Whorhay · · Score: 1

      It would seem that you are unfamiliar with how VidAngel actually works. As a user you pick which filters are used. The list of options includes a variety of profanities, nudity of varying levels, violence and gore, and of all things starting and ending credits. Or at least that is how it has been described to me by users of the service. It would seem that as a user there is a huge variety in what you can choose to filter, or not. They essentially let you preprogram the viewing of a movie or show such that you don't have to fiddle with the remote to skip content you don't want to see. So yes, it is essentially a DVR situation where people are skipping parts they've decided not to view.