"It's smash and grab, no different than a guy walking down Fifth Avenue and smashing the window at Tiffany's and reaching in and grabbing what's in the window." -- U.S. VP Joe BidenWhile they may never be able to truly defeat piracy and drive it from the lurking depths of the internet, copyright protection attack-dog organizations like the RIAA and MPAA have long dreamed of the day when they would no longer have to pay for their own copyright enforcement. Now that dream is on the verge of coming true, thanks to the Obama administration.After countless lobbyist dollars from the music and film industry and a brief "public review", the administration rolled out its vision to fight piracy yesterday afternoon. U.S. Vice President Joe Biden -- whose blunt speech has sometime left him in trouble -- did not mince words.He states, "This is theft, clear and simple. It's smash and grab, no different than a guy walking down Fifth Avenue and smashing the window at Tiffany's and reaching in and grabbing what's in the window."The sound-byte comparing downloads to stealing jewels from New York City's finest jeweler quickly lit up the web. Bob Pisano, interim chief executive officer at the Motion Picture Association of America praised the VP, "It is especially critical that the United States has an effective framework for protecting creative content online and enforcing intellectual property rights in the digital environment."According to the Obama administration, the RIAA, and MPAA, the world economy is pretty much doomed if we don't start prosecuting pirates at home and abroad. Without such a crackdown, businesses will go bankrupt the coalition argues. Biden states, "Piracy hurts, it hurts our economy."Interestingly, the statements seem to fly in the face of a recent Government Accountability Office study released to U.S. Congress earlier this year, which concluded that there is virtually no evidence for the claimed million dollar losses by the entertainment industry. That study suggested that piracy could even benefit the economy.Another noteworthy study from three years back notes that virtually every citizen violates intellectual property laws in some way on a daily basis.The White House press release was full of buzz phrases, but short on details. It did however indicate that the U.S. government may increasingly monitor filesharing networks and BitTorrent sites and assist media groups in their prosecution/threat letter efforts. It speaks of improved "law enforcement efforts at the Federal, state and local level."The biggest effort, though, will be devoted to cracking down on piracy websites in the U.S. and overseas. The administration was short on details of how exactly it would convince piracy-loving nations like China to change their ways, but it did say it would try to do so by "being as public as we possibly can" about infringement.The press release states, "As we shine the spotlight on foreign governments that have rogue actors doing illicit business within their borders, it's the government's responsibility to respond."Such efforts have shown mild success. After lots of threats against the Swedish government by the U.S., the European Union nation finally tried the site's admins last year and found them guilty. The trial was later exposed to be a perversion of the justice system, with the judge who gave the verdict have multiple ties to copyright protection organizations. The verdict -- $3M USD in damages and a year of hard prison time for the admins -- is currently being appealed.The White House's vision is perhaps a prelude to the Anti-Counterfeiting Trade Agreement, which will go before Congress later this year. The bill would make P2P or BitTorrent client development a criminal offense if the distributed software was used for infringement. It also implements an interesting provision called "imminent infringement", which allows the government to charge people who they think might be about to infringe with a civil offense (for example if you searched "torrent daft punk"). This is among the first official "thought crime" provisions to be proposed by the U.S. government. The bill also makes it a criminal offense to bypass DRM.Ultimately, it should be interesting to see how American taxpayers react to President Obama's decision to spend their money on efforts to prosecute them and try to choke out piracy at home and abroad, particularly when the current evidence is inconclusive of its effects. One thing's for sure, though. Top politicians on both sides of the aisle are firmly behind the music and movie industry anti-piracy and money-collection efforts.http://www.dailytech.com/article.aspx?newsid=18815------------Fuck that shit. I bolded the especially dangerous part, which basically prosecutes thought crimes.I'm not sure what they're thinking with this mess, especially since there are much worse problems in this country than "the woes of the music and record industry." I guess it proves that massive lobbying for your cause really does work, and the policy changes always benefit those with the most money.
6/23/2010 1:28:07 PM
This is ridiculous. Obama's administration is taking the losing side on this one, and will end up on the wrong side of history.Freedom of information and the ease of its spread are directly tied to progress in culture, science, education, art, etc. Capitalists can't make a cut off of it and so they bring in their 2nd favorite butt boys, the Democrats, to save the day.This should be evidence to Republicans that Democrats are not the filthy socialists they make them out to be and are just as invested in the interests of capital as Republicans.
6/23/2010 1:35:02 PM
Haven't there been court cases that dealt with DRM and how it applies to purchased materials?
6/23/2010 1:46:48 PM
This is totally absurd and wildly dangerous.
6/23/2010 1:50:35 PM
6/23/2010 1:55:23 PM
^ Capital gets its way.
6/23/2010 1:57:13 PM
^^Well yeah, I'm just talking about the big picture.^Sure, which isn't necessarily bad. The thing is, information isn't really capital. We just treat it that way and pretend it somehow "magically" becomes actual property.
6/23/2010 2:00:50 PM
6/23/2010 2:01:30 PM
I mean, I'm all for rights-holders protecting things that they created and have ownership over, but there's a clear attempt to shift the burden of protection on to the shoulders of the consumer of said content. If I'm doing something illegal with a purchased copy, yes, I should get prosecuted. But that's not happening to the majority of customers that are being saddled with restrictive DRM.
6/23/2010 2:03:27 PM
when you steal a CD from sam goody's, you get a ticket, and the cops drive you home to speak to your parents.you download ke$ha, and you get gang raped by the record industry.yeah, it's a smash-and-grab alright.
6/23/2010 2:14:55 PM
Not that I agree with extreme anti-piracy methods,
6/23/2010 2:20:58 PM
6/23/2010 2:23:40 PM
Honestly, I have lost 'most' sympathy for people who are downloading copyrighted materials... I use to be on the side of the downloaders, because the industry was doing such a good job of holding up progress (being able to pay for a music file). But there are numerous methods for you to download these things now legally. The fact that you either dont have the money to pay for the items or dont want to spend money for the items isnt a good argument.My comments are directed toward the people downloading movies and music online illegally, only.
6/23/2010 2:25:08 PM
here's my thing:i download music that i would never, ever buy. like, on a whim, i'll download a song that i only intend to listen to once to fulfill my immediate desire for satisfaction. i still buy music from artists i enjoy. so making it illegal isn't going to make me buy any more than i already do, it's just going to stymie the growth of my music library a little. i don't think i'm alone on this. i really don't think the record industry is going to see a spike in growth because of this, should it go through.
6/23/2010 2:29:50 PM
these are the politicians that YOU PEOPLE voted for
6/23/2010 2:30:13 PM
6/23/2010 2:32:01 PM
6/23/2010 2:32:19 PM
mls... Even if I believe your argument in whole, that you never download music that you listen to regularly, thats not going to be the case for most.I also believe there are services that allow you to download music on a subscription basis, not per file, which would allow you to operate within the letter of the law.
6/23/2010 2:33:47 PM
6/23/2010 2:35:17 PM
^^^do you want to be shot in the heart, or stabbed in the heart? neither? fuck you, choose one]
6/23/2010 2:35:43 PM
6/23/2010 2:38:28 PM
6/23/2010 2:39:24 PM
^^or choose one, and still get fucked in the assanyway though, i'm getting off topic]
6/23/2010 2:40:53 PM
haha, this won't fly
6/23/2010 2:42:49 PM
6/23/2010 2:44:30 PM
6/23/2010 2:46:24 PM
^^which brings me back to my point. the punishment doesn't fit the crime. you wouldn't imprison a jay-walker, would you? if a stolen CD from your local store is worth $15, and if it's truly a smash-and-grab, the punishment should be commensurate with the crime. if you're stealing a cd by Ace of Base, you shouldn't be stuck with the bill equal to the defecit of haiti.record industry's are hurting because of their inability to respond to evolving market demands and their stubborn desire to hold on to a dying business model. i don't exactly weep for them. sooner or later, artists are going to learn that it will be more cost-effective for them to distribute their music for free/very cheap on their own websites (or some other medium), completely bi-passing the record industry. i hope this happens[Edited on June 23, 2010 at 3:00 PM. Reason : ]
6/23/2010 2:46:43 PM
Digital piracy doesn't just affect the record industry. It affects all forms of media and information: software companies, newspapers, book authors/publishers, pay-to-view websites, the film industry, etc. Anything that can be converted to digial media and sold, from a professor's algebra lesson to the repair manual for a 1988 Ford Taurus. I have definitely pirated hundreds of dollars worth intellectual property from small businesses and even private citizens.
6/23/2010 3:22:05 PM
^^ Exactly how I feel. It's going to be one person with talent that goes viral and collects 100% of their profit by distributing their music online or through their own label.After that, it will be a no brainer to promote your own music online.
6/23/2010 3:38:12 PM
6/23/2010 3:45:14 PM
Digital piracy makes my job hundreds of times cheaper and hundreds of times faster. Fuck publishers.
6/23/2010 3:46:18 PM
This bill scares the fuck out of me, for all of the reasons listed above.
6/23/2010 3:46:31 PM
6/23/2010 3:46:59 PM
6/23/2010 3:53:48 PM
If lawyers only worked for free, then that might work...
6/23/2010 4:00:16 PM
Any way you cut it, these blanket lawsuits are nothing short of extortion.
6/23/2010 4:01:28 PM
if you steal actual property of equal value, you pay $100 in court fees and have to clean up the highway for a week. they're stealing songs, not diamonds.
6/23/2010 4:03:32 PM
6/23/2010 4:05:25 PM
So, they have to hire investigators to find out who is sharing and downloading their content, then they have to hire lawyers to find you and file a lawsuit, and they are only entitled to $20?It doesnt work that way.
6/23/2010 4:26:44 PM
6/23/2010 4:39:41 PM
6/23/2010 4:40:43 PM
d357r0y3r:Is your political science concentration on communism or something?
6/23/2010 4:43:26 PM
If you think I was endorsing communism with any of that, you either didn't understand what I said or don't understand what communism is.
6/23/2010 4:46:41 PM
This isn't just about music. Musicians can make decent money from tours and shows.How do high production value movies and video games survive a free information society?[Edited on June 23, 2010 at 5:00 PM. Reason : ]
6/23/2010 5:00:42 PM
Seriously fuck the knowledge pimps that pad their pockets by restricting the flow of free information in the sciences.
6/23/2010 5:01:21 PM
6/23/2010 5:07:36 PM
I'm confused. From what I can tell, we are bigger consumers of legitimate media than ever. Thirty years ago, nobody was all aglow under the Christmas tree unwrapping season one of Simon & Simon. But we are now, and I don't mean season one of 30 Rock...I mean, we're actually buying fucking Simon & Simon...paying money for it...I think they need to count their blessings.
6/23/2010 5:09:18 PM
6/23/2010 5:09:29 PM
The point is that the consumer determines the value of an item by purchasing it or not purchasing it. Not by deciding to have it without purchasing it.The only argument that could possibly be made here is destroyers: that songs are not "things". I don't agree with it since songs have the definition of non-conceptual things.
6/23/2010 5:13:09 PM
People need to stop viewing "providing capital" as "providing innovation". Just because some guy shuffles currency to a project he thinks is going to generate revenue for him doesn't make him anything other than an unnecessary middleman.
6/23/2010 5:15:23 PM