industryterm:online piracy

  • Censoring The Pirate Bay is Futile, ISPs Reveal | TorrentFreak
    http://torrentfreak.com/censoring-the-pirate-bay-is-futile-isps-reveal-120711

    Courts all around the world have ordered Internet providers to block subscriber access to the torrent site, and more are expected to follow.

    The idea behind these blockades is that they will help to decrease online piracy. However, more and more evidence is appearing that suggests that this aim is not being fulfilled. In fact, the blocking attempts may actually be having the opposite effect.

  • Shareable: Don’t Believe the Hype: The Entertainment Industry is Growing, But...
    http://www.shareable.net/blog/dont-believe-the-hype-the-entertainment-industry-is-growing

    The entertainment industry is contracting, large media conglomerates claim. Online piracy is starving the long-beleaguered artist, whether their medium is music, film, television, or books. It’s this sort of rhetoric that has catalyzed bills such as SOPA that ostensibly will save artists from the lives of privation threatened by piracy, deleterious side-effects to rest of the Internet be damned. It’s been a compelling pitch to lawmakers and pundits, regaled no doubt with nightmare scenarios in which Dr. Dre and Jimmy Iovine are forced to downsize from Cristal to Bollinger. Conversely, this could all be bullshit, a myth propagated by legacy media corporations resistant to change who have bent the ears and pocketbooks of credulous lawmakers and pundits.

    In light of such doomsaying, Mike Masnick’s study and infographic at Techdirt The Sky Is Rising: The Entertainment Industry Is Large & Growing… Not Shrinking is refreshing. His research puts the lie to big media’s faulty case and suggests that the push for SOPA and related bills is indeed driven more by bullshit, incompetence and special interests than a clear and present danger to creators.

    Some key takeaways from Masnick’s research, and Techdirt’s infographic:

    • Entertainment spending as a function of income went up by 15% from 2000 to 2008
    • Employment in the entertainment sector grew by 20% – with indie artists seeing 43% growth.
    • The overall entertainment industry grew 66% from 1998 to 2010.
    • The amount of content being produced in music, movies, books and video games is growing at an incredible pace.

  • SOPA Is Dead: Smith Pulls Bill
    http://mashable.com/2012/01/20/sopa-is-dead-smith-pulls-bill

    Lamar Smith, the chief sponsor of SOPA, said on Friday that he is pulling the bill “until there is wider agreement on a solution.”

    “I have heard from the critics and I take seriously their concerns regarding proposed legislation to address the problem of online piracy,” Smith (R-Texas) said. “It is clear that we need to revisit the approach on how best to address the problem of foreign thieves that steal and sell American inventions and products.”

    Smith also released the following statement on Friday:

    “We need to revisit the approach on how best to address the problem of foreign thieves that steal and sell American inventions and products. “The problem of online piracy is too big to ignore. American intellectual property industries provide 19 million high-paying jobs and account for more than 60% of U.S. exports. The theft of America’s intellectual property costs the U.S. economy more than $100 billion annually and results in the loss of thousands of American jobs. Congress cannot stand by and do nothing while American innovators and job creators are under attack.”

    try again

  • The SOPA Protest

    It’s rare when the entire Internet industry rises up with one voice. Perhaps that’s why the protest against the House of Representatives’ Stop Online Piracy Act and its Senate counterpart, the Protect Intellectual Property Act (PIPA), is getting so much attention. In policy circles, usually one segment of the online industry is jockeying for favorable position against another. Today, with Wikipedia dark, Google taped over, and a host of other sites large and small raising awareness through home page notices, New Media is drawing its line in the sand against the most astounding government overreach into Internet regulation to date.

    The bills amount to good intentions gone awry. True, sites that sell brand-name counterfeits and offer illegal downloads are easy to find and no honest user advocates intellectual property theft. But SOPA and PIPA are extremely coercive and heavy-handed, and as both bills have percolated up through the legislative process, opposition has steadily mounted. There have even been outright turnarounds. The Business Software Alliance, a strong supporter of antipiracy measures and an initial backer of SOPA, reversed its position upon examining the bill.

    SOPA and PIPA essentially place responsibility-and cost-of policing the Web for IP violations on the shoulders of Web site owners through an electronic version of prior restraint. The law would require Internet service providers (ISPs) to take steps to prevent their customers’ web browsers from connecting to alleged pirating site. Search engines like Google would have to scrub alleged pirating sites from their search results, or else disable links to them. Web advertising delivery systems would be required to block distribution of banners and links. Finally, sites which revolve around user-generated content, such as Facebook and Wikipedia, would be liable for any pirated content or link posted by any one of their millions of visitors.

    http://techliberation.com/2012/01/18/the-sopa-protest

  • The Pirate Bay is immune to SOPA | ExtremeTech

    Over on Techdirt, Mike Masnick has pointed out the mother of all ironies: The Pirate Bay, one of the largest outlets of copyright infringement, would be immune to the takedown tendrils of the imminently incoming Stop Online Piracy Act (SOPA).

    Apparently it all comes down to the fact that The Pirate Bay has a .org domain — and according to Masnick, the current version of the SOPA bill working its way through congress excludes American domestic domains from being the target of takedown notices from copyright holders. In this case, a “domestic domain” is any domain that comes from a TLD run by an American registry — and sure enough, .org’s registry is Public Interest Registry, a US non-profit based in Virginia. In other words, thepiratebay.org isn’t eligible for a SOPA-based takedown, even if its servers are based in Sweden or another country outside the US.

    http://www.extremetech.com/computing/113275-the-pirate-bay-is-immune-to-sopa

  • Tim O’Reilly - Google+ - I was pleased to see the measured tone of the White House…
    https://plus.google.com/u/0/107033731246200681024/posts/BEDukdz2B1r

    I was pleased to see the measured tone of the White House response to the citizen petition about #SOPA and #PIPA

    https://wwws.whitehouse.gov/petitions#/!/response/combating-online-piracy-while-protecting-open-and-innovative-intern

    and yet I found myself profoundly disturbed by something that seems to me to go to the root of the problem in Washington: the failure to correctly diagnose the problem we are trying to solve, but instead to accept, seemingly uncritically, the claims of various interest groups. The offending paragraph is as follows:

    “Let us be clear—online piracy is a real problem that harms the American economy, and threatens jobs for significant numbers of middle class workers and hurts some of our nation’s most creative and innovative companies and entrepreneurs. It harms everyone from struggling artists to production crews, and from startup social media companies to large movie studios. While we are strongly committed to the vigorous enforcement of intellectual property rights, existing tools are not strong enough to root out the worst online pirates beyond our borders.”

    In the entire discussion, I’ve seen no discussion of credible evidence of this economic harm. There’s no question in my mind that piracy exists, that people around the world are enjoying creative content without paying for it, and even that some criminals are profiting by redistributing it. But is there actual economic harm?

    In my experience at O’Reilly, the losses due to piracy are far outweighed by the benefits of the free flow of information, which makes the world richer, and develops new markets for legitimate content. Most of the people who are downloading unauthorized copies of O’Reilly books would never have paid us for them anyway; meanwhile, hundreds of thousands of others are buying content from us, many of them in countries that we were never able to do business with when our products were not available in digital form.

    History shows us, again and again, that frontiers are lawless places, but that as they get richer and more settled, they join in the rule of law. American publishing, now the largest publishing industry in the world, began with piracy. (I have a post coming on that subject on Monday.)

    Congress (and the White House) need to spend time thinking hard about how best to grow our economy - and that means being careful not to close off the frontier, or to harm those trying to settle it, in order to protect those who want to remain safe at home. British publishers could have come to America in the 19th century; they chose not to, and as a result, we grew our own indigenous publishing industry, which relied at first, in no small part, on pirating British and European works.

    If the goal is really to support jobs and the American economy, internet “protectionism” is not the way to do it.

    It is said (though I’ve not found the source) that Einstein once remarked that if given 60 minutes to save the world, he would spend 55 of them defining the problem. And defining the problem means collecting and studying real evidence, not the overblown claims of an industry that has fought the introduction of every new technology that has turned out, in the end, to grow their business rather than threaten it.

    P.S. If Congress and the White House really want to fight pirates who are hurting the economy, they should be working to rein in patent trolls. There, the evidence of economic harm is clear, in multi-billion dollar transfers of wealth from companies building real products to those who have learned how to work the patent system while producing no value for consumers.

    P. P.S. See also my previous piece on the subject of doing an independent investigation of the facts rather than just listening to the appeals of lobbyists, https://plus.google.com/107033731246200681024/posts/5Xd3VjFR8gx

  • SOPA Sponsor Has Copyright Problems of His Own
    http://mashable.com/2012/01/12/sopa-sponsor

    The controversial SOPA bill is designed to combat online piracy and copyright violations. But now it turns out the bill’s author and main sponsor, Texas Rep. Lamar Smith, has some copyright problems of his own.

    Vice’s Jamie Lee Curtis Taete did some investigative research into whether Smith’s own campaign site was copyright Kosher. The photographic agency which produced the images used on Smith’s current site told Taete it was “very difficult” for them to check if Smith has the rights to use those photos.

    So Taete did some more digging, looking at older archived versions of Smith’s campaign website. One former version of the representative’s site used a picture of an idyllic backwoods scene which Taete traced to a photographer named DJ Schulte:

    je ris !!!

  • Battle for Internet Freedom Pits Hollywood vs. Silicon Valley - Business - GOOD
    http://www.good.is/post/battle-for-internet-freedom-pits-hollywood-vs-silicon-valley

    Users logging into the popular micro-blogging platform Tumblr last Wednesday found every post in their feed had been “blacked out” in protest of the Stop Online Piracy Act. Tumblr took the unusual step to inspire its vast user base to lobby against the pending legislation: American users were encouraged to read some anti-SOPA talking points and then be connected directly with their member of Congress. Tumblr says 87,834 of its users did so.

  • How the Internet Evolves to Overcome Censorship | Techland | TIME.com
    http://techland.time.com/2011/11/21/how-the-internet-evolves-to-overcome-censorship

    Last week’s congressional hearing on the Stop Online Piracy Act, or SOPA, drew attention to the fact that Congress has it within its power to censor the Internet. Dozens of sites across the web blacked-out their logos in opposition to the bill. Social blogging service Tumblr took it farther, redacting all content on its users’ dashboards and asking them to phone their members of Congress, resulting in over 87,000 calls.

  • Stop the Stop Online Piracy Act !
    http://techliberation.com/2011/11/01/stop-the-stop-online-piracy-act

    I have a long analysis and commentary on the “Stop Online Piracy Act,” introduced last week in the House. The bill is advertised as the House’s version of the Senate’s Protect-IP Act, which was voted out of Committee in May.

    ....

    Two good things I found in the 79-page draft:

    1. The failure of Protect-IP to define “nonauthoritative domain name server” has been addressed. That term is now defined, and the definition looks correct to me.

    2. SOPA recognizes, at least, the better approach to solving the problem of foreign websites that blatantly violate copyright and trademark. Near the back, Section 205 calls on the State and Commerce Departments to make enforcement of existing international law and treaties regarding information products and services a priority. This includes the assignment of new attaches dedicated to information products.

    Would that SOPA started and ended with this provision, there would be little basis to fault its drafters. If the problem SOPA is attempting to solve, after all, is the scourge or foreign websites that distribute movies, music, and counterfeit goods without a license (often pretending to be legitimate), then surely the solution is one of foreign and trade policy and not micromanaging Internet protocols.

    Instead, we have a bill that treats all U.S. consumers as guilty until proven innocent, and hands Hollywood the keys to the inner workings of the Internet. Just what they’ve always wanted.