loquasagacious
NCAP Mooderator
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- HSC
- 2004
Net pirates face three-strikes rule
Practically speaking there are also big issues as the MPAA/RIAA/ARIA etc rely on uploading files to identify downloaders - as a result there is software in place to automatically avoid downloading from known 'industry' uploaders. And the emergence of closed pirate communities.
Ultimately though the industry has moved too slow and is stuck playing catch up. The internet has fundamentally changed the environment that the industry operates in. If they had recognised this early and sold content online then maybe they wouldn't be in this mess - however they didn't and free pirate content emerged and proliferated.
While piracy was isolated to early adopters the industry might have been able to quash it in this way but now it has gone mainstream. It's not just 'nerds' who spend their lives attached to computers who are downloading pirated material it's regular everyday people. Routers and external harddrives routinely come with bitorrent clients.
The masses have come to expect free content and they won't be pryed away by flawed and arbitrary enforcement methods.
Cost differenting business models will not work because you can't beat free. The only avenue is to compete on quality. The success stories of course being iTunes and Steam which make high quality content easily available through a user-friendly and well integrated interface.
Any other thoughts on the issue?
Must admit that I'm curious as to where the libertarians stand on piracy - afterall their philosophy would seem to be based on concepts of ownership and contracts which piracy would seem to violate?
Asher Moses in smh said:People who are caught repeatedly downloading movies, music and TV shows illegally would have their internet disconnected under legislative changes being considered by the Federal Government....
Makes for an interesting development, as Vaile identifies there are obvious and serious issues due to the lack of judicial oversight and the presumption of guilt.Asher Moses in smh said:....David Vaile, executive director of the UNSW Cyberspace Law and Policy Centre, raised serious issues with the proposal, such as that customers could be disconnected following mere allegations of copyright infringement by the content owners without having been found guilty of an offence by the courts.
Practically speaking there are also big issues as the MPAA/RIAA/ARIA etc rely on uploading files to identify downloaders - as a result there is software in place to automatically avoid downloading from known 'industry' uploaders. And the emergence of closed pirate communities.
Ultimately though the industry has moved too slow and is stuck playing catch up. The internet has fundamentally changed the environment that the industry operates in. If they had recognised this early and sold content online then maybe they wouldn't be in this mess - however they didn't and free pirate content emerged and proliferated.
While piracy was isolated to early adopters the industry might have been able to quash it in this way but now it has gone mainstream. It's not just 'nerds' who spend their lives attached to computers who are downloading pirated material it's regular everyday people. Routers and external harddrives routinely come with bitorrent clients.
The masses have come to expect free content and they won't be pryed away by flawed and arbitrary enforcement methods.
Cost differenting business models will not work because you can't beat free. The only avenue is to compete on quality. The success stories of course being iTunes and Steam which make high quality content easily available through a user-friendly and well integrated interface.
Any other thoughts on the issue?
Must admit that I'm curious as to where the libertarians stand on piracy - afterall their philosophy would seem to be based on concepts of ownership and contracts which piracy would seem to violate?