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#121 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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#122 | |
Wizard
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Last edited by stonetools; 06-30-2012 at 09:06 PM. |
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#123 |
Grand Sorcerer
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I think there are three reasons:
-- Tried and failed with SOPA, as already noted by Stonetools -- Advertisers don't directly choose which sites their banner ads will appear on. -- Same reason no one is going after people who have admitted to piracy on this web site (we could argue over what that reason is; I'm just saying that, whatever the reasons are for prosecuting neither advertisers nor individual downloaders, those reasons overlap) See: Advertisers pledge not to support 'rogue' pirate sites Last edited by SteveEisenberg; 06-30-2012 at 09:06 PM. |
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#124 |
Wizard
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Nope, there are legit uses for torrents. Unfortunately, it seems that the illegit uses of the technology has vastly outpaced the legitimate use. I wish it weren't so, but here we are.
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#125 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Won't stop the public domain, either... Won't stop somebody camcordering a DVD, at home... Shall I go on? |
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#126 | ||
Wizard
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The purpose of enforcing anti piracy laws is not to eradicate piracy: it is to suppress it to a low enough level so that it doesn't crowd out innovation and legitimate business activity. The Trichordist website has testimonies from artists who have just given up on creating new art because its not worth it to any longer because of piracy and file-sharing. One artist writes: Quote:
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#127 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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Piracy is not merely a some organized group of criminals, but everybody with a computer is a potential criminal. They have the means to pirate. And I don't mean internet access, I mean a computer. All computers have permanent storage, and any permanent storage can be used for piracy. And will be. And nothing short of a police state or destroying all the computers will stop it. And your task is to figure out how to make people pay for something they've been receiving free all their lives, and can create privately themselves for nearly free. Because that is what you're demanding. Your system is based on the (now obsolete) fact that people couldn't create their own copy of I.P. easily and cheaply. And that world is gone. It isn't coming back. And some of the leading large producer have started basing their models on this new reality. And that's why SOPA failed. The people that have moved on are now as powerful politically as those attached to the old reality. |
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#128 | |
Nameless Being
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Copying a file from a friend is an example of the former. But that has been happening for quite some time. Copying an audio cassette or a video tape is an example that predates (most people's use of) computers. Photocopiers fall in that realm too. Going to a website or a peer-to-peer network though is a different story. A lot of that is organized by people who have the intent to copy material on a massive scale and for profit. That sort of thing happened in the past too. So nothing is really new here. Well, one thing is new. Law enforcement has had trouble keeping up with the Internet. In the beginning, they didn't handle it properly. It was probably a matter of scale and technical competence in the beginning, which didn't help matters. But even once they got over those issues they were dealing with a bigger problem: crimes that could once be handled locally now had an international element. Sometimes they couldn't reach the people facilitating these activities, or it was a tediously long process if they did. Couple that with proactive civil rights movements which suddenly considered copyright infringement a speech issue, and enforcement because a big issue. I would argue that this lead to another consequence: there was a cultural shift because the anonymity of the internet and the lack of effective enforcement gave people the perception that copyright infringement was okay. And that, I would suggest, is the real cat that got out of the bag. Computers and the internet have very little to do with copyright infringement other than being a tool -- one tool among many. |
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#129 | |||
Wizard
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I'll outsource this one to the Cynical Musician: Quote:
There is zero reason, technologically, why the Internet cannot be set up to the protect rights holders. It is a matter of historical accident why the Internet is set up as it is, and why the law is as inadequate as it is. Both can be fixed. David Lowery again: Quote:
IOW, there are ways to set up the Internet to prevent large scale violation of artist's rights. All it takes is brains and the will. No scheme will be perfect but then perfection is not of this world. It just has to be better than the current system. Last edited by stonetools; 06-30-2012 at 11:31 PM. |
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#130 | ||
Treachery of images ...
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Removing an author's details, or denying their existence, is not an issue under contention in this thread. |
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#131 | |
Treachery of images ...
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I've been the first user of a new library book (on numerous occasions), and I've purchased paper books and ebooks some of which may have been loaned or sold on. So, if the original ebook was passed on and then deleted it doesn't fit your scenario. PS: thank you for the link!! ![]() |
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#132 | |
Guru
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*Interestingly enough I met for lunch with some in-law relations who were passing through the airport today. A retired university professor and a retired Headmistress of a girls boarding school. Fairly conservative, solid middle England. Both were incandescent about the Richard O'Dwyer extradition case and the state of US/UK legal balance in general. This could generate a reaction similar to ACTA. The US as a country, not necessarily its people, is about as unpopular in the world as I can ever recall, partly as a result of attitudes and actions like this one. I don't think I would rely on future US hegemony too much. |
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#133 | |
Treachery of images ...
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Here is an Australian example: For example: ------------------------ Until 1 January 2005, copyright generally lasted for the life of the relevant creator plus 50 years. There were various exceptions to this rule, including: • where a work was not published, performed or broadcast during a creatorʼs lifetime; and • where something was published anonymously or under a pseudonym, and the identity of the creator couldnʼt reasonably be ascertained. (In each of these cases, copyright lasted for 50 years from the end of the year the work was, with permission, first published, performed or broadcast.) Under the Free Trade Agreement with the United States, Australia agreed to extend the general duration of copyright. As a result, the rules now are that copyright generally lasts for the life of the creator plus 70 years and where duration depends on year of publication, it lasts until 70 years after it is first published. The Free Trade Agreement did not, however, include any obligation to revive copyright if copyright had already expired. This means that if, under the old rules, copyright had already expired by 1 January 2005, it stays expired and the material can be used freely under Australian law. http://www.copyright.org.au/find-an-answer/ --------------------- Pharmaceuticals is another area where the US Gov't was particularly blatant in its attempts to get us to enshrine their ideology. Thank heavens they failed!!! PS I did mention aspects of this in an earlier post in this thread, but I've included the actual proof statements in this post. Last edited by Lynx-lynx; 07-01-2012 at 06:28 AM. |
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#134 | |
Grand Sorcerer
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So if loosing any money is irrelevant and the true argument is that it is illegal then that is the argument that should be used and it is a bit dishonest to use the emotive argument about loosing money when that argument is broken. |
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#135 |
Guru
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Australia is not the only country they've tried to bully, Canada and the UK have seen the ugly side of US dominated agreements as well, and these are the people who fought beside the US in Afghanistan and Iraq! It's mostly driven by the lobby groups, but it's the country that gets a bad name. US economic power is going to decline drastically in the next 20 years. It will be interesting to see how many "friends and allies" they'll be able to bully then. Or for that matter, how many friends and allies are left.
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