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MPAA cam

MPAA cam 06/17/2005 05:09 PM

Mpaacam-1
Photo of camera
by Jeff Koga
The Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) is paying the Los Angeles police department to install cameras to crack down on DVD bootleggers. So far four cameras have been installed and six more are on the way. Although the LAPD refuses to say where the cameras are installed, but there is information on Xeni's post on Boing Boing. The post also contains funny details of their adventure.

I hadn't realized that there was DVD piracy activity in LA. I wonder how much "lost revenue" they will recoup from these cameras. I wonder what else the LAPD going to use these cameras for. Having said that, I think we probably have more cameras per square inch in Tokyo than in LA. Welcome to our world.

Xeni has filed a story with Wired News about this as well.

UPDATE:

Xeni
Hi, Joi -- Sean Bonner created some topographical maps of the site, and posted those along with more photos and his first-person account over at blogging.la. Check it out:
http: //blogging.la/archives/2005/06/sekret_location.phtml
< br />

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Be your own MPAA


Be your own MPAA 05/06/2004 12:16 AM
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Oh, Sure, Now The MPAA Settles With 321


Oh, Sure, Now The MPAA Settles With 321 08/10/2004 01:58 PM
Sometimes you wonder why they even bothered. After completely stompin g 321 Software out of business by saddling them with lawsuits claiming their useful software was a tool of pirates, rather than for backing up what people legally owned, now the MPAA announces that they've "settled" with the company. Seems like a Michael Corleone-style settlement. Meanwhile, Jack Valenti gets in a bogus quote about how this shows that there's no leniency for breaking copyright laws. Of course, there's never been any proof that anyone using 321's software broke copyright laws - which is something 321 showed by offerin g a $10,000 reward for anyone who could find a "pirated" DVD made using 321's software.

Debunking the MPAA


Debunking the MPAA 06/05/2005 11:24 PM

BitTorrent Facilitating Illegal File Swapping of Star Wars On Day of Opening

“Statement by MPAA President Dan Glickman

Washington, D.C. - - Responding to news reports today that BitTorrent is already facilitating the illegal file sharing of the final Star Wars episode, Revenge of the Sith which opens in theaters today, Motion Picture Association of America, Inc. (MPAA) President and CEO Dan Glickman made the following statement:

‘There is no better example of how theft dims the magic of the movies for everyone than this report today regarding BitTorrent providing users with illegal copies of Revenge of the Sith. The unfortunate fact is this type of theft happens on a regular basis on peer to peer networks all over the world.

Fans have been lined up for days to see Revenge of the Sith. To preserve the quality of movies for fans like these and so many others, we must stop these Internet thieves from illegally trading valuable copyrighted materials on-line.

If piracy and those who profit from it are allowed to flourish, they will erode an engine of economic growth and job creation; undermine legitimate businesses that strive to unite technology and content in innovative and legal ways and limit quality and consumer choice.’…

‘My message to illegal file swappers everywhere is plain and simple: You are stealing, it is wrong and you are not anonymous,’ said Glickman. ‘In short, you can click, but you can't hide. There are lots of ways to legally download our products through companies like CinemaNow, Movielink, Ruckus and others.’ ” [MPAA Press Release in Word document format only, via the Interesting People mailing list]

This statement would indeed be alarming, if it wasn’t for the fact that the original copy leaked onto BitTorrent was stolen by someone associated with the film and if “Revenge of the Sith” hadn’t made $50 million the first day alone. Glickman shoots himself in the foot by noting that the movie was pirated and yet “fans have been lined up for days to see” it. He wants to have his cake (fans lined up everywhere!) and eat it, too (but piracy “will erode an engine of economic growth and job creation”).

Explain to me again why Congress listens to him? Oh yeah - the money.

Hopefully they’ll cry wolf one too many times, and they and their record profits will be seen for what they really are – a successful business that needs no further legislation from our government. The legal business models Glickman refers are indeed working and with time, they will grow into a thriving business if they stop concentrating on disabling customer playback devices with overly-restrictive DRM and concentrate instead on producing a good product. Just like every other business out there.


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MPAA under new management


MPAA under new management 09/04/2004 05:11 PM

Techdirt has a great article with a lot of links to the message being put forth by Dan Glickman. He is yet another idiot in the food chain that does not understand today's technical based marketplace. As soon as they figure out how to satisfy consumers and assure fair use rights remain in place the better. I have no problem paying for content I just want it packaged in such a way that once I pay for it I never have to pay for it again ever.

Example I buy a DVD, I copy that DVD to my hard-drive, 5 years from now when I break that DVD I load that archived hard-drive and I burn a new copy for my viewing pleasure. Better yet I stream that video directly from my hard-drive to my wide screen TV.

How many cassettes do you own that you wished you could have a pristine copy of? I bet you all have a lot that went into the trash and then you re-purchased CD's of the same music? [Techdirt]


MPAA Gets New Top Paid Shill


MPAA Gets New Top Paid Shill 07/01/2004 03:41 PM
Well, it's not surprising (and it might barely be worth noting), but the MPAA has officially named Dan Glickman to replace Jack Valenti as their new top paid shill. Glickman, of course, says his number one goal is to "fight piracy," rather than, say, figuring out a way to embrace new technologies to help increase the movie industry's market. Not that something like that would ever happen. While the news reports note the fact that Glickman, the former USDA secretary, is a politician more than a Hollywood insider, that's not really that newsworthy. His job is to lobby, so of course they want a political insider. Besides, he isn't completely unknown in Hollywood. In the past he's lobbied for Disney and his son is a successful movie producer. Either way, it is, as everyone expected, more of the same.

Memo to the New Head of the MPAA


Memo to the New Head of the MPAA 01/06/2004 05:42 AM
Trading movies digitally still isn't easy, but Hollywood has a lot less time to act than it thinks. Here's some advice to help it avoid the fate of the music industry. By Wired magazine's Chris Anderson.

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A kinder, gentler MPAA 12/29/2003 12:12 PM
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New MPAA head is former Secty of
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RIAA and MPAA take lawsuits to Internet2


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There goes the neighborhood I personally think that by forcing this the FCC will essentially eliminate the fair use standard,...

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An interesting survey based project to try to answer the question of whether the cost of what the MPAA and RIAA does exceeds their forgone revenues to piracy.

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Cory Doctorow: Ernest Miller and Jason Schultz latch on to this great quote from MPAA hack Fritz Attaway:
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Jason's response:
[T]he quote reveals the MPAA approach to every problem: either pass laws to ban behavior or pass laws to ban technology. Innovation, ingenuity, competition -- those are for suckers. More laws and more lawsuits, that's the Hollywood way. Cut past the consumer and go straight to Congress. Oh well, at least they're finally being honest.
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Briefly: MPAA picks new chief lobbyist


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roundup Plus: Dell expands recycling grants...Viacom bids for SportsLine.com...Cisco to power Orange Wi-Fi upgrade...PalmOne spreads out Treo update.

Memo To The New Head Of The MPAA:
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Chris Anderson at Wired Magazine has written up an excellent memo to the new head of the MPAA, whoever that may be, outlining the strategy they should take to save the movie industry from falling down the same hole that the recording industry is now in. He makes perfectly reasonable suggestions, explaining that the technology is here to stay, but that people view movies in a different way than they do music. He also points out that, so far, all of the attempts by the industry to stop online trading work towards offering less to the consumers, rather than more. So, he suggests embracing the technology, ditching copy protection, admitting that some people will trade movies illegally, but that many will prefer to get the legitimate product via legitimate means (he suggests BitTorrent). By embracing systems like BitTorrent as an excellent (and free!) distribution mechanism for movies, they can help to reinvent the movie industry in a way that consumers will want to be a part of - rather than driving their best customers underground. Of course, the chance that any new MPAA head will follow this advice is somewhere close to 0%.

Wired's open letter to new head of MPAA


Wired's open letter to new head of MPAA 01/06/2004 10:40 AM
Chris Anderson, Wired's Ed-in-Chief, has written an open letter to whomever succeeds Jack Valenti as the head of the Motion Picture Association of America:
Now the bad news: You're at risk of alienating your customers like the music industry did. The do-not-record "broadcast flag" that the TV industry just pushed through the FCC will introduce new restrictions on programming, none of which benefit consumers. Proposed legislation that throws anyone caught with a prerelease movie on their hard drive into prison for three years is the sort of disproportionate response that gives the RIAA a bad name. The notorious Digital Millennium Copyright Act is Hollywood's fault. And extending copyright protection year after year so that the film and television archives stay shut isn't just bad law, it's depriving Americans of their cultural history.
Link

MPAA wins settlement in DVD copy case


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Intl MPAA/RIAA to ISPs: cut your own
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Intl MPAA/RIAA to ISPs: cut your own
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04/08/2005 05:28 AM
Cory Doctorow: The MPA and IFPI (international versions of the MPAA and RIAA, respectively), has produced a report describing the code of conduct they'd like ISPs to embrace -- basically, they want ISPs to act like AOL in the old days. Any ISP that adopts this code of conduct is cutting its own throat -- seriously, this thing is a frigging embarrassment, it really makes the IFPI/MPA people look like they live in Narnia. The MPA/IFPI people I've met on the road are generally lightweights, prone to telling easily countered lies, ignorant of the law, fumble-tongued and ham-fisted. This report tells me that my impression of them was dead on. Here are some callouts from CoCo:
* "remove references and links to sites or services that do not respect the copyrights of rights holders".'

* "require subscribers to consent in advance to the disclosure of their identity in response to a reasonable complaint of intellectual property infringement by an established right holder defence organisation or by right holder(s) whose intellectual property is being infringed"'

* terminate contracts of recidivist'

* implement instant messaging to communicate with infringers'

* implement filtering technologies to block sites that are 'substantially dedicated to illegal file sharing or download services.'

* voluntarily store data for copyright enforcement...

"To enforce terms of service that prohibit a subscriber from operating a server, or from consuming excessive amounts of bandwidth where such consumption is a good indicator of infringing activities."

Link (via Copyfight)

MPAA: Movie downloading is new piracy
plague


MPAA: Movie downloading is new piracy
plague
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The Motion Picture Association of America Inc. (MPAA) warned against a "growing global epidemic" of movie piracy over the Internet this week, citing a survey of Internet users in which nearly one in four respondents had illegally downloaded a movie online. The study, conducted by online research company OTX, queried 3,600 Net users in eight countries, and was cited by the MPAA as the harbinger of the tough times the industry faces ahead in grappling with online piracy.

Illegal movie downloads on the rise,
says the MPAA


Illegal movie downloads on the rise,
says the MPAA
07/10/2004 12:48 PM
25% of all Internet users have downloaded motion pictures illegally, according to the MPAA. Are downloads really costing them money, though?

Truth Seizes Headlines Back From The
MPAA!


Truth Seizes Headlines Back From The
MPAA!
06/22/2005 02:17 AM
By now it should be no surprise that the MPAA likes to overhype lots of things, from the "losses" due to file sharing to the "risk" posed by the VCR ("the Boston Strangler" to the movie industry). The current bosses are no exception, from blami ng technology to dire warnings about the end of content, it pays to take most of what they say with an extra big grain of salt. Hopefully, you had that salt handy as you read an announcement trumpeted by the MPAA about how they, along with a "California High Tech Task Force" shut down a Southern California DVD processing plant seizing $30 million worth of DVDs. The implication, though not stated in the article, was that the plant was used to copy DVDs illegally. Perhaps the reason it wasn't stated was because it might not actually be true. Constitutional Code points to the processing plant company's angry response to the news today, suggesting that almost nothing in the MPAA's announcement was accurate. First off, the company claims they only copy legal DVDs, and are a well established (over 15 years in business) legal DVD and CD reproduction plant. Second, neither the MPAA nor the so-called High Tech Task Force "shut the plant down." After the raid was completed the plant was allowed to return to full production levels immediately. The Task Force did take some DVDs, but the plant believes they were perfectly legitimate DVDs being produced by a well-known public company. Finally, in the MPAA's favorite area, it looks like they completely inflated by ridiculous amounts the "value" of the seized materials. The plant claims that the DVDs taken were worth a grand total of $10,540. The DVD copying equipment seized was worth about $15,000. In other words, the claim of $30 million worth of product seized was exaggerated by a mere 2,000%. So, not only does it sound like they're lying, but they're bad at math as well. And yet, for some reason, we still think it's okay that they get to go into schools and push their agenda as some kind of educational lesson? Of course, why should the MPAA care? They got the headlines they wanted out of the Associated Press, so it shouldn't really matter if the story isn't actually true.

Overzealous MPAA mistakenly targets
Linux Australia


Overzealous MPAA mistakenly targets
Linux Australia
09/21/2004 01:11 PM
Cease-and-desist foul-ups by the MPAA: demanding that Linux Australia remove a python framework and memory management tool.

MPAA anti-piracy software not as bad as
reported, but still stupid


MPAA anti-piracy software not as bad as
reported, but still stupid
02/01/2005 08:53 PM
Sometime ago, the MPAA released a program that's supposed to let you scan your hard drive for infringing material. Contrary to published reports, it doesn't claim to identify such material automatically. It's still garbage, though.
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