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Archive for the ‘Piracy’ Category

Look Forward to the new Canadian DMCA

June 4th, 2010 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 1 Comment | Filed in Online, Piracy

In Canada a few days ago, the third attempt to update the copyright law since our last big reform back in 1997 was introduced.  It was called Bill-32, and although many big issues people had with the last one were resolved, I believe that the digital lock issue (not being able to break digital locks without breaking the law) outweighs all of things that were fixed with the new bill.

Today, in Canada it is technically illegal to copy songs from your CDs to your iPod, even though many people do that!  Also, it is technically illegal to tape tv shows at the moment!  That also is a common practice, which is why these laws are overlooked.  These issues make it clear that the copyright law does need updating, but although the new copyright bill will fix these problems, and give the consumer more rights, the fact that any content creator will basically be able to “ixnay” any of these rights that were given to the consumer simply by adding a digital lock is unfair to consumers.

If a customer was sold something with a digital lock, then they basically can’t do anything with it except what the rights holder wants the customer to do with it!  This is ridiculous and must be changed!

See these articles for more info:

http://www.vancouversun.com/health/Copyright+bill+makes+easier+target+illegal+file+sharing/3103853/story.html

http://www.theinquirer.net/inquirer/news/1652537/canadian-copyright

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Pirate Bay shut down by BREIN, moving to Nuclear Bunker

October 7th, 2009 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | No Comments | Filed in Piracy

The Pirate Bay was taken down today by anti-piracy agency BREIN.  BREIN recently sued Mininova, who lost the civil dispute and was ordered to remove all of their infringing torrent files in august.

The Pirate Bay has plans to switch to move to an ISP called CyberBunker, which is was a NATO nuclear bunker from the 50s that was sold in the 1990s to the current owner.  It is its own republic and is surrounded on all sides by the Netherlands.  Check out the Republic of CyberBunker’s website for more info about the history of the country.

The nuclear bunker is used as hosting facilities, and it can withstand a nuclear strike as well as an EMP blast, and CyberBunker certainly won’t cave to threats from BREIN!

As the owner of CyberBunker, Sven Kamphuis, said, “I don’t expect BREIN to do pretty much anything at this point. The last conversation we had with them was about some mp3 site they wanted to have shut down somewhere in 2001/2002. It took around 3 hours at 2am at night and the end result was that both parties agreed not to agree.

The bay has been up and down rather sporatically throughout the day, and it should be online steadily soon.

All-around, this is great news for fans of the Pirate Bay, and great news for torrenters all-around.

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Automatically download TV Shows using TED

July 18th, 2009 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 6 Comments | Filed in Apps, Piracy

TED is a program that automatically searches for new episodes of your favorite tv shows on RSS feeds and then automatically downloads them and opens them in your Torrent client of choice to download.

This program’s pretty handy if you want to use your computer sort of as a PVR but instead, just automatically download the shows off the internet.

You can select shows from a list of preset shows, click subscribe and then Ted will automatically download the show the next time a new episode comes on the RSS feed.

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Does file sharing help music artists?

May 11th, 2009 by Connor McBrine-Ellis | 4 Comments | Filed in Essays and Stuff, Online, Other, Piracy, Tech

Many people wonder whether file sharing can actually increase revenue for music labels and artists because it helps both newer and older artists to be discovered or rediscovered. This question is frequently asked by fans and artists alike. I believe that BitTorrent is an excellent system and model for marketing and distributing media, such as music and movies, and should not be opposed the way it currently is by organizations such as the IFPI and the MPAA – it may even be making up a large figure of their sales!

Peer to peer technologies have been proven to be an effective marketing / promotion tools, For instance, in 2007, Radiohead made an interesting move in which their fans could make whatever payment that they wanted, including nothing; the site only advised, “it’s up to you” or free, or “Choose what you pay”, so that the fans could pay the amount they wanted for the album.
Of course, the band did not actually release their sales figures, yet the album became famous as the first one released in this method, and generated much publicity. New websites are now also following Radiohead’s model, as in “Choose what you pay”, such as the new public music tracker, Coda.FM.

BitTorrent is more effective as a marketing tool for artists that are not already established, yet for those already established as an artists, it may hinder them more than help, because since they are already popular, the viral nature of BitTorrent is not as useful, and many people will “leech” the music instead of buying it.

A report from the BI Norwegian School of Management has found that those who download music illegally are also 10 times more likely to pay for songs than those who don’t. This is because those who download music are generally music enthusiasts that agree that you should have the right to see exactly what you are buying before you buy it, and if it’s no good, then they won’t buy it. These enthusiasts see this as completely fair, yet the IFPI disagrees. Many people also say “I’d never buy it anyways!”, which is generally true, yet, they are obtaining the Intellectual Property for free – and thus comes the question – is IP even worth anything?

There is no doubt that the downloading of music for free will continue nevertheless, yet the question will remain in our minds, are we helping the artist (as in “increasing their revenue” or increasing exposure), or costing them? I believe that in the future, music will be either free, cost very little, or the consumer will choose the price – either way, the actual worth of something that can be copied, distributed, and reproduced countless times, all for free, will forever be disputed.

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