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The French are also skeptical about the whole movie-piracy phenomenon. Why should illegally downloading the equivalent of a $19 disc result in a $250,000 fine and 5 years in prison? Shoplifting a $100 item from a store-which is tangible and real-has fewer consequences. Does this make any sense to anyone? The French don't think so. Illegally copying movies or downloading should be like a traffic ticket-perhaps a $100 fine. Now they are being accused of "encouraging" piracy. How's that? $100 is a lot of money.



Oh, Those Crazy French!
ARTICLE DATE: 03.27.06

By John C. Dvorak
While the world moans and groans about the French and their attitude of cultural superiority, you sometimes have to give them credit, often in hindsight, for their ability to see through all the BS out there.

So France doesn't like the idea that Apple and the iPod and iTunes are intertwined with a proprietary structure that has no way for any other player/music download service to compete. The French say that Apple must either open the kimono, as it were, or be banned. Apple thinks it may as well walk away from France. Screw those French!


The French are also skeptical about the whole movie-piracy phenomenon. Why should illegally downloading the equivalent of a $19 disc result in a $250,000 fine and 5 years in prison? Shoplifting a $100 item from a store-which is tangible and real-has fewer consequences. Does this make any sense to anyone? The French don't think so. Illegally copying movies or downloading should be like a traffic ticket-perhaps a $100 fine. Now they are being accused of "encouraging" piracy. How's that? $100 is a lot of money.


This is the problem, and I finally realized it. To Hollywood, $100 is not a lot of money. In fact, $250,000 may not be a lot of money to many of these folks. I just died when I was looking through the latest Forbes list of Hollywood's top incomes. Comic actor Will Farrell makes $40 million a year? For what? I mean seriously, I don't want to exhibit income envy, but what great skills does Farrell employ to deserve $40 million?

Well, he obviously must attract more money in box-office receipts than he's paid, but if that's the case, things are quite skewed, and some college kid downloading a movie can't be a threat that deserves jail time. I mean, really. The French have got it right. Especially when you consider that you can record the movie off a cable channel without penalty.

So while drug-dealing, cocaine use, murder, mayhem, armed robbery, rape, and illegal corporate shenanigans run rampant in the U.S.A., law enforcement has to be on the lookout for movie downloading, to protect Hollywood billionaires. Curiously, the police are often mocked and ridiculed in these movies. Ah, irony.-Continue reading...

The American tendency to prioritize poorly seems to be thematic. It took yet another new twist when a get-tough stance against Wi-Fi poaching cropped up in Illinois. Yes, forget burglary, where someone steals something tangible. Instead, we need to bust Wi-Fi poachers. This is get-tough police work, eh? How proud they must be of themselves.

In this case, there was a guy parked in his car outside someone's house, apparently downloading his e-mail or who knows what. The network had no security, so he partook. I personally think that an open network is just that-open. And if it abuts your person or property, you can connect to it. (I'm not going to keep arguing about it.)

This much I can say: Law enforcement should not be wasting the taxpayers' money looking inside every car where they see some guy sitting reading a newspaper, in hopes of finding a Wi-Fi poacher.

Knock, knock. "Sir, is that a laptop? Out of the car! Hands on the hood. I said hands on the hood! Spread 'em. Jenkins, grab the laptop. Click on View Wireless connections. What's it say?"

"Says 'default,' sir."

"Okay, go door to door, find default!"

Bang, bang. "POLICE, OPEN UP!"

Soon there's a 10-year-old peering out of a partially opened door. "My mommy is in the bathroom."

"Ask her if you have a wireless router in the house called default."

"You're scaring me!"

I mean, come on! The Wi-Fi poaching police are on the job. How humiliating is it to be assigned that job? "So what do you do for the police? Vice? Narcotics? Gang infiltration? Homicide?"

"No, Wi-Fi poach protection and enforcement!"

I'm moving to France.

Date: 2006-03-30 05:52 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottscidmore.livejournal.com
While I'm mostly in agreement with this myself, I suspect that the media companies would argue that "shoplifting a CD/DVD is just the loss of the cost of the CD, while pirating the contents means that an unlimited number of copies can be made, which means the loss of an infinite amount of revenue!!! Thus we must strongly discourage such activity. (hurrumph)"

The ISP Speakeasy service contract allows you to share your broadband connection with others, unlike some ISPs that prohibit sharing. I know several folks that have their old access point/base station on the other side of a firewall, with that access point wide open for anyone. The firewall keeps nasties from getting in that way, and blocks traffic from their house network (which is secure) from hitting the open access point.



Date: 2006-03-30 10:31 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anysia.livejournal.com
While I'm mostly in agreement with this myself, I suspect that the media companies would argue that "shoplifting a CD/DVD is just the loss of the cost of the CD, while pirating the contents means that an unlimited number of copies can be made, which means the loss of an infinite amount of revenue!!!

What's to stop the shop lifter from passing the CD/DVD to someone else, and then that person passed it to someone else,and so on and so on would probably be the counter arguement for that.

But I do agree with the view of rather over paid actors. If the entertainment business isn't making money mabye they need to restructure their business model, and their outgowing expenditures. 40 million dollars to do a movie? Shuttle crew (or their families) should be getting that as they risk their lives. (ironic laugh)

Date: 2006-04-07 07:14 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] scottscidmore.livejournal.com
Well, replaying what strongly pro-DRM people have said to me, "in the case of a physical object handing on to another person removes it from your possession so you can't play it any more".

The logic is a bit messy, but here goes. Law abiding people who only want to see a movie once would rent it, passing the DVD from person to person takes away that revenue stream. Passing around a DVD that can't be copied would not have much impact in regards to people who want to own the movie, complete with all the extras on the DVD.

But most of the pro-stupid-class-DRM arguments are like that; there's always an aspect being showed into a corner with hopes no one will notice it.

Date: 2006-04-07 08:45 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] anysia.livejournal.com
OH, I know what the current laws are. Besides stupid I mean. Instead of coming up with an intelligent business model (man oh man do I remember from years ago, on the CNET TV show about how movies and music could be shared and there was concenses from the industries it was no big deal) they try to stick to a fossil-like mentality. Like cranking out a 20 song CD with 19 tracks of shit, and one good tune for example.

Still, the $250,000 fine is over the top for some 11 yr old wanting to see "Finding Nemo", who never would have bought the dvd in the first place is too extreme.

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