There is now
a new system in place in the United States to prevent copyright infringements
or, as it's better known, digital piracy.
A joint
venture between content companies (i.e. your pals in the entertainment and
music business) and internet service providers has resulted in the creation of
an entity called the Copyright Alert System. This is being administered
by the Center
for Copyright Information (CCI), lead by such people as Jill
Lesser (formerly of AOL), Jerry Berman, Jules Polonetsky (also formerly of AOL)
and Gigi Sohn. Members include the RIAA, MPAA and five major internet
service providers - AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner Cable and
Verizon meaning that most Americans will be impacted. CCI was created to
"educate consumers about the importance of copyright protection and to
offer information about online copyright infringement.".
Here's how
the Copyright Alert System works:
The
Copyright Alert System is also known as the "six strike" system
Copyright
Alerts assist us by:
• Making accountholders aware that unlawful
content sharing may have happened using their internet account.
• Educating accountholders on how they can prevent copyright
infringement from happening again.
• Providing consumers information about ways to access digital
content legally.
If you receive an alert and choose to ignore it, your ISP can:
•
temporarily reduce your internet speed (i.e. put you
in the internet penalty box).
•
Redirect you to a landing page for a set period of
time, until a subscriber contacts their ISP or completes an
online copyright education program. (i.e. they send you back to school where you'll
learn that what you did was a bad thing).
Supposedly,
when a content owner identifies that their material is being illegally
downloaded, the actual identity of the "pirate" is known only to the
ISP, at least for the first offences.
Here is a
leaked training document from AT&T showing how they will handle
"pirates", particularly repeat offenders:
It's not terribly surprising but, according to TorrentFreak, the number of new subscribers from the
United States signing up for VPN (Virtual Private Networks) which employ
encryption to ensure non-disclosure of personal data, soared recently as users
anticipated the implementation of the "six strikes" rules. In
case you care, here is a listing of VPN providers and an
analysis of whether they live up to their billing of anonymity.
While, right
now, it doesn't appear that media owners have legal action against
"pirates" on the front burner, the fact that AT&T will turn over
personal information to assist in litigation should be of concern to those
downloaders who would rather not appear in court.
In other news, revenue from music sales in 2012 were up 0.3 percent on a year-over-year basis, hitting $16.5 billion, the first time revenues have grown since their 1999 peak.
Wow talk about the little guy getting screwed once again. I guess things like this will re-open the door for physical copies(bootlegs) of entertainment media, your mix’s of popular music sold on cheap flash drives for 20$ for 2000 of the latest top hits. Bootleg DVD movies will become more popular. Maybe we can legalize drugs and move those folks over to pirating media?
ReplyDeleteI *knew* that once Capitalists got a hold of the internet they would ruin the whole damn thing. Turn it into *their* internet and turn the rest of us into virtual serfs.
ReplyDeleteFuck this planet, I just want to hurry up and die.
And now in Feb 2014 the Comcast/TimeWarner merger has just finished. "Extended basic" cable TV for most people in North America is already about $100/month. It could easily climb to $150-$200. And then they wonder why everybody torrents cable shows ...
ReplyDeletesharing evolves us.
ReplyDelete