Graham Cluley, senior technology consultant at Sophos, a leading computer security company
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Stealing music and movies is wrong.
Piracy has cost artists and media empires millions, and thousands of people have lost their jobs as a result of copyrighted material being freely available for download over the net.
Take a look at last night’s TV schedule and the chances are that you will find the top dramas and cult shows already available for fans to download to their computers.
But the same technology that allows pirates to steal films and albums can also be used for legitimate purposes. The fact is that there is no 100 per cent effective way of blocking illegal file-sharing that will not impact on legal file-sharers.
Illegal file-sharers are a determined bunch, and when obstacles are put in their way they will discover new ways to distribute and share copyrighted material with each other.
Yes, it’s right to send out a strong message that stealing someone else’s creative work is a crime.
But putting the pressure on the internet service providers to police their users is not the answer to the problem.
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um, does anyone see a problem with forcing ISP COMPANIES into being vigilanties? they need their own police force. It's one thing for the largest ISP's in the world to consider this as a voluntary service. Quite another thing to force small, local ISP's to be forced to take this responsibility on.
For one, I doubt many small ISP's have the expertise in their staff, or the financial resources to even achieve this micromanagement of their customers without seriously hurting legal sharers.
I am a legal sharer, I upload and seed a torrent I created, containing nothing but music files.
Long story short, these music files are those of a band that I am a member of. Simultaneously, these songs are available on CD, but as a band without the resources to go international, this is the only realistic way to get music across the ocean.
My main point: I don't WANT somebody sharing my music p2p to get banned from the internet because an ISP with limited resources put out a blanket ban on .mp3.
David, Melbourne, Victoria
dave, Nottingham
I don't think it's wrong it's progress.
Ptogress to what? The Government camera in your TV monitoring you at home?
If I borrow a book from the Library I don't pay a royalty for doing so except through my Council Tax. My broadband charge is taxed in the same way. The Government should stop invading peoples privacy and cowtowing to the music and movie industry.
Marnie
Marnie Crittle, London,
Craig - you're wrong about theft. Copyright infringement deprives the creator/owner of the fruits of possession (ie his earnings). It's not the same as stealing a car, but it's definitely still theft.
And the dishonesty costs everyone - we almost lost the plays of Shakespeare because there was no copyright protection in place for him. Instead of printing his plays, allowing many more people to enjoy them (and pay him) while he was still alive, he was forced to keep them on a very few hand-written copies under lock and key. This last made it very difficult for the actors to learn their lines, so further restricting his earnings and (perhaps) his productivity.
Tom Rawlinson, St Ives, Cambs,
1000 character limit, so this is going to be multi-part.
irstly, let's clear some terms up.
UK Theft Act, basic definition of theft:
(1) A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it; and 'thief' and 'steal' shall be construed accordingly.
"Stealing" music/movies and "pirating" music/movies are completely different: piracy does not result in the deprivation of property. A much more accurate term is "copyright infringement". The media industry tends to push the view that they are the same thing. Don't believe me? Put a DVD in your DVD player (not computer: chances are it'll be so heavily DRM-laden that you won't have the necessary rights to watch it on a proprietary player) and force yourself to watch the lengthy "would you steal a car?" anti-piracy propoganda. Well, I say "force" yourself to watch; you don't have the choice to skip it anyway.
[continued]
Craig Sutherland, Edinburgh,
[continued]
When you steal a car from someone, or a handbag from someone, you are depriving them of property. They lose and you gain. When you download a copyrighted file from a P2P network, you get a copy of it, and the person you downloaded it from gets to keep theirs too. Piracy is not stealing. Piracy is copyright infringement.
I don't condone the wanton piracy of copyrighted works, but I also do not condone the demonisation of the file-sharing community and the P2P protocol. P2P was widely in use before bittorrents (remember the first Quake back in 1996, anyone?), and in no way is P2P traffic a signpost of someone illegally distributing copyrighted material. Neither is filesharing inherently illegal, unless you're distributing copyrighted content without the right to distribute aforementioned content. There need to be clear definitions of what is meant by an "illegal file-sharer".
[continued]
Craig Sutherland, Edinburgh,
[continued]
Blanket terms and ignorance are just a few of the tools that the music and film industry take advantage of to achieve their own ends.
ISPs are not the people to blame for individuals committing copyright infringement. You cannot blame a service provider for misuse of the service in the same way that you couldn't blame Smith & Wesson for gun crime. I firmly believe that privacy is a right we are all entitled to, and private businesses (music/film industry) pressuring our ISP's to give this up for the supposed profit of the industry is frankly absurd. I can commit much more serious crimes over the phone, or by sending mail (snail, no e-!), yet our privacy in these methods of communication are rather heavily protected by law. I don't think any private business would dare suggest that all our mail should be opened and our phonecalls listened to just because we "might" be committing copyright infringement. Yet our ISPs are giving in, and no-one's making a stand against it.
Craig Sutherland, Edinburgh,
Am I the only person in this country who thinks that this is very, very, very wrong?
Craig Sutherland, Edinburgh,
I dont think its wrong. I think its progrees.
dave, Nottingham,