Should Piracy Punishment Scale To The Quality Of The Copy?
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  1. #1

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    Default Should Piracy Punishment Scale To The Quality Of The Copy?

    In a case involving the administrator of a BitTorrent tracker this week, a judge felt that punishments should reduce if low quality movies were being shared. On the other hand the plaintiffs argued that since their product was being devalued with poor quality reproduction, compensation should actually increase. In a separate case in Argentina, seven pirates just walked because their copies were poor, and the public knew it.

    Considering the huge crackdown against illegal camming in recent years it’s clear that the movie industry, rightly or wrongly, perceives this type of piracy as a serious threat. Indeed, they have succeeded in making the activity a criminal offense in many parts of the world.

    One might argue that their actions have been pretty successful. Five years ago or more, very high-quality cammed movies were commonplace on the Internet and the release of the best Telesyncs (cammed video with a direct sound source) from Scene groups such as Centropy and maVen were a highly prized and anticipated event. These days, although cams are still reasonably common, very high-quality releases are much less prevalent. Mission accomplished then? Maybe not.



    This week the case against the administrator of the EliteBits BitTorrent tracker came to its conclusion, with the judge pondering on an interesting issue.

    The judge said that since he could not assess the quality of the movies being offered via EliteBits, he found it difficult to know how much compensation to award the movie companies. The implication was that rightsholders should get less money if the product was low quality – cammed movies for instance – but lawyers for the plaintiffs disagreed. They said that rightholders lose goodwill when films are distributed in poor quality so the compensation should be more.

    This raises an interesting argument. There is a school of thought which suggests that when people are presented with a cam copy of movie they will expect it to be poor. However, if they enjoy it, they will invest in a trip to the theater to see it properly. Others won’t even want to spoil their enjoyment by watching these inferior copies and will see the movie in the theater straight off. It’s probably fair to assume that people expect some aspect of a copy to be lower quality that the original.

    There can’t have been many people who didn’t appreciate that when the workprint copy of Wolverine leaked out, they were getting an unfinished product. Did the lack of effects ruin the reputation of the movie? Sales seems to suggest not. Would the movie industry have preferred it if a perfect copy had leaked out in this instance rather than a second-rate version? Hardly. Nevertheless, the Wolverine leaker was still hauled over the coals, much more so than those who leak perfect copies. However, if he had lived in Argentina, things might have been different for him.

    This week a case was heard in Argentina’s Federal Court. It involved the issue of seven individuals caught selling pirate movies on the streets in 2008. In the first hearing the individuals were found guilty of copyright and trademark offenses but in the latest hearing that decision was overturned – and it all came down to the quality of the product they sold.

    The judge decided that it was “impossible to jeopardize the credibility of the legitimate manufacturers” since the buyers of the pirate copies knew full well they were getting an inferior product. One might argue that individuals downloading cammed material from EliteBits also knew that they wouldn’t be getting a good copy, yet rightsholders in that case would certainly have disagreed with the judge’s assertion here.

    So, if there is to be any punishment at all for sharing copyright material, should quality be taken into consideration? Should a perfect DVDrip of a movie attract a higher fine because people are less likely to seek out and pay for an original?

    Should those sharing low bitrate MP3s be left alone because they providing a low-quality try-before-you-buy service, or should they be heavily punished for ruining the reputation of the artist with a pale imitation of the real thing? As usual, we’d love to hear your thoughts in the comments.
    Source: http://torrentfreak.com/should-pirac...e-copy-110227/
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  3. #2

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    Default

    Interesting read, but simply put - piracy shouldn't be punishable. It should urge companies to find new innovative ways to get their products out at a lower cost. Piracy isn't theft. Theft takes the original, piracy makes a copy.

    Truly good products are purchased after being pirated anyway. It's the mediocre or bad products that nobody ever buys, and those tend to be the companies who get the most upset about piracy.

    If everyone can see your product for free, and you're generally not very skilled at producing a good product, you can't trick people into paying to see it with a 30 second teaser trailer that encompasses the best 30 seconds of the entire movie.

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  4. #3

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    I believe that piracy should be punishable. Crime and ways of stealing will always be ahead of the curve. The law catches up, but by then, there is a new way of crime or stealing. However, people that are caught should not be made an example of. If you illegally download one movie, you should be charged for the loss of income that the in illegally downloading of that one movie resulted in. If you you download 100 movies, then you should be charge for the full weight of the loss of the income of those 100 movies.

  5. #4

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    May 2009
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    Exactly. If you're caught then you should pay the price of what you owe.
    Not thousands or millions of dollars.

    However, the problem is that SHARING means that you're also providing the movies.

    Who gets in more trouble, the crackhead or the crack dealer?
    That's pretty much the case here.

    They can't necessarily track every person you spread the file to, so they push for as much as they can get.

    Nearly forgot about the topic at hand.
    Well yeah, if it's a bluray rip then you owe the price of the bluray.
    Same with DVD's. CAM's shouldn't be a big deal.. The person with the camera should get some punishment i suppose.
    Last edited by konVILEuted; February 27th, 2011 at 11:51 PM.
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