Some of you may be aware of the "three strikes" plan recently approved in France, where suspected copyright infringers are liable to be banned from the internet for up to a year if they persist after two warnings, and failed efforts to push similar laws across the entire EU a few months back.
Not content to be rebuffed, proponents of the laws have put them back on the table in Brussels, where they were set to be voted on yesterday. No news seems to be available online yet about how it went (any Europeans visitors have details on that?).
Is banning pirates from the internet going too far, or is it justified? It seems that no amount of DRM ever deters them for long, so perhaps cutting them off from their sources entirely would be the solution to large-scale piracy. Or maybe it just might drive them underground, and result in innocent users being banned on suspicions only. What do you guys think? Could this possibly work, or will it only make matters worse?
I thought it more 'incomprehensible' than 'hilarious'...
---Warning: Developer Rant. The following is not targeted directly at anyone here, but rather a general public attitude that some individuals hold---
Not all entertainment industries, companies, and practices are the same. I am tired of people ignorantly looking at any business as 'the man' - some faceless corporate behometh ready to squash anyone in sight. Guess what? Ironclad is a corporation....ahhhhh run for your lives! Come on. We are just regular people with names, families and lives, just like you. No one here has a head of grey hair, wears a suit to work, and drives a BMW. We just happen to work hard doing something we love. I can't stand 'the man' any more than you do. I hate getting ripped off too. I was recently speaking to a kid at circuit city who was telling me how upsetting it was to have so much merchandise stolen everyday. I replied by saying, I know exactly how you feel. I explained that I owned a game development studio and how irritating it was when pirating got out of control. I could tell he was nervous and scrambling for something to say as I stood there looking into his eyes. At first he said he didn't believe me, then he remarked, "well you don't actually recieve much from the sale of games anyway, do you?" I was dumbfounded.
I'm a bit late, but this is a fun discussion. However, several critical facts have been skipped over if you're thinking at all about the US.
To have a constructive debate on any subject, you need to have something you agree on. Most (999/1000) people's opinions on copyright law are completely baseless, though the better informed half may have enough "rules of thumb" to figure out some stuff. Really, though, unless it's your job or a hobby it's too complex and there's too much false info and too many lies floating around for the ordinary person to figure it out. Since we're (mostly) from the United States and US law copyright law originated with British law and spread to much of the world, it's the best basis.
Firstoff: The whiny pirates are partially right. Intellectual property is not actually property, and abusing it isn't theft. This has no bearing on how "wrong" it is, or whether you can get punished, though, but it does place some important limitations on the extent to which copyright is applicable. Effectively, copyright is a government-gifted monopoly over the use and distribution of a work and derivatives, so that cool people like Stardock will make more (or as the Constitution says, to promote the progress of science and useful arts). This means that application of the copyright monopoly is heavily limited through the principles of Fair Use. The author's creation is not their baby, and the Supreme Court does not look kindly on those who forget this (see Sony v Universal City Studios).
This is where you run into problem territory trying to force people off the net. Shaking them up for money (i.e. settlement letters) appears to be a rather dubious practice, as shown by the judicial responses in Arista vs Does. Forcing them off the net is going to be extremely difficult: the RIAA's IP address hopscotch is not going to work here - and you really, really don't want to mess up and (for example) take a classroom offline due to educational use of material which fits under Fair Use.
Practically, you'd have to force every ISP in the country to do an unprecedented level and range of deep packet inspection, replace all wireless access points with new versions which don't allow for open wifi, and generally lock down the internet to the point where the content providers themselves would take a heavier financial loss than from piracy.
Even then, you'd still have false positives and only catch the less technically adept (the opposite of who you want). Basically, this is a hilariously bad idea.
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