RIAA drops the idea of copyright protection

amdskip

Lifer
Jan 6, 2001
22,530
13
81
lol, finally realized that everyone hates what they do

I support anti-piracy but sometimes they go too far.
 

Nocturnal

Lifer
Jan 8, 2002
18,927
0
76
I think being owned for the twenty fifth time this past weekend finally made them change their minds.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,896
553
126
This agreement is largely symbolic and will not fundamentally change RIAA's focus:

"To combat piracy, the industries will promote privately funded public awareness efforts, as well as approach Congress regarding any federal role. Both industries stated their support for private and federal enforcement against copyright infringers as well as unilateral technical protection measures and they agreed that legislation should not limit the effectiveness of such measures. The industries also expressed support for actions by rights holders that could limit the illegal distribution of copyrighted works in ways that are not destructive to networks or products, or that violate consumers? privacy."

Essentially, RIAA has had phenomenal success in the courts, shutting down file-trading networks, gaining injunctions against ISP's whose subscriber's are found to be storing copyrighted content on their servers, and shutting down bootlegging operations. RIAA will keep pursuing this approach, as well as other efforts such as industry collaboration on effective copyright protection measures and protected distribution channels.

Nothing new to see here, move along...
 

Skyclad1uhm1

Lifer
Aug 10, 2001
11,383
87
91
Originally posted by: tcsenter
This agreement is largely symbolic and will not fundamentally change RIAA's focus:

"To combat piracy, the industries will promote privately funded public awareness efforts, as well as approach Congress regarding any federal role. Both industries stated their support for private and federal enforcement against copyright infringers as well as unilateral technical protection measures and they agreed that legislation should not limit the effectiveness of such measures. The industries also expressed support for actions by rights holders that could limit the illegal distribution of copyrighted works in ways that are not destructive to networks or products, or that violate consumers? privacy."

Essentially, RIAA has had phenomenal success in the courts, shutting down file-trading networks, gaining injunctions against ISP's whose subscriber's are found to be storing copyrighted content on their servers, and shutting down bootlegging operations. RIAA will keep pursuing this approach, as well as other efforts such as industry collaboration on effective copyright protection measures and protected distribution channels.

Nothing new to see here, move along...

Don't know about you, but my (Dutch) ISP does not allow them to monitor users unless they have a legal order.
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,896
553
126
Don't know about you, but my (Dutch) ISP does not allow them to monitor users unless they have a legal order
They don't have to monitor users from the ISP's end of things to discover this information. Its one way, but not the only way.
 

dmcowen674

No Lifer
Oct 13, 1999
54,889
47
91
www.alienbabeltech.com
Originally posted by: tcsenter
This agreement is largely symbolic and will not fundamentally change RIAA's focus:

"To combat piracy, the industries will promote privately funded public awareness efforts, as well as approach Congress regarding any federal role. Both industries stated their support for private and federal enforcement against copyright infringers as well as unilateral technical protection measures and they agreed that legislation should not limit the effectiveness of such measures. The industries also expressed support for actions by rights holders that could limit the illegal distribution of copyrighted works in ways that are not destructive to networks or products, or that violate consumers? privacy."

Essentially, RIAA has had phenomenal success in the courts, shutting down file-trading networks, gaining injunctions against ISP's whose subscriber's are found to be storing copyrighted content on their servers, and shutting down bootlegging operations. RIAA will keep pursuing this approach, as well as other efforts such as industry collaboration on effective copyright protection measures and protected distribution channels.

Nothing new to see here, move along...

Exactlty, that article is some sort of smokescreen garbage. They are working with Authorities all over the U.S. and the world in preparations to arrest and jail at least 8 million people worldwide this year in an historic show of Corporate agression against the people of the world.



 

Confused

Elite Member
Nov 13, 2000
14,166
0
0
Music sales have fallen sharply over the last few years, with music producers blaming sharing of files over the internet and digital piracy as the major factors.


Or maybe it's cos there's not any really really good music been made and released, with everything sounding similar, and just a rehash of other's work
rolleye.gif



I haven't even downloaded any new music in the past year, let alone buy any! Some of the stuff I downloaded a couple of years ago, i went out and bought (to get better quality than crappy 128kbps!) but there's nothing new now I really like enough to download in the first place!


Confused
 

tcsenter

Lifer
Sep 7, 2001
18,896
553
126
Exactlty, that article is some sort of smokescreen garbage. They are working with Authorities all over the U.S. and the world in preparations to arrest and jail at least 8 million people worldwide this year in an historic show of Corporate agression against the people of the world.
Will they be using UN Troops?
 

WinkOsmosis

Banned
Sep 18, 2002
13,990
1
0
The growth of the internet has led to massive piracy of music, with tracks being saved to computers and then shared amongst music fans through "sharing" sites such as Kazaa.

Music sales have fallen sharply over the last few years, with music producers blaming sharing of files over the internet and digital piracy as the major factors.

Wtf? Kazaa is a site? Music sales have fallen sharply? This is news to me.
 

Darein

Platinum Member
Nov 14, 2000
2,640
0
0
So they are becoming a little less fanatical in their old(er) age, good to see.
 

arcas

Platinum Member
Apr 10, 2001
2,155
2
0
You know something's fishy when the music industry lobby's greatest fear is that "fair use" gets defined by Congress...:disgust:

The sole purpose of this agreement, from the RIAA's point of view, is to head off proposed legislation by Reps Lofgren and Boucher that would define "fair use".