Posted on 07/12/2002 6:01:33 PM PDT by Brian Mosely
July 12 Keith Tyler signed up for broadband Internet access three weeks ago, and did what many high-speed Net users do he started swapping music and movies. But within days, the movie industry and his ISP tracked him down and told him to stop offering movies for download, or else. Such threats are now the weapon of choice for the Motion Picture Association of America, which says its slinging some 2,000 complaints a week toward alleged movie pirates.
ITS CALLED A takedown notice, and it comes with the eerie feeling of having been caught with your hand in the cookie jar by a lawyer. The letters are flying fast and furious now, as the movie industry tries to pre-empt a Napster-sized outbreak of free content swapping.
Dear Customer, a typical letter from one ISP, Cox Communications, says, We have received a notification that you are using your Cox High Speed Internet service to post or transmit material that infringes the copyrights of a complainants members. ... Cox will suspend your account and disable your connection to the Internet within 24 hours of your receipt of this e-mail if the offending material is not removed.
The letter then goes on to site the offending content. In Tylers case, it was three or four episodes of The Simpsons and part of Kevin Costners new movie Windtalkers. A bit shocked by the notice, he quickly removed the content.
I had high speed Internet access for just three weeks, it had not even been that long, said the 24-year-old Tyler, an information technology specialist from Phoenix, Ariz. It was just a couple of movies. He had made them available for download on the Gnutella network.
Tyler said he replied immediately to Cox saying he had deleted the files. They wrote back and said that should be good enough.
Tyler was nabbed by an automated program developed by Ranger Online Inc. The software cruises file-swapping networks like Gnutella to find copyrighted materials, hunts down the IP address of the poster, then discovers which Internet service provider is being used. Soon after, the MPAA sends its form letter to the ISP. Under the Digital Copyright Millennium Act, Internet providers are compelled to stop distribution of copywritten materials when they are notified, so the ISP in turn forwards the note to the user, along with a threat of disconnection. Expect more threats as time goes by in 2001, 54,000 letters went out. The rate has now doubled, with 50,534 takedown notices sent by June 30 of this year, keeping Internet service providers very busy chasing down copyright complaints.
We are continuing to fine-tune the system, said Ken Jacobsen, senior vice president and director of worldwide antipiracy efforts at MPAA. While the firm began sending takedown notices in late 2000, efforts continue to ramp up, to keep pace with increased movie swapping online.
A LIGHTER TOUCH
So far, the MPAA seems to be using a slightly lighter hand than the Recording Industry Association of America. Along with the calamitous battle with Napster, followed by litigation against current file-swapping services KaZaa and Morpheus, the music industry has been behind several high-profile arrests of individuals involved in the online music trade. And just last week, The Wall Street Journal reported the industry is planning to step up such individual prosecutions.
While Jacobsen says such drastic law enforcement measures would be appropriate in extreme situations, he says the movie industry is really hoping to have relatively civil exchanges with transgressors like Tyler, and sees takedown notices as an educational effort.
We are trying to notify people, he said. The person may not understand this is inappropriate behavior. Clearly our first approach would be to try to let them know.
THREATENED WITH DORM EXPULSION
The MPAAs exchange with Robert Sullivan, one of the first recipients of a takedown notice, was a bit more acrimonious. As a student at the University of Iowa last year, Sullivan said he was sharing files on Internet Relay chat for 10 minutes max. Two weeks later, his dorm room Ethernet access was shut off, and he was hauled into the residence hall deans office for a discussion of Ethernet abuse.
They suspended my network rights for the rest of the year, Sullivan said. They said that it could have been worse and I could have been kicked out of the hall.
Sullivan is hardly alone. About 100 Iowa students received takedown notices last year one of several college campuses targeted by anti-piracy efforts.
With a combination of tech-savvy youth, plenty of bandwidth, and perhaps plenty of free time, colleges and universities are ripe for movie file swapping, Jacobsen said, so the MPAA has made efforts to focus on schools. In recent months, the MPAA has sent notices to Stanford and the University of Texas at Austin criticizing the schools efforts to stop file-swapping.
In the letter to Stanford President John Hennessy, MPAA chairman Jack Valenti criticized Stanfords acceptance of theft which collides with moral and civic compact. Stanford responded by saying it had taken steps to stop piracy by its students.
The movie industrys letter-writing campaign shows its trying to learn from the lesson of the music industry, which failed to address the Internet music piracy issue until it was almost overrun by it. Some estimates say more than a billion songs per day were flying around the Net in Napsters heyday. Movie swapping is considerably less popular and more clunky, but some 400,000 to 600,000 movies are downloaded every day, according to the MPAA.
And the number is steadily rising thanks to increased availability of broadband Internet access and new compression techniques. Even just two years ago, downloading a movie online was relatively complicated and time consuming, but now, an average movie can be downloaded over a broadband connection in about half its running time, the MPAA says.
FALSE POSITIVES
Needless to say, the letters arent popular. Some critics raise the possibility of false positives, suggesting Rangers software might falsely accuse a file swapper perhaps someone sharing a home video that happened to be named Simpsons, for example. A Hawaii-based Web site named InternetMovies.com says this happened to them last year. It was temporarily knocked offline by its Internet provider after an MPAA takedown notice was received. InternetMovies.com, which claims it wasnt offering copywritten material, filed suit against the MPAA on April 25 for causing a business disruption.
But Jacbosen says InternetMovies was offering up pirated material, and furthermore, he claims Ranger is almost never wrong.
Of all the letters we have sent out, we only had 2 other people who corresponded back who said we were mistaken, Jacobsen said. And we didnt think we were.
But while the cease-and-desist letters will continue, so will the cat-and-mouse game between copyright holders and Web users bent on sharing files.
Just this week, a new file-swapping program was announced that promises more anonymity to file swappers - making them harder for the industry to find and stop. Called Flyster, the program will allow downloading in complete anonymity, according to developer Louis-Eric Simard. However, those who host files for download could still be traced, he said. Meanwhile, other developers are working on technologies that would add anonymity to file sharing networks.
Jacobsen acknowledges the MPAA is fighting an uphill battle while trying to shut off access to pirated films. He wouldnt say if he felt the takedown letter campaign was successful.
Its all relative, he said. Clearly we have a colossal problem out there ... and it doesnt appear to be getting smaller.
Additionally, ISP's are more interested in revenue then in serving as CopyCops.
But Nancy did the song in this peppy, upbeat manner, and the song is NOT peppy and upbeat. It's about a very destroyed woman, devastated by some jerky guy.
Nancy sings it peppy. Upbeat. Happy. The song was performed by Edna in a haunting, angst-filled way on Howard Sterns show -- and she said that was how it should have been performed. I looked for it everywhere. The only place I could find it was in the Gnutella world. I never could have found it anywhere else.
Xcrew the record companies. They are as bad as liberals, and in most cases, are one and the same.
And it is absolutely over.
Oh no. Now you've done it! There's gonna be a whole army of FReepers heading over here making accusations that downloading music/movies from the internet is no different than beating up grandma and running off with her Social Security check as happened on this thread.
It pays for politicians to pay a lot of attention to H'wd, and H'wd has certainly gotten a lot of bang for their buck from the FBI.
Downloading quality video is still a long way off, or a job for very patient people. You could go to the video shop, rent the movie watch it and return it before the download finishes!
Just for the record Kevin Costner is not in Windtalkers. And the movie is not good at all.
The moral of the story is that file-sharing is good for the little guy and bad for the big-guy. The file-sharers get the bands the Corporate Recorders don't want to promote, or sign, out in the public eye.
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