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The Internet Sony Your Rights Online

Sony CEO Proposes "Guardrails For the Internet" 708

testadicazzo writes "Micheal Lynton, the guy who said 'I'm a guy who doesn't see anything good having come from the Internet. Period.' has posted an editorial at the Huffington Post titled Guardrails for the Internet, in which he defends his comment, and suggests that just as the interstate system needs guardrails, so too does the information superhighway. The following is pretty indicative of the article: 'Internet users have become used to getting things when they want it and how they want it, and those of us in the entertainment business want to meet that kind of demand as efficiently and effectively as possible. But what has happened online is that if it is 'beyond store hours' and the shop is closed, a lot of people just smash the window and steal what they want. Freedom without restraint is chaos, and if we don't figure out some way to prevent online chaos, the quantity, quality and availability of the kinds of entertainment, literature, art and scholarship we need to have a healthy, vibrant culture will suffer.'"
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Sony CEO Proposes "Guardrails For the Internet"

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  • I'm a guy (Score:5, Funny)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:52AM (#28093585)
    Who doesn't see anything good having come from Sony
    • by vintagepc ( 1388833 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:57AM (#28093651) Journal
      ...Except the fun people had mailing them bricks in pre-paid envelopes when they recalled their DRM-laden music CDs in Spring 2007.
    • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Moryath ( 553296 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:15AM (#28093907)

      He published in the huffandpuffington post. Are you all that surprised it, like everything else on that site, is just mindless garbage?

      I mean, seriously. I have seen not ONE good article there except the stuff they plagiarize. It seems to be a site that exists solely to push stupidity.

      For example:

      And my point is this: the major content businesses of the world and the most talented creators of that content -- music, newspapers, movies and books -- have all been seriously harmed by the Internet.

      Obviously what he really means is that the Internet is stopping the gatekeepers from controlling who can get published. There are more people publishing their own books independently - rather than having to go through, say, Del Rey - than ever before. The comic pages of the newspaper have been replaced by webcomics but that's not necessarily a bad thing either - either you adapt, like Scott Adams, or you don't and you perish.

      The Internet has brought people with no regard for the intellectual property of others together with a technology that allows them to easily steal that property and sell or give it away to everyone, with little fear of being caught or prosecuted.

      He doesn't give a shit about "theft." He hates the idea of the Internet because it removes the need to keep his dumb ass as the distribution "gatekeeper" and skim money off of the hard work of others.

      Prior to bittorrent, there was Samba sharing as enabled by several crawler-search setups. Prior to those, there was Napster. Prior to those, there were a zillion sites running FTP (ratio or otherwise). Prior to "the internet", there were BBS'es all over. Prior to that, there was sneakernet.

      Go back ~100 years, and dumbshits like this Sony retard were "protesting" and trying to lobby Congress to forbid municipalities from keeping lending libraries (you know, the public library system we all have the right to use for free) because it would "impede sales if people could simply borrow the book instead."

      • Re:I'm a guy (Score:4, Interesting)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:05AM (#28094565)

        Excellent comment.

        He reminds me of the Catholic church shortly after the invention of the printing press. Life was going to end once the unwashed masses got their fingers into the realm of the intellectual & financial elite.

        And as for his "nothing good" comment, maybe Sony should just give back all the money it has made from online games since nothing good came of it...

      • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:17AM (#28094711)

        Have a little empathy. What we have is a group of rich, powerful and intelligent people who imagine a changed future in which their personal fortunes may not grow as fast as they do currently. Realizing that an argument like "The Internet is bad because I may not be as wealthy as I'm used to" is not a very persuasive they modify the argument to be: ""The Internet is bad because it means the END of CIVILIZATION as we know it" or something similar.
        As far as I can tell there is fortunately hardly any correlation between creativity and monetary rewards. Great works of art, literature, music etc are far more often created by the impecunious than the wealthy.

        • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

          by wilhelm ( 5091 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:37AM (#28094953) Homepage

          +1 Insightful.

          You've hit it spot-on. The rich aren't going to be getting richer quite as fast as they used to, and they're upset about it. And of course you know the golden rule, "he who has the gold, makes the rules."

        • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Informative)

          by cjsm ( 804001 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @11:26AM (#28096621)

          Great works of art, literature, music etc are far more often created by the impecunious than the wealthy.

          How true this is. The greatest artists of the past, Mozart, Bach, Shakespeare, worked for a pittance comapred to what artists make nowadays. And contrary to the argument made that we have to feed the rich more vast sums of money so they keep on producing; the volume of output of am impoverished Mozart or Bach was enormous compared to the output of the pampered rich artists of today. And with a higher quality level.

      • XKCD (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:51AM (#28095171)

        The point is exactly right. Does anyone honestly believe XKCD would be published in any major newspaper? Yet look at how far it's going as a webcomic.

        • Re:XKCD (Score:5, Interesting)

          by schmiddy ( 599730 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @12:21PM (#28097403) Homepage Journal

          I love XKCD as much as the next bloke, but let's at least be fair in our hypotheticals. Would Calvin & Hobbes* exist if Bill Watterson had been born twenty or thirty years later? I'm doubtful.

          * Watterson was vehemently opposed to commercializing the art that he saw his comics to be -- hence the lack of any official C&H merchandise, as opposed to Randall's business model.

    • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Interesting)

      by mdwh2 ( 535323 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:43AM (#28094265) Journal

      Yet he posts his views ... on the Internet. Period.

      He then refers to the "blogosphere", trying to reduce all criticism to a single entity: "Now, the blogosphere does not take so kindly to provocations like that"

      Lynton may have been privileged to have been offered a publication in a traditional news site, on account of him being CEO of some company, but his words written on the Internet are no different to any kind of blogger. Period.

      On what basis does he claim that newspapers have been harmed? Even if we accept that Internet piracy is causing harm, where is all the newspaper-piracy? Are people distributing copies of the Huffington Post on bittorrent? Is there a Napster for Broadsheets?

      Period.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by Opportunist ( 166417 )

        I'm fairly sure there are limits to what crap you can find on bittorrent. Things that don't even warrant the abuse of electrons to transmit them.

        Or, as I like to put it, my traffic is too good for that crap.

      • by MindKata ( 957167 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:36AM (#28094939) Journal
        "On what basis does he claim that newspapers have been harmed"

        Its the same thinking as Rupert Murdoch, i.e. "News Corp will charge for newspaper websites, says Rupert Murdoch"
        http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2009/may/07/rupert-murdoch-charging-websites [guardian.co.uk]

        Rupert Murdoch and this Sony CEO are the same type of person. People like them don't get to become high up in corporations without being power seeking control freaks. Their ruthless arrogant self serving behavior provides them with a competitive advantage which allows them to fight their way high up the corporate hierarchical power tree structures to gain power over others. This is why their kind of personality type feature so prominently in very competitive environments like business and politics.

        So its no wonder the people at the top of these corporations think in terms of how to apply pressure to control others. They do that in their jobs to stay at the top so its no surprise they apply that same kind of thinking to the Internet.

        For so many decades these control freak kind of people ruled over the old school media to control what people could see and when they could see it and for how much. These control freaks can't cope with a new open world where people can choose what they want to see and when they want to see it and even see it for free. Its an alien world to the control freaks. They want to be in power, to control others, they don't want open sharing of information.

        The new and media companies are not going to die. Its simply evolving into media outlets that provide content that attract like minded people around open information that appeals to this group of people. The companies that work like this will gain advertising and other incomes like in some cases merchandising and cross promotional incomes etc.. while the old control freak media companies will die out as they fail to control what people can see and do.

        The sooner the better.
    • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by beelsebob ( 529313 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:51AM (#28094389)

      I don't understand this guy, he's complaining that people are making it really really obvious what they'd like to buy. If I were running a company, I would quit complaining and sell it already!

      People don't want DVDs with copy protection notices, and DRM and region coding? Don't sell them! Sell DRM free downloads for a sensible price - that is after all what people are saying they want!

      • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:12AM (#28094667)

        I've been wondering the same for ages.

        Take an immigrant from Scotland selling Haggis. You know, those delightful dishes made of liver, heart and other selected throwaway parts of sheep, seasoned in a blend of secret spices, kept secret to protect the guilty. He's convinced that this is the best dish ever. And he is complaining without end about those burger joints next door that steal his customers.

        Fortunately, nobody could understand him through his accent, so we were spared with the big burger chain crackdown and today we don't have to resort to eating nothing. Because nothing beats haggis. Read that however you like...

        DRMified content is the same. Their argument is that everyone would buy it if it wasn't for those pesky places where you can get it without (i.e. the way you want it). No. We wouldn't. Believe it or not, content is not like food, water, light or air. We don't need it.

        YOU need US. Not the other way 'round.

        Instead of complaining that those pesky customers don't like your product and demand that the customer has to change his tastes, produce what he likes and he will gladly buy it.

        It's not "pirating is communism". Communism, actually, is producing what you deem "right" and expecting your customer to buy it because you deprive him from any alternatives. Ask anyone who grew up in the "Soviet states".

        • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @10:15AM (#28095517)

          Please... as someone that grew up in a "Soviet state" I perfectly know what Communism should have been... and what we had was not Communism. A part from this (old, re-hashed, western propaganda/ignorance) mistake, I agree with what you said. But please drop the "Communism = Soviet Dictatorship" examples... really.

    • by Dan541 ( 1032000 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:25AM (#28094807) Homepage

      Well this is a malware company after all.

    • Re:I'm a guy (Score:5, Insightful)

      by DigitAl56K ( 805623 ) * on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @10:00AM (#28095305)

      I think the most interesting thing is that he doesn't actually comprehend what he himself is saying:

      Internet users have become used to getting things when they want it and how they want it, and those of us in the entertainment business want to meet that kind of demand as efficiently and effectively as possible.

      Okay so far...

      But what has happened online is that if it is 'beyond store hours' and the shop is closed, a lot of people just smash the window and steal what they want.

      Yes, what you are saying there is "we realize that to compete on the Internet where there is a lot of choice available to potential customers we need to meet their expectations for service, pricing, experience, and so forth. If we don't they may end up going elsewhere, and that's a huge problem for us!".

      Perhaps if all the big players had spent as much time investing in the internet as they had fighting it in past they would be in less of a predicament.

      I want service on my terms at a reasonable price without abuse of our relationship through the likes of DRM. If you can't even come close to my terms then we don't do business. It works that way in the real world, why do you think it should work differently online? Too often studios are so threatened by piracy that they impose such abhorrent terms on potential customers that nobody wants to be an actual customer. It's a self fulfilling prophecy perpetuated by the studios themselves.

      Why can't I download FLAC from the majority of online stores for the same price I can download an MP3, or even at all? Why can't I download a movie in high quality without DRM? We both know it's technically possible, we both already know I can get the content elsewhere, and so far as the studios refuse to cater to what I'm looking for at a reasonable price realistically they can't expect anything other than what they're seeing.

  • Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)

    by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:52AM (#28093589)
    Comment removed based on user account deletion
    • reedom without restraint is chaos, and if we don't figure out some way to prevent online chaos, the quantity, quality and availability of the kinds of entertainment, literature, art and scholarship we need to have a healthy, vibrant culture will suffer.

      As a scholar, I attest that this is absolutely true (boldface mine). If we put our scholarship up for free, the following will happen:

      1. Almost everyone will have access to it! Then my ideas will reach a wider audience, and might make a difference. This is not why I signed up to be a scholar.
      2. The publisher, which makes money on journal subscriptions with my papers, will lose money. Although I will not personally be affected one bit, I can't stand the thought of those nice folks at Elsevier, Wiley and Springer losing money they make off my back, for little to no investment.

      So, to hell with this unrestricted Internet thing.

    • by qbzzt ( 11136 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:13AM (#28093873)

      No. Freedom without restraint means there's nothing stopping you from murdering me. By the same token, it means there is nothing to stop me from murdering you. Since you consider being murdered a bad outcome, the steps you'll take to reduce the likelihood of it would restrict your freedom - a lot more than having cops who'll arrest you if you murder me.

      It's illegal to break into Sony's Web site. It's illegal to copy their material. But I don't recall any law giving potential theft victims a pre-emptive right to search vehicles for stolen goods. If Sony's CEO wants that, he's allowed to wish for it.

      • Yeah, but we're not talking about murder here. He's complaining that consumers want the products on fair terms, and this guy is basically complaining, "the free market is a chaos which doesn't allow us to guarantee that we get to sell whatever products we want on the terms we want them."

        The restraint we're talking about here isn't like, "You can say whatever you want, just so long as you don't kill me." It's more like, "You can have the car in any color you like, just so long as you like black."

        • by avm ( 660 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:18AM (#28094721) Journal

          Ok, let's keep the car-analogy meme going here...it seems that this joker's viewpoint is a little more like this:

          You can have this car in any color you want, as long as it's black. Oh, and paint, brushes, spray guns and air compressors are now illegal, and if we suspect you may be inclined to change your car's color, we can preemptively search for and seize afrementioned equipment which surely is only useful for committing unauthorised car recoloring.

          Or something...

    • by Narpak ( 961733 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:31AM (#28094111)

      Freedom without restraint is chaos, and if we don't figure out some way to prevent online chaos, the quantity, quality and availability of the kinds of entertainment, literature, art and scholarship we need to have a healthy, vibrant culture will suffer.'"

      Yes I always felt that what my freedom has been lacking is a Person or group of semi-elected officials filtering what information and data I am allowed to access. I feel that the view spewed forth by the Article author is one that believes that some form of "culture" or "art" is better than other forms; and that a group within the state or economic system should filter and decide what is allowed and what isn't. I understand the fear and panic some that might come when you realize that your current distribution model for certain products is quickly going the way of the Dodo. But certain things are inevitable.

      There is no doubt, or at least I hope, that there will arise a new system that will allow people to, in some way shape or form, pay those that produce literature, music or other forms of entertainment or art. But even so I expect those with a real interest in such to continue creating. If for nothing else then for the fact that most bands make most of their money of gigs and concerts (and some from merchandise). And I guarantee that regardless of how easy or how cheap it is to download; people want to see bands they like LIVE. And people don't mind paying for the privilege. However this is money that goes almost directly to the band (in many cases) and the Distributors don't get to leech of a significant cut like they do with record sales.

      My point I guess is that some things will change, through technology and social changes, fighting them will only push people harder and further into groups that oppose an insistence upon holding on to ageing distribution models. As many bring in to these debates; Musicians are almost to a man holding their tongue in the arguments; simply because there are very few among them that want to sue or otherwise antagonize their own fans. There might be fans that download songs illegally; but if that person later goes to one of their concerts, buys one of their shirts, or even buy their albums when the person in question have the economic capacity to do so; then it is a net profit for the band. Even if it might be appear like a loss to their record label.

  • I don't buy it (Score:5, Insightful)

    by jsnipy ( 913480 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:53AM (#28093591) Journal
    "Guard Rails" sounds like "Insurance for Commerce". Culture is much more than what you can sell.
    • Re:I don't buy it (Score:5, Insightful)

      by damburger ( 981828 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:58AM (#28093669)
      "Insurance" sounds too innocent. I would say its a government subsidy for commerce. I am pretty sure Sony don't intend to pay for the draconian system of 'rules' they want enforced.
      • by account_deleted ( 4530225 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:08AM (#28093805)
        Comment removed based on user account deletion
      • Re:I don't buy it (Score:5, Insightful)

        by fictionpuss ( 1136565 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:12AM (#28093857)

        Well yeah. He even says "It's hard to sell a legal DVD when it can be stolen without any repercussions." If the pirates gave away DVDs for free, and Sony charged a reasonable price for DRM-free downloads of new content, then Sony would have a fantastic business model.

        DVDs are a pain to store, use and purchase, when compared with a network solution. But the studios stubbornly continue to tie their own hands with their arcane marketing and distribution 'rules'.

    • by dov_0 ( 1438253 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:04AM (#28093763)
      Also 'Store times'? Who's time? From what time zone? Sheesh. This guy is stuck in the 1890's.
    • Re:I don't buy it (Score:5, Insightful)

      by morgan_greywolf ( 835522 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:21AM (#28093969) Homepage Journal

      Culture is much more than what you can sell.

      That's it exactly. Did Michelangelo lock the doors to the Sistine Chapel and stand outside charging $20 a head (sorry, no cameras or sketchpads allowed) to come in and see his masterpiece? No.

      Did Wolfgang Amadeus Mozart charge each symphony that wanted to play his pieces a separate fee for each concert they performed? No.

      Did Leonardo Da Vinci hide digital watermarks in Mona Lisa so he could make sure no one was stealing his work? No.

      Does Sony think The Fugees are in the same caliber as any one of the above artists in terms of culture?

      • by MightyYar ( 622222 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:59AM (#28094495)

        Does Sony think The Fugees are in the same caliber as any one of the above artists in terms of culture?

        Without Sony, we wouldn't have classic movies like Angels and Demons, Fired Up!, Obsessed, The Pink Panther 2, Quantum of Solace, or the International.

        Now in all seriousness - those movies all came straight from the front page of their web site... this is apparently what they are most proud of. In that list, there is only one movie that provokes any kind of interest in me at all, and it is yet another rehash of the old Bond series. Where, exactly, is all of this creativity that he speaks of?

        I look at that horrific list, and when he says that output will be reduced all I can think is, "Good!" Maybe people will go outside instead of watching this dreck.

    • Re:I don't buy it (Score:5, Insightful)

      by JasterBobaMereel ( 1102861 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:35AM (#28094163)

      He does not want guardrails at the edge of the highway, he wants them across the highway so you can only go where he wants you to ....

  • by damburger ( 981828 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:53AM (#28093601)
    After this and his other comment, I have decided to not buy anything Sony from now on. A healthy, vibrant culture comes from having low barriers of entry to public discourse, not from having a monopoly on the public discourse held by the rich. Why can't these elitist motherfuckers just die already?
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 )

      You needed THIS comment to decide that Sony isn't what you want to buy?

      Frankly, Sony has a MTBFIM (mean time between foot-in-mouth) of about 2 years, either you're new or young.

      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by damburger ( 981828 )

        More that I've been out of the consumer loop a while; I lived frugally and worked less for a couple of years so choosing which greedy corporation to buy electronics and media from.

        Having a bit more money is a burden in many ways; so many of the things I end up spending it on are from corporations so overtly nasty they make me feel dirty associating with them.

    • by elrous0 ( 869638 ) * on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:13AM (#28093867)
      Sony has for decades now been one of the handful of big media companies that basically controlled the kingdom of all media. During that time, they came to regard that kingdom as their birthright. Then the internet came along, and fewer and fewer peasants were coming around with their tax payments and deference for the king. So now they want to take back their kingdom by force. I think that's a much better analogy than "guardrails on the information superhighway."
  • sony reality check (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:54AM (#28093609)

    the cat's out the bag dude. you're either too late, or your business model is fucked.
    move along, nothing to see here...

  • by Paul Pierce ( 739303 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:54AM (#28093617) Homepage
    Numa Numa guy
  • Imagine that (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Dolohov ( 114209 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:58AM (#28093663)

    "Internet users have become used to getting things when they want it and how they want it"

    Not at all like rich CEOs, no.

    • by qbzzt ( 11136 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:16AM (#28093913)

      Internet users have become used to getting things when they want it and how they want it

      Natural effect of Capitalism. If Sony's CEO would rather live in a Communist economy, I heard Cuba is still accepting immigrants. He might have to take a cut in salary and status, though.

    • Re:Imagine that (Score:5, Interesting)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:19AM (#28093953)

      Yes, we did. Yes, we got used to instant delivery of digital content to our PCs. We got used to being able to use the content to display on multi purpose machines (like, say, PCs) instead of having to buy a few dozen different boxes to achive the same results. We got used to ease of storage, being able to put hundreds if not thousands of songs, movies, books and other content on a single hard drive, taking up the room a single book or two CDs in jewel cases would.

      Now some bozo comes in and says you can't have that. My only response is "why?". Why not? Because you don't want me to have it? You can't always get what you want, I, for one, would want people to have a clue before they're allowed to open their mouth.

      But then we wouldn't ever have heard that gem from the Sony CEO. Which would be a shame. I dare say it has the potential to become about as powerful as the 'internet tubes' meme.

    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      But that's how it's supposed to work in a world created by the elite for the elite. The little people are scum who exist to toil and sweat for peanuts making the elite richer. Scum are not supposed to be allowed to get things for free, they are there to have what little they do earn claimed back in the form of mass market goods via slick psychologist advised PR campaigns. This is the natural order of things.
    • by bughunter ( 10093 ) <.ten.knilhtrae. .ta. .retnuhgub.> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:11AM (#28094653) Journal
      What's wrong with this picture?
      1. University Nerds create internet for sharing research data.
      2. Open information concept attracts more nerds, some anarchists, and a whole lotta hedonists.
      3. Someone starts making money selling internet access.
      4. Big Business sees a market and starts selling things on the internet; information proves most popular.
      5. Big Business starts complaining that "sharing data" and "open information" conflict with its maximized profits.
      6. Big Business starts demanding laws outlawing open information.

      We were here first, dammit.

      (And your track record precedes you, thief.)

  • by 91degrees ( 207121 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @07:58AM (#28093671) Journal
    If you can't provide what we want, someone else will. Capitalism fills these niches.

    Wolverine was leaked. Maybe it did reduce its potential sales, but it certainly didn't make it impossible to sell tickets for it. The movie industry seems to be able to survive pretty well. Hell, Amazon seems to be doing okay with its mp3 store, even though it's easy to get everything they sell for free.

    I'm happy for regulation to exist that enables you to have a profitable business providing things that consumers need. But I'm only willing to allow that much. We have no obligation to maximise your potential profits.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:00AM (#28093683)

    Great example of why sony hasn't been doing well. As opposed to changing or modifying their business model to meet the demand "after store hours" the customer should change for sony, not sony for the customer.

  • by eldavojohn ( 898314 ) * <eldavojohn@gSTRAWmail.com minus berry> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:00AM (#28093687) Journal
    So you justify your statement that "nothing good has come from the Internet. Period." with

    And my point is this: the major content businesses of the world and the most talented creators of that content -- music, newspapers, movies and books -- have all been seriously harmed by the Internet.

    This is the equivalent of a shock statement followed by "Now that I have your attention ..." and is only appropriate when trying to address an auditorium full of teenagers.

    I respect you no more than I would respect someone saying

    The entire world is burning. Everyone is going to die soon. Period.

    Now that I have your attention, I would like to discuss the occasional forest fires that threaten many homes in my state.

    Piracy is a problem but it's your problem, not mine. And it's not on the scale you make of it. I am in no way a party to it so I don't want to hear you bashing the greatest communications tool to date nor do I want to hear suggestions of curbing the freedom I enjoy daily on said communications tool.

    You had to pack up your home DVD stores in South Korea? Do you think that your supposed "guard rails" will be readily implemented world wide and embraced? I'm sorry, go ahead and sue the whole country or pressure the government to crack down on it or stop releasing Korean dubbed movies or--horrors of all horrors--lower your prices to something people are willing to pay? You effectively prevent me from owning any of your DVDs when the technology to digitally duplicate them is readily available and dirt cheap. That's your choice and you're free to opt for that.

    Your comparison to the Interstate Highway System is laughable. Please, do me one favor. In the future, when you draw comparisons of physical theft and huge undertakings like the Interstate Highway System to file sharing and "the Internet" do not confuse physical materials with information! There are major differences--for example: information can be freely replicated with no transfer of resources between the two parties involved! You draw a poor analogy and then *wave of the hands* we need protections like this. What "guard rails" do you suggest for the internet? I mean specifically, what do you have in mind? Have you thought this out at all? I'm sure you don't know but your engineers could suggest a small program from Sony that every internet user has to install on their computer to access the internet that has access to kernel space and ... yeah, I think we've been down this road.

    • by jbolden ( 176878 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:14AM (#28093895) Homepage

      About 8 years ago the CEO of Fox Media gave a keynote at Comdex on this topic. What they wanted was something like the trusted computing initiative. Moreover what he wanted was a partnership with IT and broad support from the developer / hardware communities. He realizes that the IT people by and large support the free exchange of information and thus undermine this partnership.

      His feeling was that there were potentially hundreds of thousands to millions of jobs in IT supporting a massive customized entertainment system, that could exist if and only if the medium was relatively safe.

      I'm not sure that with Web 2.0 another alternative, the return of the amateur, isn't the direction we are heading in instead.

    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:36AM (#28094183)

      The biggest difference between the real "guard rails" on highways and the proposed ones on the internet is maybe that the real ones serve me, the user of the road, to guard me and to keep me safe.

      I can't see how such "internet guard rails" would serve me. I could well see how they could put me in a straightjacket and limit my freedom.

      If anything, "speed bump" would be the suitable analogy. Wonder why he didn't choose speed bumps. Maybe because they are as popular amongst motorists as those internet speed bumps would be amongst internet users? But even the (real) speed bumps serve a sensible purpose. You have to slow down and thus fewer accidents occur, and those that occur are less severe.

      We don't put them on highways for very logical reasons, though. We put them where pedestrians are crossing the road. Kinda like, say, laws concerning the internet that outlaw pyramid schemes and the like?

      But last time I checked there were little if any laws, regulations or guards on roads that protect trucks from pedestrians or convertibles. Maybe because trucks hardly need protection from those.

      Quite the other way 'round...

      • by alvinrod ( 889928 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @11:13AM (#28096419)

        I would say less 'speed bump' and more 'toll booth'. These companies are less interested in protecting anyone, including the artists that they allegedly server, and more interested in extorting as much money out of everyone as they can for as long as possible. Given the extension of copyright laws (and the likely extension they'll see again.) over the years it's as though they've started erecting the toll booths on public roads as well.

    • by bcrowell ( 177657 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:21AM (#28094769) Homepage

      Lynton said:

      And my point is this: the major content businesses of the world and the most talented creators of that content -- music, newspapers, movies and books -- have all been seriously harmed by the Internet.

      This is an example of the shortage of careful analysis in his editorial. He lumps together four things: music, newspapers, movies and books. Okay, let's take these one at a time:

      • Music. Here is where he has the strongest case. It's undeniably true that a large number of people illegally download a lot of music. However, there's no real evidence that this hurts legal sales of music. Sales of recorded music have shown a general upward trend over time, and they also fluctuate a lot from year to year, e.g., 1982 was a good year, driven mainly by Michael Jackson's record "Thriller." The CD format started to grow in the 1980's, and may now be starting to die, but that's sort of a normal way for a particular data format to behave. A lot of people, including me, are just finding it more convenient to buy music in digital form rather than buying it on CD.
      • Newspapers. This one is totally different. The newspapers started experimenting long ago with primitive digital methods of distribution, and as the internet matured and its use became more widespread, the experiments became more and more serious and widely used. The newspapers put their own content online, and now they're finding that they don't have a viable business model anymore. This has nothing to do with illegal copying.
      • Movies. He talks about South Korea as an example. But I just don't see illegal copying of movies being a widespread phenomenon in the U.S. He says an illegal copy of the new X-Men film was downloaded four million times. That isolated example is a drop in the bucket compared to the whole U.S. movie market. I know tons of people who illegally download music, but I don't know anybody who's ever illegally downloaded a movie.
      • Books. Totally bogus example. There's a lot of speculation that illegal copying of books will start to have a big impact on the publishing industry, but so far it hasn't. Basically it's a lot of work to scan a book and put it online, and the resulting product (a giant PDF with scanned bitmapped pages) is not very convenient.

      But, without standards of commerce and more action against piracy, the intellectual property of humankind will be subject to infinite exploitation on the Internet.

      This is the closest he comes to laying out what he wants to happen, and it isn't very specific at all. What does he mean by "standards of commerce?" I have no idea. Is this his code word for pervasive DRM and trusted computing? What kind of "action against piracy" does he want? He's already got the DMCA. Does he want a new and improved DMCA II or something? If so, let's hear what he wants to go into that bill, so we can debate it.

  • by 192939495969798999 ( 58312 ) <info&devinmoore,com> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:00AM (#28093693) Homepage Journal

    Not only has that horse bolted from the stable already, but it is now married with 10-year old kids. Trying to stop it now will work about as well as prohibition did back in the 20's, which was ill-founded for the same reason: EVERYONE was already doing the thing you're wanting to make illegal!

  • by liquidsunshine ( 1312821 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:01AM (#28093701) Homepage
    Only on bridges and other places where they are specifically needed to protect the well-being of the motorists. The internet already has these; they're called firewalls.
  • by Drakkenmensch ( 1255800 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:01AM (#28093705)
    The RIAA and MPAA, who smash our home windows and front doors to come and riffle through our things looking for evidence that we're all bandits out to rob them blind so they can sue us for hundreds of thousands the moment they find a single downloaded song. Oh, the irony.
  • Sony saying this? (Score:5, Interesting)

    by WCMI92 ( 592436 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:01AM (#28093709) Homepage

    Isn't this the company that is losing billions of dollars, that is notorious for cheating their customers, installing rootkits, running their MMORPG's in an unethical manner? This is a company that for 15 years has been living off their name and the fact that it used to make rock solid quality products.

    Yeah, I as a consumer SO need to be lectured on ethics by a stuffed shirt from Sony.

  • by MathFox ( 686808 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:02AM (#28093723)
    This request for censorship comes from the guys that sold malware infected CDs [wikipedia.org] to unsuspecting customers. (And passed the blame to someone else.) I wonder how they avoided criminal prosecution...
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      by Opportunist ( 166417 )

      By the same miracle formula that now prevents banks with poor management from walking the road many small businesses went (i.e. bankrupcy):

      Too big to fail.

  • by ionix5891 ( 1228718 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:03AM (#28093739)

    metal bars for entertainment CEOs

  • In the very clever book "Virus of the Mind", the author defines an "association meme" as a social idea about how one thing goes with another. Examples of association memes include: "Cereal is for breakfast", "Muffins are for breakfast", and "Chocolate cake is not for breakfast". Merchants wishing to sell chocolate cake for breakfast (including Starbucks) must work within these memes, which is why they bake their product into a muffin shape. Quite a clever little manipulation.

    Turning now to the summary:

    Micheal Lynton, the guy who said 'I'm a guy who doesn't see anything good having come from the Internet. Period.' has posted an editorial at the Huffington Post titled Guardrails for the Internet, in which he defends his comment, and suggests that just as the interstate system needs guardrails, so too does the information superhighway.

    To extend "Virus of the Mind"'s ideas, guardrails are an association meme. We associate them with benevolence, with keeping us safe, and with an obvious danger. Lynton is invoking that meme, muffin style, to manipulate us into accepting something we otherwise would reject. The chocolate cake he is selling for breakfast should properly invoke the meme of a school principle, but if it did, nobody would accept it.

    I will contribute a dollar to any charity raising money to put Lynton onto a ship and dump him onto a deserted island, never to return. Let's see how he, a professional influencer who, in influencing the movements of billions of dollars, has never produced so much as a grain of wheat, fares alone.

  • Cars (Score:5, Funny)

    by DoofusOfDeath ( 636671 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:08AM (#28093799)

    suggests that just as the interstate system needs guardrails, so too does the information superhighway.

    I think he's actually right. One time, when my Cat6 cable had too tight of a bend, I had packets breaking through and slamming against the wiring closet wall. It was... terrible.

  • by JaredOfEuropa ( 526365 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:12AM (#28093841) Journal

    Internet users have become used to getting things when they want it and how they want it, and those of us in the entertainment business want to meet that kind of demand as efficiently and effectively as possible. But what has happened online is that if it is 'beyond store hours' and the shop is closed, a lot of people just smash the window and steal what they want.

    The guy does have a point.

    However, I have seen precious little from the entertainment business to meet this demand. Shopping for music online has become somewhat better, with reasonable prices, good selection and less DRM. But online movies? There's few choices there, if any. And the focus is still very much on DRM and/or streaming (the Pay-per-view model that they love so much), as evidenced by recently emerged standards such as HDMI and Bluray.

    Many consumers are willing to pay for content. Especially if they get a better product by paying: encoding and compression rate to order, and no DRM. I want to select the quality, easily download the file, and then be able to play it on any of my PCs, my iPhone, and on my TV using a media streaming device. Guess what? Pirates are offering the better product, as things stand today. AllofMP3 let me select encoding and compression, and movies are generally available in various levels of quality, if you take the time to look for them. The movies provided by pirates can be played anywhere, anytime. Pirated movie downloads offer more convenience even than physical Blurays; perhaps Michael should start to understand why that is, and think about ways to offer a competitive product.

    My advice: open an online store for movies, offer various download types (for starters: DVD, 720p and 1080p HD, perhaps also lowres files for PSP or iPhone), encode in formats that are generally accepted as the standard (just use what the pirates use), do not require any special players or software (so that the files can be viewed on any device), and do not add any DRM.

  • by spydum ( 828400 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:17AM (#28093937)
    I just don't buy that the CEO of Sony has altruistic motives for protecting artists. This is all about the losses that continually climb from their Entertainment branches due to box office flops. They need a place to put blame, and since piracy is the big boogey man in the closet, it's become the reason for falling earnings.
  • by pecosdave ( 536896 ) * on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:20AM (#28093965) Homepage Journal

    When they decide to start wearing pants [ctrlaltdel-online.com] I might pay attention to them.

  • Severe Tire Damage (Score:5, Interesting)

    by argent ( 18001 ) <peter@@@slashdot...2006...taronga...com> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:22AM (#28093997) Homepage Journal

    If one, for the sake of discussion, were to accept the bad analogies in this message: don't forget that Sony are the ones who shipped CDs with that caused "severe tire damage" to people who didn't even touch them... without so much as a warning that they were going to install a rootkit on your computer. If Sony's proposing guard rails, be sure they'll be electrified to 270 kVA with spinning tungsten-carbide blades and proximity-fused claymores.

  • by Hangtime ( 19526 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:23AM (#28094013) Homepage

    If you sent this guy back to 1999 with all the knowledge of the last 10 years at his disposal - I think he still screws it up and history repeats itself in terms of how the market plays out. This is a guy who cannot and will not change. The industry could have OWNED online distribution but instead decided to put its head and the sand now it deals with its gatekeeper and arbiter, Apple. Good job there sparky.

  • by DaRat ( 678130 ) * on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:23AM (#28094015)
    Ummm, most of the interstate system doesn't have guard rails. Sure, there are guard rails in the dangerous or highly populated spots, but most of the network doesn't have guard rails.
  • by macraig ( 621737 ) <mark...a...craig@@@gmail...com> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:27AM (#28094063)

    ... are the unethical profit margins of the mob of middlemen who thrive at the direct expense of both creative people and the people who would be consumers of that creativity. Those middlemen are the true "useless eaters" that early Twentieth Century eugenicists should have been targeting with forced sterilization. Nobody likes parasites, least of all the intended hosts of them. Just as the Italian Mafia were parasites on the economy, so too is the RIAA and its clientele parasitic. They themselves produce NOTHING of tangible value to the world, yet those corporations harbor some of the wealthiest people in the world. Useless eaters all, deserving of sterilization....

  • And my point is this: the major content businesses of the world and the most talented creators of that content -- music, newspapers, movies and books -- have all been seriously harmed by the Internet.

    "That word, you keep using that word, I don't think it means what you think it means."

    Labels, studios, newspapers, and book publishers are not "creators of content".

    The creators of the content are actors, artists, composers, directors, writers, journalists... not the companies that distribute that content. The Internet makes distribution easier and cheaper, so of course it's going to cut into the business of less efficient distributors. That's going to happen no matter what guard-rails you put on the information superhighway.

  • A hopeful nazi (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Eravnrekaree ( 467752 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:33AM (#28094137)

    This idiot seems to be a Nazi with his calls for censorship and so on. He acts like there is some terrible danger, yet copyright infringement is already illegal under present laws and nothing more needs to be done. I think what he is rally concerned about is that people can now publish their own music, art, literature etc, independantly, without having to go through large corporations who have to approve their work and control it. The idea that people can express themselves independantly scares them and they want the internet to be like every other medium, they control, that is filled with the same corporate controlled crap that fills the other mediums, basically an online version of MTV, the crappy noise that passes for music today and so on cooked up by recording company marketing departments and computer processed and synthesized that could make any bad singer sound like Elvis.

  • by khendron ( 225184 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:33AM (#28094141) Homepage

    He's right in that people have a "give it to me now" attitude, but he's wrong in saying that people are unwilling to pay for it.

    If people want it now, and you want to make money from them, then make it available to them now. People will pay if you give them what they want.

    I have happily paid to rent movies online through iTunes. Why? Because it is very convenient. I wanted to see something now and didn't want to leave the house to get it. iTunes delivered and I paid for the convenience. When what I want to see is not available to purchase (for example, most TV shows are not available through iTunes in Canada), I have to turn to the free alternatives.

  • History lessons? (Score:4, Interesting)

    by argent ( 18001 ) <peter@@@slashdot...2006...taronga...com> on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:37AM (#28094193) Homepage Journal

    In no other realm of our society have we encountered so widespread and consequential a failure to put in place guidelines over the use and growth of such a major industry.

    I guess he never heard of the Betamax decision. Now what company was involved in that, again?

    Not to mention the crises created by the invention of piano rolls, radio, and the cassette tape.

    Speaking of which, why do you suppose the Sony Walkman was a roaring success, but Sony completely failed to come up with a credible competitor for the iPod? If Sony had run the "Rip, Mix, Burn" ad campaign instead of trying to put guardrails on their music players, do you suppose history might have been a little different?

  • I completely agree (Score:3, Insightful)

    by Dunbal ( 464142 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:38AM (#28094201)

    just as the interstate system needs guardrails, so too does the information superhighway.

          Yes, there should be laws protecting the common people on the internet from abuses by large corporations like RIAA backer and rootkit maker Sony, "trusted computing" Microsoft, and anyone else who buys judges and politicians or wants to take rights away from people in an underhanded way via the internet.

  • by durathor ( 450646 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:39AM (#28094233)

    You know (bear with me on this), one thing that really annoys me on the internet is when someone spends considerable time and effort putting together a humorous photoshop/blog post/top 10, and the next day I see it, completely uncredited in a national newspaper. Some journalist has stolen it...just because it's on the internet...and stuff on the internet is like, free, right?

    Much as I hate to admit it, I think on this occasion Michael Lyton has a point (dammit, I don't like what he says but I have to defend his right to say it). In the real world, no one would seriously contemplate reprinting the contents of a book they borrowed from the library and passing it off as their own, and no one would seriously contemplate walking into their local record store and walking out with anything that caught their eye just because they 'wouldn't have bought it anyway if they'd had to pay full price'.

    Thing is, I also buy into the argument that illegal copying actually promotes music sales. Hell, I copied enough albums from my friends when I was a kid to know that I still bought a lot of albums. But don't try to con me that what I wasn't doing wasn't stealing (i.e. taking without permission). It's stealing when a journalist tries to pass off my website as his own work, it's stealing when I copy an album that I never wanted to listen to but my friend says I might quite like, and it's stealing when I download the latest star trek movie because I can't be bothered to pay for it at the cinema and after all, it's bound to be shown on free television at some point anyway.

    So let's reboot this discussion. All illegal downloading is theft. Full stop. The more interesting question, is it theft like stealing a pen from work, or is it theft like stealing a car. And if it's theft like stealing a pen, then why is so much more like stealing a car when somebody does it to me.

  • Reality Is (Score:4, Insightful)

    by kenp2002 ( 545495 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:41AM (#28094245) Homepage Journal

    A craftsman makes 4 wooden masks. Someone takes one without paying for it. The craftsman now has 3 and someone has stolen 1. This is theft.

    A craftsman makes 4 wooden masks. Someone makes an identical mask. The craftsman still has 4 masks. This is not theft as the craftsman didn't lose anything.

    I don't care how hard they try, you cannot redefine theft. As a wise man once said, "I DO NOT BELIEVE IN IMAGINARY PROPERTY."

    The Internet exposed a simple fact is all. Information is not a product. So laws that for centuries relied on the concept of phsyical assets are scrambling to catch up. industries built on that are trying to catch up.

    The whole concept of copyright law was built, for centuries, that copying something had an implied labor cost, it took some measure of effort to copy. Now with the digital age, the Internet has exposed a series of seriously flawed assumptions on how fast information ages.

    Dear Sony, we do not need safty rails on the Internet. It is like space (hence we call it cyberspace) in which it is nearly an infinite space with no center, up, or down. You can't "fall off" the edge. Like it or not, this is now the 21st Century and the last 30,000 years of recorded history is not much use in charting a course into the 21st century.

    Relgion must adapt
    Science must adapt
    Business must adapt
    Government must adapt
    Cultures must adapt
    People must adapt

    Litigating a false nostalgia of how thigs "should be" based on how "things were" is irrelivant.

    The 21st century is now and we need to move forward. The Internet is not a series of tubes, it is what it is, the Internet. It is not analagous to a phone network, a highway system, or a giant Rube Golberg machine. It a a complex collection of communication protocols and presentation layers most easly conceptualized by the phrase:

    "Please Do Not Tip Strippers Poorly Again"

    (P)hysical = The hardware that connects stuff
    (D)ata Link = How do get stuff from hardware A to B
    (N)etwork = Logical segmenting of 1 network from another
    (T)ransport = How do we get stuff reliably from A to B, especially across more then 1 network
    (S)ession = how can we tell we are working with A and B
    (P)resentation = how do we move data from A to B
    (A)pplication = What tools do we use to move data from A to B

    While the descriptions are simplistic they should be sufficent in understanding what the "Internet" is, a very larger interconnected network of computers that operates largly based on that model listed above.

    The Internet is PING, ARP, TCP, UDP, HTTP, XML, XVID, GIF, PNG, AVI, FLAC, FLASH, IRC, NTP, and so on and so on interoperating with one another to present information from A to B.

    If I must dumb it down, then I offer this:

    "To describe the Internet I can offer this: it is the canvas by which people communicate with, not only wth a wide variety of paints, but all the colors each paint makes available." - Ken P.

  • Hasn't changed (Score:4, Informative)

    by nlawalker ( 804108 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:46AM (#28094331)

    "There has grown in the minds of certain groups in this country the idea that just because a man or corporation has made a profit out of the public for a number of years, the government and the courts are charged with guaranteeing such a profit in the future, even in the face of changing circumstances and contrary to public interest. This strange doctrine is supported by neither statute or common law. Neither corporations or individuals have the right to come into court and ask that the clock of history be stopped, or turned back."
            - Robert Heinlein, Life Line, 1939

  • by JPLemme ( 106723 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @08:52AM (#28094395)
    I'm not going to make any /. friends today, but he's got a valid point.

    1. When there's a show on British TV that I want to see, I don't wait for it to show up on BBC America with extra commercials a year later. I don't wait for it to come out on a region 2 DVD and then order the DVD through amazon.co.uk and have it shipped to my friend's parents' house in England so they can include it in his next care package from home and then buy a special non-region-coded DVD player so I can watch it. I just grab a torrent within an hour of the show airing in the UK and watch it on my big TV that connects directly to my computer.

    2. When I DVR something (that I paid for the right to save and watch at my convenience) and it's sitting on my cable box in the living room and I want to watch it in the bedroom, or on my Blackberry, I don't just go without. I grab a torrent and watch that wherever I want.

    3. When I want a copy of a worn-out cassette that I bought back in college (or a vinyl album I left in the sun...), I don't pay $18 for a new CD. I pay $8 for a DRM-free MP3 album from Amazon. If it's not available as an MP3 I grab a torrent. If I can't grab a torrent I'll try a used CD store and the RIAA gets no money at all.

    4. When I want a collection of -- say -- all the songs that charted on the Billboard Modern Rock chart in the 90's (even the ones that never took off), I look for legal versions. You can't even get the *charts* for free; much less a convenient collection of the singles. (And if it was available they'd try to charge $5,000 even though we all know that half the stuff would be unlistenable.) They don't even want me to listen to their music in this case. How much more music would I want to buy if I could have dozens of "I remember that song!" moments?

    In all of these cases I demand immediate access to DRM-free digital versions of my favorite media. And in most of those cases it's not that the store is closed, it's that the store either doesn't offer what I want to buy, they want one of my kidneys in exchange, or they think that making me jump through hoops and skirting US law is an acceptable substitute for just selling what I'm trying to PAY THEM FOR. When you get right down to it, I'm no different than an anarchist at a WTO meeting.
  • by anothy ( 83176 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:04AM (#28094557) Homepage
    he really ought to stop comparing the internet to a highway with guardrails and dangerous vehicles on it. i mean, the internet isn't a big truck.
  • by Zontar_Thing_From_Ve ( 949321 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:13AM (#28094679)
    Oh how I wish that this could be read by Mr. Lynton, but unfortunately even if he read it, he JUST WOULDN'T GET IT anyway.

    Lynton refers to how Sony has essentially closed shop in South Korea because those sneaky Koreans can download his DVDs too fast, so they have no incentive to buy them. Well, I'll tell you why people in South Korea and elsewhere are bypassing Sony. It's your fault. And I'm going to explain why it's your fault and I'm not even going to go down the path of telling you that American movies mostly suck. While that's certainly true, that's not why South Koreans and others aren't buying from your stores.

    Hollywood, which includes you Mr. Lynton, is its own worst enemy. Let's take a look at what you release to foreign markets. There's a huge demand for region 1 (USA/Canada) DVDs around the world. Know why? It's because region 1 DVDs mean quality. Region 1 DVDs typically use progressive video and high quality audio (DTS for example). Region 1 DVDs often have extras and while personally I'm not real fond of extras most of the time, the marketplace here seems to want it. Let's look at what you give to people in South Korea, which is region 3 for those keeping score. Well, you often release a film with zero extras. You sometimes give them interlaced video and lower quality audio choices (AC3 only and at low bit rates). I have no idea if the subtitles you give them are any good or are as bad as some of those bad English subtitles we used to get on Hong Kong movies in the past. And here's the best part of all - you and your cabal have "persuaded" almost every single DVD manufacturer to stop making DVD players that can have the region settings changed. So now Samsung, a very large company in, hmmm, South Korea, simply does not make a DVD player anywhere in the world now that can be made region free. They are not alone in this. I participate in a large video forum and you know what one of our most popular questions from new members is? How can I make my DVD player region free? You know what the answer is? Often it is "You can't". So you, Mr. .Lynton, sold an inferior product to your customers around the world and in your paranoia over piracy made sure that they could not buy a superior product from region 1 and watch it on their TVs at home. And to top it all off, while you and your Hollywood buddies have slit your own throats you are convinced that someone else has done you wrong. What's really sad is that doing things like having region codes to begin with and convincing Samsung and others to stop making consumer friendly DVD players has caused those customers to look for alternatives - "free" copies of your DVDs that don't have region codes in them so they can play them at home. So no, I don't feel sorry for you because you did this to yourself and what you and your buddies in Hollywood think that consumers want is not what they want at all. If you want to fix this, put out better product overseas and start encouraging those same DVD player manufacturers to make region free DVD players because until you give up on region coding and finally understand how much we, your potential consumers, hate it, you're basically grasping at sand and not understanding why it's running through your fingers.
  • by Cajun Hell ( 725246 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @09:18AM (#28094715) Homepage Journal

    But what has happened online is that if it is 'beyond store hours' and the shop is closed, a lot of people just smash the window and steal what they want.

    Not to defend window-smashers, but if people are lining up and begging you to take their money, and your response is "no thank you, we're not interested in money," then I don't know why you're complaining about the windows. Replacing them only costs money, and money is obviously something you don't care about anyway.

    If you were a for-profit business, then you would open the store.

  • the idea that we need a corporate filter on our culture is a false assumption

    actually, you did need a corporate filter on our culture... before the internet, when vinyl and cassette tape were our distribution options

    now artists and fans can reach each other directly

    so now the corporation is looking forlorn and feeling insecure, and its shills (this retarded author) are attempting to justify and extend its existence artificially

    the job of the average media company right now is simple: just die already

  • by unity100 ( 970058 ) on Tuesday May 26, 2009 @04:42PM (#28101283) Homepage Journal

    Fuck you.

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