In the UK, a Plan To Criminalize Illegal Downloaders 382
krou writes "It looks like the launch of the UK Pirate Party came not a moment too soon. The Independent reports that Business Secretary Lord Mandelson is going to take a hard-line stance to preserve copyright after intense lobbying by the music and film industry. 'Under the proposed laws, Ofcom, the industry regulator, would be given powers to require Internet service providers to collect information on those who downloaded pirate material. The data would be anonymous, but serious repeat infringers would be tracked down through their computer ID numbers.' Prospective punishments included restricting internet access, either slowing down an offender's broadband or disconnecting them altogether, and fines up to £50,000. The Pirate Party came out against the scheme, calling it a gross invasion of civil liberties, while Tom Watson, the former minister for digital engagement, spoke out against the move, saying that the government should stop trying criminalize downloaders just so as to 'restore 20th-century incumbents to their position of power,' but should instead be 'coming up with interventions that will nurture 21st-century creative talent.'"
Mandelson (Score:5, Funny)
Lord Mandelson. It *is* a villainous name. He's a slimy horrible member of the undead. He just keeps coming back...
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Funny)
As Frankie Boyle [wikipedia.org] said recently on Mock the Week [mocktheweek.tv], "Who made this guy a Lord, the Sith?"
My other favourite was, "Mandelson's back from his summer vacation - what they don't tell you is he stopped on his way back to visit his parents ... in Mordor."
Re:Mandelson (Score:4, Insightful)
p.s. somehow Grand Viziers tend to be portrayed rather "unsympathetically" in books and films, wonder why
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
It does sound like a villain name out of a cheesy crossover between James Bond and DC comics, doesn't it?
Re:Mandelson (Score:4, Funny)
Actually, his name reminds me of THIS [youtube.com].
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
http://1.bp.blogspot.com/_j4BAix7ZCvo/SOYJHrk2bdI/AAAAAAAACB8/pYhHHwrYP1I/s1600-h/Mandelson+moustache.jpg [blogspot.com]
Peter Mandelson with hairy worm under nose.
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Interesting)
Its funny but also somewhat scary you say that, because for years I've thought he not only looked like but also behaved very much like Heinrich Himmler. At times I find Mandelson a truly scary character because he seems to have immense political power behind the scenes. Time and time again he has been linked with corruption. He has even been thrown out of Government twice, yet he is back for a 3rd time and within months of being back, somehow he has one of the most powerful jobs in New Labour. He must have some very powerful friends and considering the speed he has got back to such a powerful position, I wonder if he has also enough dirt on other MPs to blackmail and force himself back into such power. In some ways he is just as manipulative and controlling as Heinrich Himmler was. I think if Mandelson ever got anymore political power, He would create a nightmare country with him at the center of power.
Re: (Score:2)
and controlling as Heinrich Himmler was. I think if Mandelson ever got anymore political power, He would create a nightmare country with him at the center of power.
Welcome to Mendelsonia.
Population: *Your security code isn't high enough to access that information*
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Informative)
Himmler is close, but both I and Mandelson himself [timesonline.co.uk] think that Stalin's henchman Lavrentiy Beria [wikipedia.org] is a closer fit:
Beria is the nasty version of Himmler, as you will find if you read about his activities as Stalin's secret police chief. What sort of man would find a comparison with mass murderers like Trotsky and Beria flattering and amusing? A former member of the Young Communist League, perhaps? [bbc.co.uk] But I'm sure he abandoned the Marxist ideology years ago, just like the rest of New Labour. You know, when they became "right wing" like the BBC says. <Hollow Laughter>.
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Funny)
Baron Mandelson, 679, of Transylvania, [today.com] smiled for the cameras, only having to reconstitute himself twice when the flashes dissolved him into dust. "I only enter where I am invited," he said in sepulchral Eurocratic tones. "When I am called upon, I shall return."
Labour MPs rushed to greet the chief architect of New Labour, many carrying wooden stakes, garlic and crosses.
Mr Mandelson has had a chequered career in office. Previous Cabinet terms have ended with unfortunate resignations due to being beheaded by angry villagers, burnt at the stake, wrapped in chains and thrown to the bottom of the Volga and, in one case, nuked from orbit.
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Insightful)
Heinrich Himmler spent years scheming and manipulating to finally work himself into a position of immense power. It is that scheming and manipulation that allowed him to consolidate his position of power leading up to WW2. His behavior showed someone extremely driven (at almost any cost) to seek any way to gain power over others. Psychologically that's very interesting, as it strongly points to a personality disorder that I strongly suspect Mandelson shares many aspects with. A good example is their extreme self interest, with such a total lack of empathy for opponents. Knowledge and lies are a weapon to people like this. Mandelson is exactly like this. (People like them so often learn from a young age that lying gets them what they want and as they have no empathy to others they don't care they are lying. Worst still, they sadly see most people as overly trusting pawns their lies easily manipulate. Even worse, they consider themselves smarter for winning over trusting people).
We have seen atrocities throughout human history, so sadly there's nothing special about our time. Given the right circumstances (or more to the point, wrong circumstances) seemingly innocent people today would sadly be capable of similar levels of horrific contempt and lack of empathy to opponents and people they just see as their pawns, in their own rampant driven for self advancement at the expense of others. For example, the act of treating 1 person with contempt or 10 million people with contempt is simply the difference between the amount of power the person in power has. But if someone with a huge amount of power treats the lives of 10 million people with contempt, then you will find hundreds of thousands of people out of the 10 million are likely to end up dying if the contempt lasts months and years. We have seen that repeated throughout history and around the world. The people in power at the time, often don't want the 10 million to die. The point is, they don't care if they live or die. Their only concern if the 10 million died is what effect would that have on their own position of power. Its a totally self interested mindset. They don't even think about the victims they are only interested in how that affects them. Thankfully most people don't think like this sick minority of people, but sadly this minority so often seeks to gain extreme power over others, ultimately for their own gain from having such power over others.
If the world is to ever progress, we *all* need to learn to recognize this kind of person and then together we would have the power to stop them holding such positions of power over us all.
Re:Mandelson (Score:4, Insightful)
What constantly astounds me about Mandelson is the lack of furore about the fact that he's unelected. We didn't vote for this man. How the hell did he get to be running the country?
Re: (Score:2)
He's running the country because everyone else has swine flu
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
This is Britain, not a democracy, why does he need anyone to vote for him? No-one voted for Brown, and two-thirds of the country voted against the ruling party in the last election yet they were returned with a large majority.
You've never needed an electoral mandate to rule this country, what are you so surprised about?
Re:Mandelson (Score:5, Informative)
Put slimebag Mandelson into perspective...
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/talking_point/471585.stm [bbc.co.uk]
"Mr Mandelson resigned from the Cabinet in December last year after it was revealed he took a secret £373,000 home loan from his ministerial colleague, Geoffrey Robinson, who also resigned over the affair."
Pulled in a few favors and got away with mortgage fraud on the mortgage application form by not declaring the secret loan. Anyone else would be in prison for that fraud.
http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/uk_politics/1210506.stm [bbc.co.uk]
"Peter Mandelson and Europe Minister Keith Vaz have been cleared of wrongdoing by the Hammond inquiry into the Hinduja passport affair. The inquiry into the circumstances that led to Mr Mandelson's resignation in January accepted that he had not deliberately lied about making a call to a Home Office minister. Secondly it found there was no connection between the Hindujas' donation to the Dome and their successful applications for citizenship."
Pulled in a few favors, got away with arranging a passport for a Labour donor, whitewashes inquiry into affair.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1205049/Lapping-sun-super-rich-friends--Mandy-man-whos-supposed-running-country.html [dailymail.co.uk]
Story seems to have been strangely deleted and not in anyone's cache about Mandelson living it up on a rich benefactors behalf.
http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1207060/Mandelson-met-Gaddafis-son-Corfu-ahead-Lockerbie-bomber-release-talks.html [dailymail.co.uk]
"Lord Mandelson faces the prospect of a sleaze investigation after he met Colonel Gaddafi's son days before it emerged that the Lockerbie bomber was to be freed."
Now reports that the alleged bomber may be freed on compassionate grounds.
Re: (Score:2)
Interesting that you should mention a vanished newspaper article that criticised Mandelson.
A while back I tried to find a quotation from Mandelson in which he said that "we now live in the post-democratic age". It was reported in a newspaper. He said it while working as a European Commissioner.
Weirdly, the original quotation is nowhere to be found. It turns up on blogs and so on, but there's no source.
I guess I must have been mistaken in ever believing that it existed. The Commissar vanishes. The lie become [newseum.org]
anonymous? (Score:5, Insightful)
The data would be anonymous, but serious repeat infringers would be tracked down through their computer ID numbers.
This must be some definition of the word 'anonymous' that I was not previously aware of.
Re: (Score:2, Funny)
It's the British definition.
Re:anonymous? (Score:5, Interesting)
The data would be anonymous, but serious repeat infringers would be tracked down through their computer ID numbers.
This must be some definition of the word 'anonymous' that I was not previously aware of.
Yes, quite. The whole thing is pure fascistic lunacy, that appears to have been drawn up by corporate lobbyists and Whitehall bureaucrats with no awareness of either the technical or legal ramifications of what they are doing.
Also, since the rate of progress of technology nowadays is so much faster than big business and government can respond to it, this scheme will be obsolescent by the time that it gets implemented.
I recently wrote [peter-b.co.uk] to the Department for Business, Innovation and Skills in response to the pre-legislative consultation documents [berr.gov.uk], and I would encourage other technically-literate Brits to do the same.
Re: (Score:2)
You wrote to the UK authorities and expect anything other than a response to say "We're right, shut up" ?
I've given up after many times having had to wait for months for a reply and then have it made quite, quite clear to me that not only have they not taken on board my concerns, they haven't even bothered to read them.
Re:anonymous? (Score:5, Interesting)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
you say the word lobbyist as if it is a bad word.
What do you think democracy is? The interested parties lobby to get their way.
What you have a problem with is not lobbying.... but the fact that lobbies you do not like are successful. ...
Corporations are a lobby.
Public sector unions are a lobby.
Lawyers are a lobby.
You could easily form your own lobby with whatever you wish. Get some names. Get people out there to care about the issue, and you too can influence government.
In any case. I do not believe in
Re:anonymous? (Score:5, Insightful)
Nothing is more insulting that equating being technically literate with 'defending the anonymity of internet pirates'.
Welcome to slashdot.
I tend to agree with you regarding downloading (though I'm fully supportive of significant copyright reform), but what this amounts to is government monitoring in your home. As the internet grows in significance in people's lives, the information broadband providers can collect on them has too - what your read, what you say, what you buy. That data should not be collected by the government. You mention traffic cameras, but that's another balancing act - illegal driving leads to deaths, illegal filesharing may slightly undermine some commerce. I'll mention your mail. Should the government read your post to check for illegal activities? (Sure, it'll x-ray a package to make sure there are no guns, or run it past a sniffer dog for drugs, but these don't intrude to the same extent.) Should it monitor your book purchases and library use for inappropriate materials? Alternatively, we could put microphones in your house to ensure you have appropriate licenses for all of your music use. The crowd on here does tend to take an extreme libertarian perspective, but it's not as simple as saying they're wrong. Ultimately, their argument is not even that the crime shouldn't be detected and prosecuted for (though many will say just that), but rather that the tools being proposed are not suitable for a government.
Re:anonymous? (Score:5, Informative)
Nothing is more insulting that equating being technically literate with 'defending the anonymity of internet pirates'. What is this? digg? torrentfreak? or 'newsforpirates'?
If you think that's what my objection to this is about, you're a fool suffering under the influence of the well-known fallacy, "The innocent have nothing to fear."
I am not a pirate, yet I oppose this. My main objections to this are:
In the legislation as currently proposed, there is no discussion whatsoever of what recourse ISP account holders would have against false accusations.
Support this legislation if you like; I will have no sympathy whatsoever for you if and when you find yourself in court accused of something you didn't do and with no way to mount an effective defence.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Nothing is more insulting that equating being technically literate with 'defending the anonymity of internet pirates'.
It's not about defending anonymity of pirates, it's defending of anonymity on the Net in general. Unless you have some magical way of determining which users are pirates and which aren't without getting rid of anonymity for everyone...
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
I knowingly, contantly, take other peoples hard work for free, again and again and again! I listened to the radio and when a commercial came on, I CHANGED THE CHANNEL! Wha ha ha ha ha! Whenever I watch tv, I intentionally avoid
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
The data would be anonymous, but serious repeat infringers would be tracked down through their computer ID numbers.
This must be some definition of the word 'anonymous' that I was not previously aware of.
It's a typo. They meant the data would be an oni mouse; i.e.: A mouse that travels through an optical network interface.
It's a faunization of the truck analogy.
Re: (Score:2)
The data would be anonymous, but serious repeat infringers would be tracked down through their computer ID numbers.
This must be some definition of the word 'anonymous' that I was not previously aware of.
The correct term would be pseudonymous, I guess. It is not directly personably identifiable information, but stands for it. Idealy it would not be reversible by itself, but could allow for identification upon further downloads. Think of a one-way hash.
Re: (Score:2)
I want to know where these "computer ID numbers" all of a sudden appeared from because if they are MAC or IP addresses, either can be spoofed easily.
Well, most computers have a CPUID nowadays. You remember, the ones that were supposed not to be used for identification against the user but to help e-commerce more secure. Yep. Of course, also not incredibaly hard to disable, at least on current motherboards.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I won't respond to the ACGP, but Star Wrek: In The Pirkinning was produced for a few thousand dollars. Only twenty years ago it cost a fortune to produce an album, now it's within everyone's reach. It won't be long before MPAA vs indies is where RIAA vs indies is now.
The MPAA's situation is more dire than the RIAA's, because the RIAA has radio. The MPAA has theaters that suck. Your idea is one the MPAA should look into. Rather than surround sound they should keep the sound on or behind the screen, with a se
Criminalise Illegal Downloaders? (Score:2, Insightful)
I thought criminalising something was where you took something that wasn't illegal ( but a significant amount of people do ) and making it illegal?
*sigh* (Score:5, Informative)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
Re: (Score:2)
It could be illegal to throw sweet wrappers on the street, but still not a crime.
Breaches of contract are not normally considered criminal - the aggrieved party might file a civil suit. The cops might start looking for you if you keep not showing up in court and ignoring the court's requests.
Now to wait for someone to say [citation needed]
Re:Criminalise Illegal Downloaders? (Score:5, Insightful)
Copyright infringments are not in the criminal code, at least not in civilized countries where the criminal code is reserved for laws "against the general population". Things like murder, rape and arson are in there, where you may assume that someone doing it is posing a threat to anyone and everyone, not just to a selected group of people, or that someone is posing a threat to life and wellbeing of a person, a group or everyone.
In general, these things are prosecuted by the state without you requiring to sue (it's one of those things where the cases are called "the people against "+$name.
The alternative is the civil code. Here, you have to sue if you care about someone doing something. Here you have things like slander or trespassing. I could maybe not care if someone told everyone I have a romantic inclination towards fish, or I could probably not care that my neighbor constantly walks through my yard. I have the right to make them stop, if necessary by legal force, sue them and I will get my right, but the state and attorney couldn't care less until I make the first move.
What's been done by the RIAA (and its local counterparts) is to push copyright towards the criminal code. The idea is simple: Save money, and have you, the taxpayer, pay to protect their rights.
Re: (Score:2)
Copyright infringments are not in the criminal code, at least not in civilized countries
By that definition, the world is rapidly running out of civilized countries.
Not that I disagree with you.
Re: (Score:2)
But theft (physical theft) is considered a crime in civilised countries. Theft bears no damage to the general population, yet we still use public servants like policemen to chase down offenders, public servants like judges to prosecute them, and public facilities like prisons to punish them.
I believe the reasoning behind theft being a crime is that it serves as a deterrent, and allows people to receive justice without having to dedicate an infeasible amount of time and resources into finding the prosecutor
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Physical theft is considered a crime, because it deprives someone of a good...
Copyright infringement on the other hand, does not deprive anyone, and it is impossible to prove that something would have been purchased had it not been available for free.
Infact, it has been shown that copyright infringement has actually increased sales of various things, as it increases the product exposure, at least assuming the product is any good... If the product is really lousy, then people might tell their friends how cra
Re: (Score:2)
No, illegal and criminal are not the same things. Not everything illegal is criminal. Sometimes when you violate a law it's not a crime, just a civil offense.
But yet, like you, I'm confused about the word "criminalize" in the title. Adding ludicrous measures against somebody doesn't equate criminalization, and when I read that something is criminalized I expect that either the police would get involved in chasing the offenders, or that it can result in jail time. There isn't anything like this mentioned in
Re: (Score:2)
Replying to myself.. but I wanted to thank those that cleared up that misconception that I had where anything violating a law was criminal.
Cheers
Re: (Score:2)
What is an illegal download? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
I think most courts would contend that any reasonable person would know that the files being offered through links on Pirate Bay are not sanctioned. Conversely any reasonable person would agree that files being offered for purchase through iTunes are sanctioned. But there is a wide middle-ground. YouTube now has so many officially-sponsored channels and deals that it's hard to know, when you watch something, whether it was posted officially or not. In
Re:Criminalise Illegal Downloaders? (Score:5, Informative)
If you read the page you linked to carefully you will find:
The making, dealing in or use of infringing copies is a criminal offence (s. 107).
This is an example of /. needing a "-1 Factually incorrect" to cancel "+1 Informative" mods.
Re: (Score:2)
This is an example of /. needing a "-1 Factually incorrect" to cancel "+1 Informative" mods.
Offtopic but, how do you interpret "-1 Overrated" on a "+1 Informative"?
Re: (Score:2)
A post which starts at 2 and is rated "+1 Informative", "-1 Overrated" ends up as "2, Informative". If it was overrated precisely because it isn't informative, that's not the desired result.
Copying is stealing (Score:5, Interesting)
Copying is stealing.
The very fact that we're willing to accept that sentence for discussion shows how far things have come. Stop and think about it, taken out of context. How Orwellian it sounds!
Now that every uninformed member of society believes that copying is a criminal act, well of course it should be criminalised. That only makes sense.
I do believe that artists and creators need to be rewarded. But more and more I'm coming around to the notion that we should scrap the whole bloody slab of law that covers IP, and start again with something sensible.
That won't happen of course. It seems that preserving industry and building capital is the single only motivation for existence in this brave new Labour world.
What ever happened to the notion that money is not valuable in and of itself, but only as a means to the ends we choose?
Copyright is stealing (Score:5, Insightful)
It deprives us from works becoming public property long after they cease to be economically feasible, being held hostage by the 'rights owners' who refuse to let them go into PD and be renewed, to serve as a foundation for new work, new art, as it has been so many times before. We are deprived from the same rights that authors and musicians during the times enjoyed, to look at what was, rethink it, rephrase it and wrap it in new clothes. Think of all the plays and movies that are based on the basic idea of Romeo and Juliet (and I'm not talking about cheezy works like the one movie with Leonardo), something that could not be done if Shakespeare lived and worked today.
How many songs have been written that used classic tunes and parts thereof as their base, rearranged and reworked to fit the tastes of today? Have you ever heard Vanessa Mae play Toccata and Fuge? If Bach lived today he could demand that his work is to be played with organs only and we would never hear this goosebump-creating work of violin again. Ever.
You see how easily that argument is turned around? Why shouldn't we spin "copyright is stealing" in return?
Re: (Score:2)
How is the parent a troll? Did someone just look at the subject and assume the post says the opposite of what the post actually says?
Re:Copyright is stealing (Score:5, Insightful)
Ah, the old 'Big Lie' method of propaganda. Just keep repeating it!
You assert that without copyright there is no content.
Therefore Linux does not exist, I have a computer at home that displays nothing but a blank screen, and I only imagine it has an operating system in my diseased CyberCommie mind.
Also, music came into existence with copyright. Prior to the 18th century music was a concept unknown to the human race. The 10,000 year old wind instrument recently dug up was clearly as fraudulent as all the dinosaur skulls that ruin nice peoples bedtime stories.
Furthermore, there is a perfect correlation between how much revenue a film generates and its artistic merit. Expensive movies are critically acclaimed and popular, movies made on a shoestring budget are critically panned and never attract an audience.
It must be nice to live in a complete fantasy world :)
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
First off, sorry you got modded troll. :/
Too many moronic moderators these days use Troll in place of "I don't agree"
It's not depriving you a helluva lot more than the alternative, i.e. the works not being created in the first place. For any commercial work created under copyright, there is a very good chance that it would never have been created without copyright.
That is flat out wrong, and provable.
Copyright is only a couple hundred years old, yet creative works of art have been made for over 10,000 years.
I mean, the Renaissance?
Most of the expansion of human knowledge has come about without any form of copyright protection, and in fact is measurably slower now which some say might be due to stifling effects of copyright.
For every 1 company that make
You wouldn't steal a car... (Score:2)
The aggressive anti-piracy clip on pretty much every DVD release in the UK really, really pisses me off. It horribly misinforms and outright lies to the public in an effort to FUD us into compliance. For those who don't know it, it goes something like this:
Quite apart from the conflation of downloading a film with stealing
Re:You wouldn't steal a car... (Score:4, Funny)
You wouldn't steal a baby.
You wouldn't kill a policeman, and steal his helmet.
You wouldn't go to the toilet in his helmet.
You wouldn't then send the helmet to the policeman's grieving widow.
and THEN steal it again.
Re:You wouldn't steal a car... (Score:5, Funny)
If you haven't seen it watch it. I think of it every time I watch a legally purchased DVD and am forced to sit through their propaganda and smile.
Re: (Score:2)
I think every /.er needs to watch all three series, tbh :-)
Incidentally, when the scary PIRACY message comes up in the cinema, I get a little thrill from going "Yaaarrrr!" in my best piratey voice. Doing so before Pirates Of The Caribbean got an especially good reaction.
Re: (Score:2)
I use xine and skip the FBI warnings. I don't think the FBI have much jurisdiction in Europe anyway.
Re: (Score:2)
Don't forget this one:
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=MRVHUbrbEUA [youtube.com]
Re:You wouldn't steal a car... (Score:5, Insightful)
[Hitler's] primary rules were: never allow the public to cool off; never admit a fault or wrong; never concede that there may be some good in your enemy; never leave room for alternatives; never accept blame; concentrate on one enemy at a time and blame him for everything that goes wrong; people will believe a big lie sooner than a little one; and if you repeat it frequently enough people will sooner or later believe it. /Godwin.
It's the Big Lie technique, through and through. Do you really expect otherwise from these mooks?
Re: (Score:2)
It's starting to look like the war is over, and the lobbyists won. I doubt they even have to work that hard any more. The perception of the population has been changed.
Copying is stealing.
Pfff, that's a minor victory.
They won't be happy till they reach:
Copying is GENOCIDE!
They're already preparing the scripts for the movies about the rise and fall of the pirate nazis; how killing jews opened the door to more heinous crimes like downloading songs or installing their games in multiple pcs.
P.S.: Yes, I am very proud of my best Goodwin yet.
Re:Copying is stealing (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Bullshit. Its acceptance by the mainstream media shows the irrelevance of the mainstream media. The fact that a behaviour casually classed as 'criminal' by newspapers is engaged in by such a large portion of the population shows they haven't won anything. Furthermore, the proportion of the population that does engage in this 'criminal' behaviour is disproportionately young.
But the mainstream media aren't irrelevant.
Those of us reading /. constitute the tiniest minority, and we are precisely those educated in this field. The majority absolutely do believe what the mainstream media tell them.
Sure that doesn't stop people copying, any more than a notice in the Times about casual theft in the workplace would stop Joe Bloggs from taking home a few ballpoints or a ream of paper.
But the damage is done. Yes, even those kids who download anyway believe that it is stealing. They
Re: (Score:2)
The perception of the population has been changed.
I doubt it, most (online) polls I've seen show very little acceptance for the ip lobbyist view.
Further, vpns and f2f networks are already getting wider deployments all the time. VPNs bypasses the snooping, and once the move to f2f becomes prevalent it'll all just be encrypted friend-copies-to-friend which is basically untracable and unmonitorable.
start again with something sensible.
Without a doubt. It's not very hard to construct sensible systems of reward f
This news is from the 16th (Score:5, Informative)
The Reg covered it yesterday [theregister.co.uk] and noted that Mandelson denied this report -- given they're due for an election in less than a year I can't believe they'd go out of their way to alienate voters.
Offtopic, British lords are so hilarious. There's a secretary of transport called Lord Adonis [guardian.co.uk]. Had to chuckle at that.
Re:This news is from the 16th (Score:4, Funny)
Well, that's that settled then.
Re: (Score:2)
"given they're due for an election in less than a year I can't believe they'd go out of their way to alienate voters."
I guess you don't know much about British politics. The ruling Labour party has spent the last few years doing just that, this is why they've lost every local council election and took a severe blow in the European parliamentary elections in the last year or two.
They've been in power 12 years and lost sight of what the public care about, that doesn't matter to them anymore, they believe they
This is interesting (Score:2, Informative)
media types (Score:4, Informative)
This is easy to beat folks; deprive them of money and mandy will slime away, like most modern politicians he's totally besotted with influence and power. Take away the music industries money and they loose that influence, and Mandy will sleeze away from them looking for the next big thing.
Media types need to understand Economics 101, you used to be able to charge 20 euros for an album and I'd pay because it was the only way I could get the music in hi-quality for listening wto whenever I wanted. Ok.
But now it is worth a 10 cents or less to me. This is an economic problem and trying to use the law to distort the market is anti-capitalistic.
Do what I do, and totally stop paying for media. Not by piracy, but just by sticking only to free stuff. Plenty of original music gets delivered straight to my ears, completely legally, without the 'music industry' profiteering at all.
I pay for my internet connection because that is a physical service, and I'll accept a moderate amount of advertising with my media, but that is all..
I choose to get it direct from the artists (and through portals like magnatunes etc..); and if I am not allowed to download music from a site created or controlled directly by the artists, full quality, free in both senses of the word, then I simply move along. I support artists directly with concert attendance and buying merchandise. But again, I check to see how deeply the 'music industry' is involved in the process and avoid venues/merchandising that they control.
Basically, I am using capitalism to solve the problem. Any objections from the 'industry' to that?
Video is more of a problem, I still go to cinemas, and there is a lot of entertaining free video out there, but I still watch TV for my sci-fi, and pay for that because I have decided it is worth it.
Re:media types (Score:4, Insightful)
Capitalism is socialism for the rich
Mining had to die, because 'the market' said so. Manufacturing, shipbuilding, all the other things had to go to. But when industries that the ruling classes have deep interests in, such as media or banking, start losing money - they must be saved to 'safeguard jobs' and 'protect creativity'.
Twas ever thus. The market promotes self-interest, and self-interest distorts the market for its own benefit. Capitalism always does this.
What about other 'copyright criminals' (Score:5, Interesting)
Like those companies which abuse the GPL and release media STB but not the source code for them? Oh, like Humax for their Foxsat-HDR box as (and I directly quote them) "the consumer can't update the firmware so there is no need to release the source code we use".
Thats just as much a breach of copyright as someone downloading a TV show off a torrent site.
So will Mandelson remove their net connection
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Has this appeared on gpl-violations.org yet? Given that Humax is a German company I'd have thought that Harald Welte would be interested.
uh oh (Score:2, Interesting)
whatever happens in Airstrip One will probably follow here in Oceania
Britian the land of the ... err free? (Score:4, Insightful)
So we have more camera surveillance than anywhere else.
We have more regulations than most places. And now we are going to help out the big money companies by criminalizing use of the internet.
Why are we helping a business model that doesn't work and is being flogged to death. UK industry used to be innovative and groundbreaking. Now instead of encouraging evolution of business, we are actively saying we will help you keep your outdated methods and kick the people who innovate.
We should be telling the record/movie industry to move with the times and only help when they have proven they have made changes that are compatible with the customers of the day.
Yes I know about iTunes and other services. but the pricing models applied to them are often the same (or worse) than physical media. And with all the DRM pain when the industry failed again to move forward, these methods have a bad name.
Things are changing and people *are* still buying music and movies. the losses the industry report assume that the downloaded tracks would have been bought (which is rarely the case) only a small preparation of downloaded music would have ever been bought. the rest would have been borrowed (taped/copied) from physical media as has been going on for many years. I don't ever remember a lawsuit over the sale of a dual tape deck that could copy between two tapes.
More interestingly, downloaded music can lead to more sales as bands that are not mainstream are discovered and shared.
I don't condone illegal music downloads. I do condone the use of laws to fund outdated industries that have big enough pockets to buy politicians.
Re: (Score:2)
if you aren't doing anything wrong, you have nothing to fear.
--Standard Overlord Answer book, revision 1, chapter 1, page 1, paragraph 1.
the model worked for decades: it's the damn pirates that broke it.
--Standard Overlord Answer book, revision 13, chapter 12.
Criminalize Leaks of private information by Govt. (Score:2)
Get a law passed that criminalizes The leakage of private information by Govt or its supreme "Yes, Minister" servants.
That way, the next time some MP or minister or a civil servant loses a hard disk containing private information, he/she faces hard time in a Federal Prison: for 10 years or more.
Why doesn't someone get the stupid ministers to pass a law like this?
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Get a law passed that criminalizes The leakage of private information by Govt or its supreme "Yes, Minister" servants.
That way, the next time some MP or minister or a civil servant loses a hard disk containing private information, he/she faces hard time in a Federal Prison: for 10 years or more.
Why doesn't someone get the stupid ministers to pass a law like this?
There already is such a law - the Data Protection Act forces organisations to keep data secure and a major mortgage company were fined for losing a laptop which had a whole lot of personal information on it. (They later announced that they'd pass this fine on to customers because they "didn't think it was fair" to pass it onto the executives, and nobody raised a stink. Go figure.)
There is the minor issue that AFAICT the only thing they can do is fine an organisation - and of course there's only one place g
Re: (Score:2)
How about the London Tower? unheated in winter and with the Ghost of Anne running around, it may just be wonderful for those chaps. Isn't it?
One in 12 of the population might disagree. (Score:3, Informative)
If that large a portion of the population think that something should not be illegal (and it's reasonable to assume that most people consider behaviour they indulge in should not be illegal), then perhaps their views should be considered rather than having them declared criminals. Perhaps though, Labour really wants to lose the next election. At least they consider losing 8.3% of the vote acceptable losses.
Re: (Score:2)
Or perhaps they just think they're unduly entitled to free stuff because they don't want to pay for it ;) Just because people drive along road
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re: (Score:3, Funny)
The pirate party is for kids who have yet to have a real job and learn the value of work.
Ah yes, real job. Like making computer games for a living. Ha Ha Ha my side just split.
Re: (Score:3, Interesting)
Proposed rules (Score:2)
1) Anyone is allowed to share any infinitely-reproducible item which they are able to reproduce, for any price.
2) After any such distribution, the copyright holder has a length of time equal to the term of their copyright to request a share of the gross price charged.
3) Everyone making a claim gets an equal portion of the gross price. If three people make a claim, the gross price will be divided evenly four ways (one part to each making a claim, and one part to the distributor), etc. If someone makes a clai
Re: (Score:2)
@3: what about those who've spent thier share of teh money and can't afford to come up with it later. This could be problematical, if someone asks for thier money years after everyone else has forgotten about it
An artist's view. (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:An artist's view. (Score:4, Insightful)
Definition of "illegal?" (Score:2, Insightful)
Isn't it redundant to "criminalize" something that is already illegal? Isn't that sort of the definition of "illegal?"
Funny, I thought they were synonymous.
And how will this be done? (Score:3, Interesting)
Firstly, this sounds like a Daily Mail [wikipedia.org] [wikipedia.org] article, but nevertheless.....
How do the government propose than ISPs determine whether content being downloaded is pirated or not? What is the difference between your browser downloading a copyrighted image on [insert name of favourite photo library site] for viewing and downloading an MP3 file? You and I may both download [copyrightedsong.mp3] but I may have permission from the publisher and you may not. How will the ISPs determine this? What if our connections were encrypted, encoded or used IPv6?
I could go on. And on. And on......
The fact is that apart from monitoring visits to [downloadyourillegalaudiofilesandfilmshere.com], there's absolutely sod all that anybody can do which is even remotely effective.
Now, on the other hand, if the government were brave enough to stand up to the music/film groups and come up with some sensible laws which benefit both the citizens and the music/film groups.... well, if that happend, I'd be living in cloud-cookoo land.
Re: (Score:3, Insightful)
They do what they already do, join BitTorrent swarms, note down the IP addresses in the swarm, see which ISPs they belong to, if the ISPs are UK ISPs, contact them to get their details, or get them via court order, then they sue.
The problem is that BitTorrent is by default weak to this type of attack - you have to connect to a public tracker for a specific piece of content.
If you use USENET to just download off of newsgroups on foreign servers using SSL then you should be safe to all government legislation
US Pirate Party (Score:3, Interesting)
Re: (Score:2)
Next we'll outlaw instruments, after all YouTube is full of people playing contemporary songs without paying the RIAA! Making music is killing music!
Re:Keep It Simple, Stupid (Score:4, Insightful)
Re: (Score:2)
Not with this particular minister, no.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
We do have a constitution. Parliament is the supreme power in the nation though, so effectively the constitution can be changed with a simple majority vote in the Commons.
It probably isn't unconstitutional, because if Parliament passes a law to sanction it (which it probably will in our elected dictatorship) then it becomes part of the constitution.
Re: (Score:2)
@1: this seems to be typical of most of northern Europe,as far as I can tell from Wikipedia (yes, that most reliable of sources).
@2: this comes from the idea that you would fill up the basin first, then use the water in the basin, a practice which originates in using a jug and washstand. I think this is considered by some to e the "proper" or more "classy" way to do it, and so they buy this sort of basin to make it look like that is what they do.
@3,4: yes I don't like this either, but there are a lot of vot
Re: (Score:2)
Troll much?
First, you have some serious issues about cleanliness if "just a bath" or "just a shower" is insufficient for you. If you think that you somehow magically gain "hygiene" by washing your bum or nadgers in a seperate appliance, then feel free. But the world has done without bidets for much of its life, and for the majority of its citizens in first-world countries. If you think it makes a difference to your overall cleanliness, I believe you're mistaken. I think you just have a complex about cer
Re:Wtf is up with the UK? (Score:4, Insightful)
Its complicated. With a wide and varied population you can't identify a singular reason. Let me see if I can have a crack at enumerating a few though:
1. Boiling frogs. There was never an Enabling Act really, more a series of measures which have slowly made us one of the least free people in Europe. Ask any of my fellow Brits, I bet none of them can definitively name a date when the government anti-freedom agenda began.
2. Thatcherism. Old milk-snatcher mounted a long, brutal, and ultimately successful campaign to decimate the base of her political opponents. This has left any political organization that doesn't blindly follow the dictats of the City out in the wilderness with few members. Sometimes I don't think Americans appreciate how horrific it was; they just assume she was a clone of Reagan - but she was much worse.
3. Media lockdown. The BBC doesn't have a mandate to really rip the government a new one. The papers are owned by people with heavy financial interests in the government. Murdoch has a vast media empire (several newspapers, and the very popular Sky television network) which basically dictates policy. In one instance, the Murdoch-owned Sun ran a 'campaign' to get the then home secretary David Blunkett to make some token move against immigrants, which he ultimately acceded to in an interview with the Sun. Thing is, he had his interview with the Sun to announce this very initiative already arranged before their 'campaign' started.
4. Paranoia. Britain is a very fearful society, largely for reasons 1 and 2 above. The assumption that everyone is ruthless and out for themselves is a self-fulfilling prophecy, because believing everyone else is a greedy scheming fucker makes it easier to be one yourself.
5. Deference. The curse of British society. We are conditioned by centuries of culture to defer to those of higher social classes. Even icons of the left such as Bertrand Russel and Tony Benn come from aristocratic stock, and their aristocratic manner helped them become iconic. The concept of 'betters' is sold to ordinary people by the tacit suggestion that, whilst they have their betters, they are in turn better than others...
6. Scapegoating. British people don't look up for the source of problems, they look down. Its the chavs. Its the muslims. Its single mums. Aside from taking the heat away from power, it also helps sell deference by telling people that there are 'scum' out their that they are better than.
There will be more reasons. Frankly, I think my country is doomed.
Re: (Score:3, Informative)
Speeding is an illegal act that is a civil, not criminal, offense.