On 5 Nov 2004 04:24:53 -0800,
(Modemac) wrote:
>Source: Internet Movie Database
>
>"The MPAA warned Wednesday that anyone who uploads a movie onto the
>Internet to share with users of peer-to-peer networks may face the
>same kind of copyright infringement lawsuit that the music industry
>has brought against record pirates. Published reports said that the
>MPAA is expected to file its first lawsuits as early as today
>(Thursday). The move follows a campaign by the movie industry to
>discourage online piracy with MTV-type video announcements in movie
>theaters comparing it to shoplifting videos in a store. Still, Eric
>Garland, head of Big Champagne, an Internet company that monitors
>movie downloading, suggested that the problem might be exaggerated. In
>an interview with today's Los Angeles Times, Garland said: 'Most
>people won't even know of anyone who has used the Internet to download
>Hollywood fare without permission, much less do it themselves. ...
>This is truly an extremely early-adopter fringe activity.'"
Well heck, what a good idea!
When television first started proliferating in the fifties it hurt the
movie studios badly, a lot of large old studios went bankrupt. The
fools, they should have just sued people for watching TV!
That's how you deal with a new technology and accompanying changes to
your market's demands! Stop it from happening! That damned
technology!
For that matter, Ned Ludd could have saved himself a lot of trouble by
just suing people for wearing clothes produced by automation.
--
Zapanaz
International Satanic Conspiracy
Customer Support Specialist
http://joecosby.com/
If you ever crawl inside an old hollow log and go to sleep, and while you're in there some guys come
and seal up both ends and then put it on a truck and take it to another city, boy, I don't know what to tell
you.
- Jack Handey