“2010: War on piracy goes big” |
| Posted: 27 Dec 2010 07:39 PM PST Governments and big industry have fought hard this year for control of the vast online oceans which were once the lawless playground of pirates. They have come late to the fight. And many argue they do not understand the principles on which the online world is allegedly built. But what they lack in experience, they address with money and power--and they have built a humbling arsenal. COICA It was pushed along with a flurry of last-minute lobbying from representatives of content providers including the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) and the Recording Industry Association of America (RIAA) and union and media groups. More than 70 Web sites have been taken down under COICA. In anticipation of its U.S. .com domain being shut down, Prominent Bittorrent Web site Demonoid has migrated to the Montenegro top-level domain, .me, and it has posted a banner asking visitors to write to U.S. senators to oppose the law. ACTA The treaty has developed draft international standards on how to enforce intellectual property rights in countries including Australia, the United Kingdom, the United States and the European Union. The end goal, perhaps a decade off, appears to be to pressure non-signatory nations to toughen their enforcement of copyright laws. Bounties The US$20, 000 is undoubtedly a small fraction of the fine the business will wear for its crime. Allies Its complaint system has been sped-up, making it easier for Hollywood to complain about pirates using Google products. And the company is also developing means to cut pirate terms from appearing in auto-complete. Google has also shown its willingness to expel copyright violators from its AdSense program and now Mastercard, Visa and Paypal have blacklisted pirate Web sites from using their financial payment services. But the pirate sites have smaller payment providers like Flattr.com, owned by the Pirate Bay's Peter Sunde, which allows users to donate to sites. Supply lines The studios lost the initial round earlier this year and an appeal is still being fought. Meanwhile, the U.S. movie and music studios are pursuing large civil cases against individual copyright-infringers. This year, American single mother Jammie Thomas-Rasset lost what is seen by some as another watershed court battle against the RIAA for sharing 24 copyright-protected songs and now owes some US$1.5 million for doing so. Piracy and privacy sound alike... The Australian Federal Police have backed the scheme, noting it will "add weight to [the] investigation process". Internet providers allege the scheme is onerous and have accused the government of strong-arm tactics. This article was first published at ZDNet Australia. This entry passed through the Full-Text RSS service — if this is your content and you're reading it on someone else's site, please read our FAQ page at fivefilters.org/content-only/faq.php |
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