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This country is Barkin Mad



pseudonym

New member
Sep 22, 2011
599
Hell
Went to the cinema yesterday,while waiting for the main feature and watching endless crap adverts one in particular caught my eye, F.A.C.T ( Federation Against Copyright Theft) spouting on about how it's a crime to copy this film etc etc, ok it's against the law,the bit that got me was i quote Film piracy in the UK is a real crime, punishable by up to 10 years imprisonment up to ten years yeah, you can go out get pissed knock a kid off he bike and kill him and get less, these scummers got five years for this, where the justice?

Couple who 'switched identity of twin babies' after abusing one them are jailed following cover up | Mail Online
 




vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
One of the worst offences I know of that went unpunished was that of the producers of " Letters to Juliet " for actually releasing this sad drivel.

Nailing 'em up is too good for them !
 


Biscuit

Native Creative
Jul 8, 2003
22,320
Brighton
piracy-e1299573133979.jpg
 


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,018
i agree wholeheartedly with the protection of copyrigted works, but the FAST and anti-priracy lobby aren't half a bunch of cocks. above sums it up neatly. its pathetic that you could get longer in prison for running a piracy racket than a car stealing racket.

also we're told piracy funds drug trafficing, prostitution, people trafficing and arms smuggling. i'd have thought those rackets would pay their own way, but there you go.
 


Joey Deacon's Disco Suit

It's a THUG life
Apr 19, 2010
854
Piracy is theft. There's no two ways about it. Someone created something and you are taking it for nothing depriving them of an income stream. What gets me though is that if I choose to buy a legit DVD I have to sit through 2 minutes of crap telling me about sodding piracy on a DVD that I actually own and I can't even fast forward that little bit. If I'd got a moody copy of the same DVD they'd have very kindly removed the Piracy advert. That really is barking mad.
 




beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,018
Piracy is theft. There's no two ways about it.

but its not. simple definition, from the Theft act 1968:
A person is guilty of theft if he dishonestly appropriates property belonging to another with the intention of permanently depriving the other of it; and “thief” and “steal” shall be construed accordingly.

with "piracy" (which is a bloody stupid word to call copyright infringment in the first place), there is no depriving the owner of the property. it is not theft, the Theft act does not cover copyright and the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988 does not use the term.

its purely for sensationalism. and i bet you've infringed someones copyright too.
 


ArcticBlue

New member
Sep 4, 2011
951
Sussex Inlander
Piracy is theft. There's no two ways about it. Someone created something and you are taking it for nothing depriving them of an income stream. What gets me though is that if I choose to buy a legit DVD I have to sit through 2 minutes of crap telling me about sodding piracy on a DVD that I actually own and I can't even fast forward that little bit. If I'd got a moody copy of the same DVD they'd have very kindly removed the Piracy advert. That really is barking mad.

Every artist is a cannibal, every poet is a thief - Bono
 


Brovion

In my defence, I was left unsupervised.
NSC Patron
Jul 6, 2003
19,867
The 'piracy or theft' semantics are interesting and neither are really accurate. It's not physical theft admittedly as the original still exists, but if you're going to go down that line - what if it were a credit card? If someone clones your credit card and uses it, what's that? Have they stolen anything by making a copy? (After all you still have the original) And are they stealing by using it?

Anyway, back on topic and without wishing to sound TOO much like a 1970s communist throwback one of the reason laws against theft are so harsh is that laws were traditionally made by the people who owned the property and thus wanted to protect it.
 




Notters

Well-known member
Oct 20, 2003
24,891
Guiseley
but its not. simple definition, from the Theft act 1968:


with "piracy" (which is a bloody stupid word to call copyright infringment in the first place), there is no depriving the owner of the property. it is not theft, the Theft act does not cover copyright and the Copyright, Design and Patents Act 1988 does not use the term.

its purely for sensationalism. and i bet you've infringed someones copyright too.

I thin you've missed the point there; it's not theft of the film that's the issue, but theft of the ability to make dosh from it.
 








vegster

Sanity Clause
May 5, 2008
28,273
What about fraud on a grand scale perpetuated by the studio's publicity departments ?

How many times do you go to see a film puffed way beyond the sum of its parts ? difficult to blame a couple who go out to be " entertained" for £20 + popcorn etc having to sit through a dog then saying "sod that, I'll download next time ..." ?
 










Fef

Rock God.
Feb 21, 2009
1,729
Anyone old enough to remember the "home taping is killing music" sticker on vinyl LP's?? Did it?

and the music industry wanted the government to impose a levy on blank tapes by way of compensation. FFS ! The sheer arrogance of the music industry is breathtaking at times.
 


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,018
Yeah I remember that Norman, a black sticker with a white skull and crossbones. Digital music is probably even easier to pirate. There must be hundreds of P2P sharing sites out there.

yet the record lables still manage to pump out all that pop shite, and the film studios find the money to remake 70's films.
 


beorhthelm

A. Virgo, Football Genius
Jul 21, 2003
36,018
I thin you've missed the point there; it's not theft of the film that's the issue, but theft of the ability to make dosh from it.

which is a completely vacuous argument, based on accountancy concept of opportunity costs. people pirate and still purchase what they like, or dont purchase what they wouldnt have done so if they hadnt had a free copy. anyway, im not condoning copyright infringment, im just saying its not "theft".
 






what if you wouldn't have paid to see the film in the first place therefore they wouldn't have made money out of you, is it still theft?

If you wouldn't have paid anything for it, that suggests that you attach no value to it and are unlikely to watch it even if you bother to download. What's a more realistic scenario is that you weren't willing to pay the £10 to see it at the cinema or £15 to buy the DVD/Blu-ray when new, but would be tempted when it's on sale for £3 a year later in HMV/Amazon.

The idea that piracy is somehow acceptable because you aren't denying someone else the opportunity to own/watch said film/music is frankly completely ridiculous. And I say that as someone that has done it from time to time, but not under any illusions that it's not illegal or morally wrong.
 


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