The MPAA Caves (Sort Of) On Screener Ban
from the just-a-bit dept
Oliver Wendell Jones writes "This article at E! Online News states that they are getting ready to overturn the ban on screener DVDs and have reached a compromise on who will still be able to receive screeners. It looks like they're leaving out a lot of people who benefited from them before, but it probably still won't have any effect on movie piracy in the long run." This sounds similar to earlier rumors of an overturn. They say that screeners will still go out to Academy Award voters, but that's it. They're going to try to keep a much tighter lid on the screener copies, which, as mentioned above will have little to no effect on movies showing up online.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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nail that mole
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Re: nail that mole
I've seen several screeners recently (Pirates of the Carribean is one example, ironically enough) that has a small blurred area of the screen which is most likely covering up a serial number or some other identifying mark.
Once a determined pirate downloads a compressed video file, they can either play it back directly on their PC, or through the use of some freely available software, convert it back to mpeg-2 video format, re-encode it to .VOB files for a DVD and burn it to DVD-/+R(W). It won't be as good as the original DVD but it's significantly better than a VHS copy from the local Blockbuster.
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