ISOHunt Gets Free Publicity From MPAA And RIAA
from the free-promotion dept
Isn't there a word for doing the same thing over and over again, even when it creates the opposite results of what you intend? Whatever it is, it appears that the entertainment industry fits that description. The RIAA and MPAA keep claiming significant blows against unauthorized file sharing, but each time they get such a significant blow, the end result seems to be that whatever it is they "stopped" comes back in a much bigger form. Remember when they "shut down" Pirate Bay and were all excited about what a big deal it was? It took a day or so for the Pirate Bay to come back online, and all of the publicity from the shut down made it much, much, much bigger than before, as plenty of people who had never heard of it were then aware of it. Soon after they "shut down" the Pirate Bay, they claimed that ISOHunt was the next target for their unique publicity engine. It appears that they've now succeeded. They convinced ISOHunt's ISP to take them down leading to a bunch of stories about the site (which is merely a search engine and isn't hosting any infringing files on its own). Of course, it only took a few hours for ISOHunt to come back up, and we're sure they're enjoying quite the traffic boost from the entertainment industry's free promotional effort of their work.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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2.) Add MPAA/RIAA annoying but legal service to product
3.) Profit more with improved margins!
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...and the word is
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ummm
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after some searching i can say that isohunt's NOT back up... :P way to lie mike... a few hours? they got taken down yesterday, the first notice says it'll be a day (today) and the last notice says that they're still working on it? a few hours? hardly :P (but it should be back up today)
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Re: ummm
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MPAA ,a film industry trade group paid for by the likes of Sony, Universal, Buena Vista, Paramount, and Warner Bros..
Hmmm, some of the evil empire pays for both MAFIAA groups, RIAA and MPAA!
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Yeah, its called the War on Terror
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Big fish eat the little ones?
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Why Would They Stop?
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Re: War on Terror
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Hopefully file sharing will become so popular it will filter the talentless musicians and movie producers that only make it because large companies force it down everyones throat. Maybe then you wont hear the same songs played over and over on the radio by a chick who needs to lipsinc cause she cant sing live. movie about a guy becoming a dog or a teenie bopper movie with the plot revolving around a simple misunderstanding.
People with real talent always find a way to make it like selling their music to comericals ,tv shows ,video games, playing live theres tons of things to do.
Unless a movie is worth 10 bucks to see it on a big screen im downloading it.
I'm tired of hearing talentless artist cry how people are ripping off their music but yet they are living in million dollar homes getting nose jobs and bigger fun bags.
No worries though cause in the near future movies and music will be free and all these big breasted no talent artists will be forced into the porn industry unless they have no talent in that department too.
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Simple
"Yo judge! See here...all of these different ip's have been downloading all of these different files! With some simple algebra that we've taken the liberty to do, you can see that they've downloaded over eleventy billion billion zillion dollars worth of movies and music! Make file-sharing illegal! Do it! Just do it!"
BTW I patented that whole scenario, so if it actually happens, I'm suing.
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Re: ummm
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Re: Re: ummm
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Insanity
yea...that does sum the RIAA/MPAA pretty well...
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Sorry
Jesus, do you democrats ever just shut up and live your lives, or are you so concerned with what other people do that you can't have a moment of peace? I think it's the latter...
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Re: Sorry
"Jesus, do you democrats ever just shut up and live your lives"
Wow. Amazing. No comment needed here, you are digging your own grave just fine.
"or are you so concerned with what other people do that you can't have a moment of peace?"
Yes, I am concerned about what other people do. I don't live in a self-contained bubble city.
"I think it's the latter..."
Former/latter does not work here, you don't present two clearly defined, differing positions.
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Torrent search tools
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Re: Insanity
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eh tu?
Go isohunt! Woe to author.
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Sue Google
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isoHunt
it is my selected torrent searcher of choice
i use uTorrent as my torrent program, and of its little in program searches, isoHunt is the best imo (piratebay is on there too, if that floats your boat)
even though the MAFIAA is too stupid to ever admit this, i download movies like this to screen for which ones are worth buying in the store
sicne going out the movies costs lotta munnys these days, i just download them once out on dvd, watch, and if i like it, go out and buy it (gasp!!!)
So, by my downloading, they are making more money than they would otherwise (in my case)
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Re:
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ISOHunt
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Perhaps everything is cyclical
Let's say copyright infringement becomes really widespread, and dominates music, film, photography and literature -- we're clearly on the way to that point now. While P2P sharing and such helps the no-name aspiring artists, it does little for the big names. But once an artist HAS a big name (say, Stephen King), it may become more financially lucrative, when he creates a new work, to sell it, not to the masses, but as a one-of-a-kind to the highest bidder. (Who could then duplicate it, or hoard it to trade with other wealthy people, or whatever.) So, I have no fear that artists, at least those with large amounts of talent, will end up starving. They certainly will not. What might happen though is that the *common man* may lose access to an increasingly large amount of art. After all, you CAN'T copy a work of art for which there exists only one, and over which the artist has complete control. It is only after it goes to distribution that art is routinely and widely copied. By reverting back to the medieval wealthy-patron-sponsorship, established big name artists could simply bypass the common man completely.
Paul Atreides said in Dune (and I paraphrase), "He who can destroy a thing has the ultimate power over that thing." Obviously, when there exists but one copy of a particular work, he who possesses that sole copy has the ultimate control. The artists have that power, and should they ever realize it and band together, there's nothing the common man could do about that.
Another thing artists could do, and again this works only very well for big names, is to pre-sell their work. For example, Eminem (or whoever) creates a new album. He has the sole copy of it. He makes a lower-grade version of it, 96k mps, 128k mp3, whatever, and releases THAT freely. Everyone copies it, everyone loves it, but they want a high-quality version. The catch is, *nobody* gets a quality version until AND UNLESS he makes X dollars in advance, with each pre-sold copy costing Y dollars. He could fiddle some with X and Y to see what numbers produce the most money, but the point is, that particular work remains unpirateable UNTIL he makes that much money. No P2P-ing a copy, no buying a CD and making copies for friends, no trading external HDs, all irrelevant, because there's only one high quality version of that work in existence, until his minimum number of pre-sales has been achieved. If that never happens, he could revise X and Y, or auction it off to a wealthy person, or just destroy it and deprive human society of that particular work. His work, his property, his call, not a thing anyone could do or say about that.
The next few years will be interesting, that's for sure!
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same with all the big guys
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who will stop this
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Payback?
Read the story here:
http://isohunt.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=141381
If you can't visit the link, you might have to sign up on the website. If you do, don't forgot to check out the FORUMS! (for help on how to get started with torrents)
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