Facebook Overreacts: Decides All Of The Pirate Bay Is Illegal
from the oh-really? dept
I didn't bother writing up the story from a couple weeks back about a The Pirate Bay feature to easily share links to torrents on Facebook, because it wasn't particularly interesting. But, you knew that someone would overreact negatively. The question was whether it would be the entertainment industry or Facebook first. It looks like Facebook may have won. Rather than dealing with it intelligently, it overreacted and has blocked any and all links to The Pirate Bay, noting that due to the ongoing lawsuit and "controversy" it's basically decided to assume all links to The Pirate Bay are infringing and a violation of Facebook's terms of service. Now, it may very well be true that the majority of content shared via The Pirate Bay is unauthorized and infringing. But, even so, this seems to go too far. There are plenty of legitimate uses for The Pirate Bay, and there is a significant number of legitimate offerings on the site. Furthermore a link should not be considered infringing by itself. No copyright is infringed by a link alone. There were plenty of more reasonable ways that Facebook could have handled this, and it chose the sledge hammer approach. And, as David Title points out, the likely end result is merely that an arms race has begun, where The Pirate Bay will create a workaround, and Facebook will have to block yet again...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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Filed Under: copyright, infringement, links, terms of service
Companies: facebook, the pirate bay
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http://thepiratebay.org/top/all
There are the top 100 torrents - please highlight the legitimate offerings.
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Re:
The top 100 singles in the chart? That's EVERY piece of music ever made, that is.
The top 100 best-selling books? Why, they are EVERY book ever published. There's never been 101 or more books produced, that's a fact that is!
Well done Weird Harold, yet again, your logic has no boundaries.
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How could you possibly have come to that conclusion based on Facebook's decision?
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Re: Re:
This is very serious. Just because there are a few "acceptable" uses of P2P doesn't suddenly excuse the massive and overwhemling amount of illegal file trading that goes on. You would expect that in the top 100 files that there would be, I dunno, at least 10% that were legit? 20%? That the number is a shocking 0% is just an indication of what is really going on.
I don't suggest for a second that the top 100 represents ALL files, but clearly it is an indication of what the vast majority of people are using TPB for - hint, they ain't trading legal NIN files.
So you can pile on the scorn, but deep down, you have to admit I am right - and I know that really, really bothers you.
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going about it wrong
TPB only posts links to infringing content. that is why their site is legal in sweden.
so facebook is blocking links to links to infringing content, which is double unnecessary. that makes my head hurt.
in about five minutes, a site called TPB-book.com (or something similar) will emerge, providing links to TPB torrents and a facebook app that makes sharing links to TPB-book super easy and accomplishing the super human feat of being triple unnecessary.
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Re: going about it wrong
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First, most of those are TV shows that just aired this week (if not yesterday). Of course they're going to be number one. And South Park is questionable, Mat and Trey don't care about piracy (that's why they created south park studios so they didn't have to download their own shows any more)
Second, Just because you think the number one use is for illegal activities doesn't mean that the tool is illegal. Look at the top 100 news articles about guns. I'd bet that all 100 are someone shooting someone else. Doesn't mean that guns should be illegal.
Third, quite a few people are still sharing NIN files. Just on my torrents there are over 1000 people sharing it and it's an old torrent. Fedora 10 has almost 4000 people sharing it (vary old torrent). Blank only has 6, I guess it wasn't that good. So from my limited and completely worthless group, I'd conclude that the vast majority of sharing is legit.
Lastly, the people that post on TechDirt will tell you when they think you're right. You will never have to guess.
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>
>You must hate when I am right.
We'll let you know when it happens.
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Re: Re: Re:
Obviously, the fact that TPB is used significantly more often for illegal file-sharing than for legitimate uses makes it a nice scapegoat for politicians eager to appease entertainment industry lobbyists, and the fickle nature of those same politicians encourages Facebook to take the easy way out by blocking links. However, that doesn't make the decision logical or prudent when considering the big picture.
Whether TPB exists or not, illegal file-sharing will continue until countries cease to prohibit it, just as drug trafficking will continue from Latin America to the U.S. until legalized. Cracking down on Napster didn't cut down on mp3-sharing any more than cracking down on Columbian trafficking made a dent in the drug war; it just transposed to Mexico, because the demand is there whether the powers that be like it or not.
And since file-sharing has virtually no impact on consumption of entertainment in general (just look at the Dark Knight), and is actually used extensively by more innovative distributors to intentionally get their content out there, the only thing that attempting to crack down on it does is hurt those legitimate purposes. People are still gonna find what they want elsewhere, whether it is a link to TPB on Facebook or Googling Harold and Kumar, but disallowing aggregate sites makes it harder for less known content to reach the masses.
What Mike contends is not that TPB is used mainly for legitimate purposes, but that banning it only hurts legitimate purposes and is thus not the most beneficial course of action.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
If P2P was doing what they wanted, there would be no need for "south park studios". They are using this site as marketing, to get people intereted to watch thier show, so that comedy central will pay them for it because comedy central gets more viewers and can sell the ads higher. Just because they set up this site doesn't suggest for a minute that they also put the material on TBP.
If TPB was even half legal use, or heck, even 10% legal use, you might have an argument - but the occassional legal file mixed in with hundreds if not thousands of rips, cracks, and pirated material doesn't suddenly make it all good. One clean and sober guy in the middle of a rack den doesn't suddenly make crack acceptable.
The NIN files shared are the rare exception - and they aren't shared specifically by TPB. For reference, the top file on TBP (episode of lost had 48227 seeders and 50464 leechers. Sort of makes that 4000 number on your NIN file seem small).
Here's the other part: If the files are legal, why go to all the effort to hide the sources? Why use hidden trackers? Why go through the process? What the heck are you hiding?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
You must hate it when reality is right.
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The Bay
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Yeah right.
Why doesn't someone open "legitimatep2p.com" and only list files that are legitimately given to them by the copyright holders to distribute? Why aren't you guys all over an idea like that, seperating yourselves from the pirates and the "infringers"?
Wait... for most of you, it's because you are the infringers. For Mike, it's because you can't sell "FREE!" advice if the mass "infringement" of music went away.
Got it.
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Question for Harold
I'm only stealing from their record label or greedy grandkids then, and we can all agree to hate them, right?
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It's facebook's choice
It could be a good move for them, especially if they're looking at some back room deals with content producers. It could also be a bad move for them given their recent public relations flubs. It could be a little of both where only time will tell which wins out.
I don't think banning TPB hurts the legitimate purposes any more than it hurts the illegitimate ones, it just doesn't give either any new exposure, at least directly, since in the end this could have the opposite effect and promote TPB.
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TinyUrl?
(According to Wikipedia, MySpace decided to block all TinyUrls because of abuse; so if Facebook does the same, well, there are other services that might not be blocked... ;) )
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They are a business. Risk analysis says its wiser to just block the links.
Sure, call them overreacting. But why would you expect a business to be a crusader in legitimizing TPB?
The legality of TPB is an entirely different issue.
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Harold Hates Guns
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
You must hate it when you're contrite.
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Seriously
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Re: TinyUrl?
Facebook might be able to block the well-known services like TinyURL.com and bit.ly, but to go after them all would be playing Whack-A-Mole...
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Re: Hiding?
They are complying with all legal requirements in their home country. Just because America's commercial interests don't like it does not mean that America's commercial interests are the same interests to the entire world. Corporations in America do not run the world. They probably should not be bribing American politicians either. If you believe this is really the case then you don't believe in democracy or the right to freedom outside the United States.
Harold is a true believer in American Fascism...
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
They are using this site as marketing, to get people intereted to watch thier show, so that comedy central will pay them for it because comedy central gets more viewers and can sell the ads higher. Just because they set up this site doesn't suggest for a minute that they also put the material on TBP.
So, let me get this straight, they are giving away content for FREE, in order to make more money, because more fans means more eyes, which means more ad sales? I thought you said that business model wouldn't work? Wow, Harold, you're learning.
Now run off and sell your recording industry guys on a new business model, the television concert. Musicians can make their money from the networks, who'll sell ads and sponsorship. Their music can be distributed free to drum up new fans and viewers.
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There are a lot of things that way - so you'd punish the innocent to get some guilty? So - because some people get drunk and kill others with cars - we should ban cars, right?
Because some people eat far too much sugar and get too fat, we should ban sugar, right?
Because some artists use offensive, racist, or untactful lyrics - we should ban music right?
Because some kid manages to get adult content on cable, we should ban cable, right?
Because some lunatic shoots up a mall, we should ban guns, right?
Because some people rape others, we should ban sex, right?
Because some politician abuses a law, we should ban laws, right?
And before you say, "well, that isn't the majority of what happens in those instances so we shouldn't ban them..." - I could most certainly argue the point right above this on that - that in fact, most of the time laws made are abused by the people making them.
Name ONE thing that DOESN'T get abused... just one.
I've downloaded a number of quite legitimate programs from Torrent...
Ubuntu Linux, Perfect World International (MMO - download from torrent), quite a number of films that are ok for free re-distribution. Any software that is a 'larger' sized qualifies, as does anything that is better off with very high availability. Not to mention, some artists like the idea of such a distribution network.
Quite a number of the smaller MMO's use torrent to distribute their installers. WoW uses an isolated version of torrent for their updates as well.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
MGM v. Grokster (545 US 913) leaves little doubt that the pirate bay is guilty of contributory copyright infringement.
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Re: going about it wrong
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I normally don't side with WH, but ...
First, all of you who claim that TPB does not infringe are correct. TPB does not infringe: they create an infrastructure that facilitates file sharing. Some users of that infrastructure have chosen to share files which, according current legal definitions, do infringe.
Second, I read a report (here? somewhere else? sorry no reference) that basically showed that link popularity is frequently exponention, with only a small percentage of content commanding a large percentage of hits. As WH notes, all of the Top 100 links on TPB are "infringing copies" (again legal definition, not mine). This just supports the well established fact that a LARGE PERCENTAGE of content linked by TPB is infringing (again, current legal definition).
All Facebook is doing is proactively protecting themselves from potential litigations. Sure this means the bad guys' lawyers are winning, but it doesn't mean the war is over. For all you guys out there with legit content, why not focus on the next workaround?
As Facebook is demonstrating here, TPB's reputation is starting to cause legal concerns for big companies. So what? TPB is not the only torrent provider, nor are torrents the only solution.
Are all of you legitimate content providers going to use this whole situation as a reason to get even more creative, or are you going to sit around complaining about your problems like the RIAA and print media?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Look at the current episode of lost then look at that same exact episode in one week and tell me if that many people are still sharing it (let me know if even 100 are). The only reason it's being downloaded by that many people is because its brand spanking new. Hence the NIN being an old torrent and Linux being a vary old torrent.
I would bet that TPB is much more than 10% legal, but we (and I mean you too Harold) have no way of knowing what truly is legal and what isn't. Linux is blatantly legal, NIN for the most part is but there are a few that are questionable, South Park isn't but they don't care, I have no idea if my copy of Blank is, then there's all the public domain stuff that better be.
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Re:
All the TV shows one can find on other $0.00 sites.
Now, before you rip into me on this, pay attention for 20 seconds.
We already pay for this content, regardless if it's on an ad supported website or television station. People who don't watch these shows also pay for it.
If monies are made through advertising, then logic dictates everyone who has purchased a Coke product pays for all content using Coke product ads.
This argument about "someone pays" always tends to take away from the consumer, who has always paid.
If you watch a show, with ads, and all ads are feminine products, what the hell did you contribute to paying for that show? $0.00.
One of these damn days, you're going to realize it's the distributor having issues with controlling content, not what revenues are "lost" due to piracy.
In the world of broadcasting, everyone pays regardless if they watch the damn show or not.
Otherwise, the ad-supported distribution model would have failed long, long ago.
As for the movies/software, I can see your point.
Music is saved for a later discussion, given it's the only distribution product in which offers a choice between 1 song or an album.
No one keeps a single episode of a television show without the rest.
Now, please place your asinine defense below. It'll be interesting to see what spin you put here.
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Solution:
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my 2 cents
The real question is, as mike mention and the core of the pirate bay trial, does posting torrents or linking them constitutes infringement.
Another aspect is this action is going to have minimal impact. Users are still going to "compress" the link and share it.
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Re: Re: Hiding?
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This is factually correct, but your legal conclusion is wrong. The doctrine of secondary liability extends to parties who induce others to commit copyright infringement.
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Re:
I wasn't stating an opinion on whether I think liability should extend to entities like the pirate bay, I was simply informing people that it does.
I think your analogy to Google is a bit of a stretch.
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It's the only search engine I use for torrent searches. So no - it's not a stretch by any means whatsoever.
http://www.google.com/search?q=ubuntu+8.10+torrent&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t &rls=org.mozilla:en-US:official&client=firefox-a&safe=active
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Re: Question for Harold
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Re: I normally don't side with WH, but ...
Why not? The RIAA are flat out refusing to change to accommodate pirates, why should legitimate people change to accommodate these RIAA lawyers. Both sides have perfectly reasonable actions they could take to work around (and possibly work with) the illegal activities.
Why are we forcing legitimate users to work around the illegal activities of the RIAA lawyers and not forcing the RIAA to work around the illegal activities of some of TPB users?
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I wasn't suggesting that you can't find infringing material through a google search. It's rather obvious that you can. Nonetheless, that is a shallow analogy in the context in which we are speaking. Contributory liability for the inducement of copyright infringement turns on a showing that the defendant had an intent to foster infringement.
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Re:
Then, by this reasoning, gun manufacturers should be held liable for anyone murdered with their product (shot down in many cases). "To hunt" isn't fair defense when anything can be hunted.
Yet, guns exist.
I get the beef of TPB. Yes, it offers a wide open door for infringement. But to blame TPB? No.
TPB doesn't tell these users to open their computers for sharing.
TPB doesn't tell these users to open their computers to copyright material.
TPB doesn't tell these users to download the content.
TPB doesn't prevent the entertainment industry for using their product.
Just like gun manufacturers don't tell their purchasers to kill humans.
TPB doesn't even imply their services are used to share copyright material.
Thus, no liability should be placed on the service/owners, regardless what the users do with it.
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Re: my 2 cents
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I don't find your analogy to be very enlightening. Generally, you're right: gun manufactures aren't liable for how their guns are used. However, a gun merchant can be held civilly and criminally liable if they sell firearms in a negligent manner, especially if one of the guns is later used in the commission of a crime. Secondary liability for copyright infringement is similar. Just because you run a site/service like Google that may enable people to find copyrighted material, you will not be held liable for copyright infringement unless your conduct suggests you sought to induce the end user's copyright infringement.
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IF
IF
IF
IF...they were in the United States but they're not. Idiot.
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We started with Napster - they got shut down.
So it went on to Kazaa, Gnutilla, Grokster, etc... Then they got shut down.
Now on to Torrent.. same thing.
I've downloaded some stuff I shouldn't have in all honesty - but I don't now and probably have bought a number of CD's to "shore up" the music I wanted.
Worst part is - I went into a Meijer's looking for a couple Live CD's (the band Live - whom I got familiar with for free - radio and torrent) and they didn't have a one!!
Oh well, Amazon does for sure. But I plan on buying at least two of their CD's now.
Some maybe are ok with half-rate digital copies, but not me. I like the original CD and a GOOD rip at 320kbs. With the ability to re-rip later if I want.
But I do understand the problem - the artists do need compensated for their work.
But I still fail to see why the RIAA or someone won't put up a server that users can create accounts on - buy music under that account and then re-download what they've bought on demand - anytime. That's value worth paying for.
What they would loose in price vs. content, they'd gain a hundred times over in sheer volume.
What's one thing you notice about torrent? no matter HOW MUCH music is out there - people never stop downloading. Now, If I could get good quality MP3's at say... 25 cents or a dime each - I'd go on a downloading frenzy - along with maybe 25 million other people who prefer legit stuff.
Hell, I wish I had a practically unlimited supply of data that users would be knocking the door down to buy at 10 cents or 25 cents. The point isn't the price PER song, it's the bill after the session is done.
I bet I'd spend more doing that than I ever did buying CD's.
It's all about the business model - not the technology. But like an old drunk, the industry keeps trying to hold on to it's old bottle of wine.
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Re: Re:
Harold is really Harriet and she's been on the rag recently so she's actually contributed thousands in tampons this month alone.
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Re:
1) You seem to be basically stating that TPB's content is infringing because of MGM v. Grokster...but that was a U.S. decision that held that entities could be held liable for inducing copyright infringement. But as far as I know, this just extends to the "marketing" per se, and not the links themselves: if it did, then as other have said, Google would clearly be liable for billions of dollars. So if the site itself is still legal in the U.S., and the company cannot be sued in the U.S. because it is located in Sweden...then what difference does it make in this case?
2) What constitutes "inducing"? Does TPB commit some action that encourages users to download an illegal torrent over a legal one? Seems they are pretty passive to me as far as their business model.
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Re: Re: going about it wrong
you misunderstood me. i mean that the only thing that TPB hosts are links to materials, rather than hosting any materials itself. i do not mean that TPB only links to infringing materials, but rather that the purpose of the site is to host aggregate pointers to and comments about materials that are not hosted by the pirate bay.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Did you forget one little detail? US court doesn't decide what is illegal in Sweden.
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Re: Re:
1) I was ignoring the jurisdictional issues because I was simply responding to the argument that their conduct could not be infringing because they don't store any copyrighted material on their servers. Assuming they were some how tried in the US, the pirate bay would almost undoubtedly be liable for inducement of copyright infringement.
2) Inducement is proven through any clear expression or affirmative steps taken to foster copyright infringement. Evidence that a company aims to satisfy a known source of demand for infringing materials, that they take no efforts to screen or remove material they know to be infringing (including links), or that they derive direct financial benefit from the infringing materials (ie - selling ad space) is all relevant to the inquiry.
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Re: Re:
i agree. google is a publicly traded company with it's headquarters in california.
the pirate bay's logo is a pirate ship. i mean the evidence is irrefutable.
C.T.: your argument is invalid.
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Re:
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Study
Does a picture of a pirate ship suddenly make everything they do illegal? I'm sure you could find lots of pirate ships on a quick search of Google. I'm also sure there are links to individual Pirate Bay pages through Google. At what point can you say that any of the linking is illegal and where do you draw the line?
This is very much a gray area. Why does a small business have different rights from a larger business? If I start an innovative search engine which is not publicly traded, am I not afforded the same rights as Google? This is setting a dangerous precedent for a lack of innovation.
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59 Comments?
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Re: Hiding?
I also think we need real change and could do a lot to change the US government toward a true democracy rather than bow to corporate feudal lords and bought-off government representatives.
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Re: Question for Harold
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Re: Re:
(as for the feminine ads, if my GF sends me to the pharmacy to get her something in a rush, I am a secondary target market... so you never know. They are paying the freight, and that is the key. Perhaps you are watching too many "girly" shows? ;) )
When you start to realize that payment isn't always made directly out of your pocket, you will understand the difference between free and "FREE!".
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Re: Re:
It's all just another rationalization...
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Almost. They are CHOOSING to give THEIR content away for free in the hope that, eventually, they'll make more money doing so.
But it's their choice to do so, not yours.
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Re: Re: Re:
Currently, the labels aren't even trying to find the right price point; they just want to put the genie back in the bottle. The genie isn't going back, so find a way to cope.
All of this isn't to say that stealing is justified; it is music and not life sustaining food after all. But why fight the customer; find a way to work with them and turn them into paying customers. At the same time, you are never going to turn everyone into paying customers, so why try? Make money from the ones you can and don't worry about the rest.
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Whats funny is that...
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Re:
You simply *can't* know without contacting the rightsholder and asking. So run off and do that now for us Harold.
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Re: Re: Re:
When we want your convoluted opinion on anything, we'll give it to you.
Until then, resist the temptation to exercise your first amendment right.
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If you are a good little Nazi, I will not have to exercise my 4th amendment right.
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Re: Re: Re:
You should be put to death. Since there are Harold's who have committed murder - we should eliminate all Harold's immediately.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
His point, which I'm sure you got and I'm also certain you're trying to obscure, is that Harold just argued for a business model that he's always arguing against. He slipped up and gave an example of the very thing he claims can't work.
Then you, of course, come along and try to change the subject to something else entirely, something to deflect the attention from Harold's failing.
Just so you get it, the record labels and artists could CHOOSE to give THEIR content away for free in order to sell or promote other goods. Just as these guys are doing, just as Harold himself argued, just as mike always argues, just as everyone with more intelligence than bias gets, the industry could do. They just choose not too because they are so greedy that they can't understand the concept of not screwing their customers over again and again along every step of the way.
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Re:
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Funny that, the very tiny percentage of viewers that do watch any given commercial, and are swayed by it to buy the product, support the full cost of all the advertising. Sort of like the tiny percentage of listeners who listen to music and are swayed by it to buy more music, products, or concert tickets support the artist. Exactly the same when you realize that music is also advertisement.
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Re: Re: Question for Harold
Giving. Giving as in granting them rights that they never had. Giving as in taking the rights away from mankind, not for any grand reason of fairness or equity, but solely because it's a marketable excuse for extending the copyright control on a bunch of disney films.
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A Sound Business Decision
TPB's legality/morality/whatever aside, if I was running FB I would do the exact same thing. Distancing themselves from TPB is distancing themselves from a potential liability. Like it or not this was a sound business decision.
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I believe in copyright in general as I am an artist myself however, big business has taken things to a whole new level. Copyright and patents, at least in the U.S. are broken systems. Only those using the current broken system to cheat others would defend it.
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Re: A Sound Business Decision
I also argue that it's one of those "slippery slopes" we hear so much about. They took down TPB links, what's next? As far as I see (vary limited expireance), Rapidshare and the like are only used for infringment. What about their links? Then Rapidsearch since it's a search engine for Rapidshare. Since we are blocking sites that potentially link to infringing content why don't we block all links all together?
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Re: Re:
That's kind of the Internet in general. If that's really the way Facebook feels about it then they should start their own private network, take themselves off the Internet and start handing out purity rings.
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FB & Safe Harbours
Wouldn't that same logic apply here? FB bans links to TPB, so FB actively polices' their links. So if someone links to illegal content (outside of TPB) wouldn't FB be potentially liable *because* they are policing their links to TPB?
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Re:
TPB doesn't decide what's most popular, the public does. Thanks for pointing out what the public really thinks as opposed to what the copyright cartels are saying.
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I don't think he said it was, either. Nice try at putting words into someone else's mouth.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Huh? Are you serious? Haven't you seen all the press TPB has been getting lately and TBP's deliberate actions to play that publicity up? And you claim that they're in "hiding"? You have really got to be one of the biggest liars I have ever come across.
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Well, if most of the public are infringers then it's high time to repeal the law.
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Re: Re: Re: Hiding?
Isn't Canada really part of the US? Don't they just do whatever the US tells them to do(Iraq, etc.)? They sure don't have any balls of their own.
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Re:
So it went on to Kazaa, Gnutilla, Grokster, etc... Then they got shut down.
Now on to Torrent.. same thing.
napster was one central location to look for infringers and to collect market research. shutting it down created 4 services to watch. shutting down each of those 4 created 4 new gnutella services. now there are hundreds of torrent trackers. soon this will all be done through anonymous proxies or encrypted tunnels. good luck capturing any data then.
every move you make against downloading makes downloading that much harder to control. every time you fail to stop the pirate bay, your cause looks more and more ridiculous.
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You were trying to inform people that US law applies to Sweden. It doesn't.
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A logo is "irrefutable evidence"? You're really daft.
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I wouldn't mind you being right.
Or even look beyond TPB. What percentage of computers need to have infringing content on them before we decide that computers are "illegitimate"?
What about companies - how many firms must have non-licensed software in use internally before they, too, are declared illegitimate?
Give us a number.
So you can pile on the scorn, but deep down, you have to admit I am right - and I know that really, really bothers you.
Meanwhile, back in the real world, I don't, and it doesn't, and it wouldn't if you were right.
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Re: Whats funny is that...
Yeah, not only is Weird Harold a liar, but he's a hypocrite to boot. Ever notice how those two tend to go together?
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The US Supreme Court disagreed, of course, but what do they know ?
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That is one of the most ignorant things I have ever read.
The internet is a communications platform not the world in anarchy. Private businesses and individuals have every right to control the content they're associated with.
Your view lacks insight or any real understanding of what the internet is. Now go outside and ride you bike or something.
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Re: Re: A Sound Business Decision
Since we are blocking sites that potentially link to infringing content why don't we block all links all together?
I'm not sure how or why you have lumped Rapidshare or any other site in with FB's decision either. There is no slippery-slope here. This is not a matter of public policy or unilateral government mandate. If somebody doesn't like it they can boycott FB. You're argument would hold water if this was somehow a sweeping policy required of all sites. It's not. It's simply a business decision. There isn't anything evil or inappropriate about it.
IMHO of course.
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Re: FB & Safe Harbours
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Re: Re: Whats funny is that...
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Wrong, yet again.
So, genius, who the hell pays for the ads I'm supposed to watch, but don't, because (like many others), a great button called "Fast Forward" prevents such "payment of attention" to these ads?
When you start to realize that payment isn't always made directly out of your pocket, you will understand the difference between free and "FREE!".
I guess you continue to skip over the parts in which I said I don't believe in the word "free".
$0.00 is not the same as "free".
Free means no cost, regardless if it's monetary or ads.
$0.00 is what we're charged when having to view content with ad support.
Thus, $0.00 means costs are made up by the very feminine product you purchased for your gf while my wife watches Lifetime.
But wait. I digress, given I forgot how you believe this system is flawed because it's offered for "free".
My bad.
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If you use the fast forward button, well, good for you. The price you paid not to see commercials is a PVR. You are the reason why there are now plenty of "placements" in TV shows to keep you entertained.
I guess you continue to skip over the parts in which I said I don't believe in the word "free".
Trying to split hairs between free and $0.00 is just you wanting to pat yourself on the back for being smart. If that makes you feel better, run with it - but in the end, you are still paying, just not with direct cash.
unless of course you are watching on cable, dish, or downloading on the internet - they you are paying, you just don't realize it.
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I just want to make sure you realize what part I'm talking about, you pig-headed imbecile. The laws in Sweden make much more sense to MOST of us. You see, since TPB doesn't actually host any infringing material, they cannot be held liable for pointing at said material, which is NOT on their servers. You see? Their laws work for them. Wish our's worked for us.
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TPB then makes money off of placing ads and offering various things on their websites to the people visiting to get to those infringing works. Remove all of the "links" to infringing works, and nobody would visit TPB.
The laws work for them because they are splitting a legal hair based on a law that wasn't constructed with technology in mind. That is exactly what makes Sweden a pro-infringment haven.
You see? Their laws make it possible for TPB to exist where it could not in the US or most other western countries. In fact, the only "next" location for TPB when things get too tight are either buying their own country, or china (or maybe Hugo Chavez Or Kim Jong Il will give them space).
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I think that explains things much more.
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If I saw a robbery in progress, I think one of the first things I would do would be to look around for a cop. I never knew that would make me complicit. Wow, thanks for your insightful comment, WH!
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I'm with you WH and another example is automobiles.
At the end of the day, people use automobiles to violate traffic laws and commit other violations. There is no denying that fact and the automobile dealers hide behind the law and cry "we just sell the cars, we don't drive them!" while clearly making money off them. Well it's time that stopped! I say start making the dealers responsible for what people do with the autos bought from them and you'll see far fewer autos on the road and far fewer traffic laws being violated!
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What's this, Harold, encouraging people to "steal"? Shame on you, hypocrite!
The price you paid not to see commercials is a PVR.
Oh really? How much of the purchase price of a typical PVR goes to the content creator? I've got a hint for you: NONE.
However, if you're saying that purchasing hardware gives one the right to use it as one pleases, then purchasing a computer gives one the right share files with it too.
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Now, if the dealership put a sticker in every car that said "here is how you drive 150mph without getting caught, don't worry,it's entirely legal" then yes, they would be liable.
All the double talk in the world doesn't make TPB any less aware of exactly what their site is used for. All the smarmy testimony in court just showed them to be an arrogant bunch of assholes giving the finger to the world and hiding behind a very poorly written swedish law.
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That was the chairman of Turner Broadcasting Systems, surely one of WH's heros.
http://www.techdirt.com/articles/20020715/0130220.shtml
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http://techdirt.com/articles/20041116/0818209.shtml
And of course they disable the fast forward on parts of DVD's and claim that bypassing that restriction is illegal too.
Bad shill! Bad!
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Re: Re: Re: A Sound Business Decision
Yeah, because those other sites don't potentially link to infringing content. Oh, wait...
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Re: A Sound Business Decision
FB wasn't being "associated" with TPB. FB makes it quite clear that they don't endorse the contents of member's pages. No, this is a clearly case of FB specifically targeting TPB, which is quite a different thing.
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Type the following into a google search bar, please:
wolverine filetype:torrent
thank you, and have a great day.
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I was unable to find a tracker file on google.
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Re: Re: Re: A Sound Business Decision
So you're another one of those shills who goes around claiming that TPB hosts infringing files. It doesn't. So quit spreading that lie.
But then again, lying is what you do best, isn't it?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: A Sound Business Decision
Sure they do. And btjunkie and Google and all kinds of other indexing sites as well. Somebody at Facebook just has a dislike for ThePirateBay and is using their position in the company to force it onto all Facebook members.
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I've seen plenty of ads and talked to plenty of auto salesmen who've talked about how fast a particular auto will go. Yet, I've never seen any of them arrested for it. Or perhaps you can provide some examples of that happening. (yeah, right)
And TPB leaves it up to the user (i.e. driver) to follow their own local laws.
You are really full of it.
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How dare they not bow down and kiss your and your industry buddies' asses? Imagine that! That just really gets to you, doesn't it?
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