Hollywood Continues To Make Up Facts; AP Continues To Parrot Them
from the evidence-please? dept
So, the MPAA's latest target for crackdowns on camcording appears to be India. You may remember that it went through a series of questionable claims about camcording in Canada and the US, where if you looked at the math, none of it added up. Apparently, the same thing is happening in India and the reporters at the Associated Press don't feel the need to investigate bogus Hollywood numbers. In this AP report about the MPAA's new "crackdown" on camcording in India, the reporter says that camcording is to blame for 90% of "pirated" movies:A year in the making, the coalition to fight film piracy in India will work with movie theaters to crack down on camcorder piracy -- the source of 90 percent of all pirated DVDs -- with police to tighten enforcement, with Internet service providers to fight Internet piracy and with politicians to create more effective laws.With these big professional reporters, you might think they would try to fact check a claim like "90% of all "pirated" DVDs come from camcorded movies." They might have trouble doing that, because the actual research suggests something quite different. A study that we wrote about a few years ago found otherwise. Specifically, it found that "77% appear to have been leaked originally by industry insiders."
But, of course, we need to save the AP, because they do real fact checking, right?
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Filed Under: camcording, copyright, india, stats
Companies: mpaa
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90%???
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Boston Strangler
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seriously?
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Camcords are laughable
Camcords were never something desired for downloading. Almost anyone I've talked to sort of snickers at the questionable "quality" of a camcord. I suppose it's alright if you've no objection to the shadow of someone standing up during the movie or the lack of any quality sound. Even the image itself is not very good in these days of high definition.
When the RIAA and calhoots were in the process of trying to get the anti-piracy measure of making it illegal to camcord in Canadian theaters, why the total of illegal camcords coming out of Canada and out of New York were better than 100%. I guess my high school math failed to teach me proper mathematics as I learned 100% was all of anything and there was no more. Yet I learned from the RIAA and calhoots, that's not true. You can have more than 100% of anything...who knew?
It amazes me the lengths that facts will be stretched out of proportion to support a stance and even more that time after time it is proven that the news reporters no longer write the news. They get it from the corporate feeds and claim it news. I often wonder if there are any lights on in the news room anymore. There sure doesn't appear to be anyone in the news fact checking room remaining because it looks like most have fired them in the interest of cutting costs.
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Re: Camcords are laughable
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Telesync = crudish.
Telecine = ok'ish.. if you really have to watch it now.
R5 = ok, normally let down by audio.
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Re: Re: Camcords are laughable
Doesn't India have its own rather booming movie industry? I could be mistaken, but don't they also have rather stringent rules for what's allowed to be shown in films (regarding nudity, swearing, etc.)? So US films (some) would be harder to see in the first place, possibly resulting in a thirst for bootlegs...but US movies might not be even permitted to be shown and hence camcorded if they're found to be violating those rules...
Whatever. India has internet too. Camcording is hardly the easiest way to obtain unauthorized copies.
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Re: Re: Camcords are laughable
Calhoots is shorthand for a famous sorority that is primarily made up of students attending the Univ Southern California Film School. Being a new soririty, The Calhoots House is actually not on Sorority Row. It is across the street from a well known wing shack, hence the name "CalHoots".
Calhoots has a recent problem of people sneaking camcorders in, and patrons not buying wings...
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Clarification
Given that microcosm, I think that, yah - a huge number of them are pirate cams. Probably not 90% but definitely up there. I think this is actually a result of the international release windows as much as anything else. But given the huge amount of piracy, is Bollywood suffering? Aren't they making 10x the amount of films that Hollywood puts out?
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camcording
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Uh, no, as you pointed out, they actually just went to Reuters or some other source and re-wrote the same story. No need to check facts when you are just doing a re-write.
; )
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Re: 90%???
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Re: seriously?
Other funnies:
- when subtitles appear, and the dude needs to quickly aim the camcorder down to get them in his frame
- people talking around the camcorder
- people walking in front of the camera
- terrible sound quality for the entire duration
- shaky cam holding
- double shaky cam when b/hollywood uses a "handheld effect" and so does the camcorder guy. Could these cancel each other out?
- the guy needs to keep the camera discreet, so lowers it when an usher comes around
I've seen one of these movies at a friend's house in Spain. I saw all the problems above by 20 minutes into the movie. I stopped watching, and rented the film at Blockbuster when I got back home.
Watching a film involves two expenses: the price, and my time. The price of free was acceptable, but I am not willing to spend 2 hours of my time on so poor an experience.
In fact, I almost think Hollywood should seed bittorrent with camcorder versions...people would rapidly learn to avoid the poor quality methods of getting content!
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Re:
Speakers too. It's trivial to turn a small speaker into a microphone.
Plus there's a long history of guitarists using their ears to violate the songwriters' copyrights by making a copy in their brains and then their fingers to reproduce the work publicly. We should probably get rid of ears and fingers too.
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Re: Re: seriously?
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Look to the Inside Hollywood.
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Although this reminds me of an article I read last night about people recording live concerts. They spend the entire concert with their phone in the air, looking at the concert through the tiny screen. In one case, the girl spent the entire concert facing 90 degrees away from the performer, because she was recording the big screen. I just can't imagine that you're getting the "full experience" watching an event through your phone, or in this case, a camcorder. Does that mean that Joe Pirate then goes back and buys another ticket, just so he can actually watch the movie properly?
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Re:
What happens, in the future, when you can resample a movie to make it look like a stylish animation? Add some artistic flair to the whole thing through a computer program?
"Our live-action 100GB-esque blockbuster movie is being stolen! What do you mean the live-action element has been replaced by animation? The voice acting replaced by HawkingVoice 4.0 and the end file size is only 13MB? That's not fair! They're stealing from us"
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Only 90% ??
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Re: Re:
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They seem to be confused between a pirated DVD and a pirate DVD. I can't imagine any pirated DVDs have come from camcorders.
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