Tougher Enforcement In Sweden Doesn't Slow Down Public's File Sharing
from the of-course-not dept
For years we've argued over and over again that stricter enforcement does nothing to slow down or stop infringement. Often it does the opposite -- either by making more people aware of the possibilities to infringe, or driving people further underground. The industry insists that it needs stricter enforcement on a bizarre and widely discredited theory that such strong enforcement is effective as an "education" technique. You hear this all the time from entertainment industry execs. They're so bought into their infatuation with copyright, that they think the only possible reason why people don't respect the law is that they haven't been "educated" enough about it -- and what better way to "educate" than to crack down hard?Except, it never works. It never has and it never will. Increasing enforcement has never -- not once -- been shown to be an effective long term solution to stopping infringement. It does appear to have short-term effects, as it makes people scatter from actions that are easily trackable, but within a few months (six seems to be about the consensus), file sharing activity tends to find a new path and get back to the same trajectory it was on before.
We've now got some more data to support this. A few years back, Sweden passed a very draconian and aggressive enforcement law known as IPRED (Intellectual Property Rights Enforcement Directive), which had the result of a temporary blip in file sharing that disappeared pretty quickly. And now, a new research report has come out showing that just as many 15 to 25-year-olds share unauthorized content online as did so at the time IPRED became law. In fact, a larger percentage of that age group share "heavily," rather than in smaller amounts.
“We can safely say that the repressive legal developments in this field have very weak support in informal social control mechanisms of society”, says Mans Svensson, Ph.D. in judicial sociology, one of the researchers doing the study. “The social pressure is close to non-existent.”So why is it that we keep seeing countries pass these kinds of laws? And why do entertainment industry lobbyists keep pushing for them when they're so woefully ineffective in doing anything positive?
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Filed Under: education, file sharing, ipred, mans svensson, sweden
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It is an effective education technique
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Unfortunately it is also a law of human nature to believe that there are simple solutions for complex problems. We develop complex solutions only for things that aren't really a problem.
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The Tarkin Doctrine in real life scenarios.
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The main complex part is getting companies and the public to agree with new laws for patents and copyrights, which is something I think will never happen in my lifetime. We live in a global economy, so I think the laws concerning IP should be established that way. The main problem now is without the public interest being taken into consideration, they are doomed to fail.
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/bob
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Anybody remember......
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The marketplace and technology should never change.
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I don't care what musicians put out anymore. Not one penny for the majors. Since I don't hear new music, I don't desire it. Not to download it for free and certainly not to buy it. It honestly isn't worth the bandwidth it takes to obtain it.
So the piracy is cured as far as I go. Then again the cure is worse than the ailment as I am not going to spend money for something I haven't heard.
You got a signed band out touring? Too bad I'm not coming to the concert. You see I haven't heard of you, don't know what you do, and have no connections at all to your music.
Since you are in the same boat as the major label that paddles it, you can thank your masters for that lack of income. They have ensured you will never get my money as a results of their actions.
I can not wait for the day that I see the last major label up for sale because of bankruptcy.
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Here's how it works:
Short-term effect: Piracy goes down a bit. People are scared.
Longer-term effect: The motivations for the piracy still exist. People are still unable to access the content they want through legitimate means, and/or those legitimate means come with digital handcuffs that make this 'availability' unsuitable.
Result: People start looking for ways to continue to access material, but taking additional precautions. People figure out how to turn on privacy/anti-tracking/etc features in torrent clients, switch to private trackers, and various other means. Whether these means work or not is irrelevant, so long as thye provide some psychological comfort for the users. Downloading resumes.
Further, as a result of having invested the effort into taking the above precautions, people feel less responsible to support the artists, and more entitled to download material. So people who occasionally downloaded do so more frequently, and in larger quantities. You convert people who are casual downloaders into people who have made a commitment in terms of time and effort to become more serious downloaders.
In the longer term, tools to protect privacy get made more common, more easy to use, and more effective. But, again, whether they actually work is irrelevant. They only need to provide a safety blanket, and people are going to want to believe these measures work, because they want to continue to access content. Eventually, even the most timid people initially deterred by the new laws are back to it, convinced that the danger has passed.
Plus, the shrilling about piracy serves as an effective advertisement for it, so when someone who hasn't downloaded before finds their favourite show/song/etc unavailable, they think, "well, what about downloading it illegally?".
These measures are therefore ineffective at best, and self-defeating at worst (and the latter more often than the former).
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Not only has pot's criminalization has less than no effect (the prisons are full of pot users, to the point where there have been cases of more violent criminals getting early release to make room for mandatory sentencing laws), but there is evidence to show that continued effort to lump pot in with more dangerous/serious drugs like coke, heroin and meth has been one of the more significant factors in the failure of drug policies in the US.
I would hazard it is a reasonably safe bet to say that not only will current personal infringement efforts fail spectacularly, but continued efforts to lump them in with large scale counterfeiting, terrorism, and child porn will also hamper long term efforts to combat those more serious problems as well.
Of course when we are discussing organizations like Hollywood who are so blind to the fact that their interpretations of reality make them criminals as well (forming in California to bypass the patents of Edison and others), trying to have rational discussions is close to impossible.
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People don't like seeing a good product wrapped in a turd sandwich. That's what the entertainment distribution industry is doing. They have a great product on rye, then take a dump on top of that and hand it to you in a soiled diaper.
It doesn't matter if there's a good product in it, it's still a shit sandwich, and nobody wants it.
Pirates have developed a way to perfectly de-shit the official industry sandwich, and distribute it for free.
Which would make you happier? Paying a lot for a shit sandwich you can only eat at a specific mealtime, on a specific plate, with only one choice of beverage? Or getting an illegal clean sandwich for free, whenever you're hungry, and eat it however you want?
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It's not just close, it's completely non-existent. I'm a Swedish student and during all my years of studying, teachers have been copying pages out of books and sometimes even copying the whole book. If someone mentions copyright to them there are three types of reaction:
a) chuckle
b) shrug
c) "Whatever"
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Evolution in action
I live in Stockholm and file sharing is completely mainstream.
Four apartments in my vicinity cooperate on a local LAN network. We share 20 TB data.
Our anonymity needs are served by an outbound gigabit VPN.
We get all big releases from a local movie industry insider.
Copyright industry propaganda has had the opposite effect.
Don't download from TPB translates into Just download from TPB.
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I'm Learning
It's the same story, retold over and over again, throughout the passages of time just under different circumstances, as I have found in many of the posts here. There's also a phrase, 'When will they ever learn', from the song 'Where have all the flowers gone'. I wonder, when will these industries and governmets ever get to the point where they learn that they can not tell others not to partake of the fruit that is plainly in their sight.
I hope I made some sense in all that.
Thank you TechDirt team, I really enjoy your postings.
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The ability of the community to route around, through and over/under laws the community themselves think are ethically wrong is becoming more and more evident and this scares the living crap out of anyone who has a vested interest (ie: money, power, ego) in the formation of these societal control laws. What the tipping point will be and what collateral damage it will cause before and especially after this point is anyone's guess though we are living in interesting times. Probably more interesting on a social movement area than anything we have witnessed since the Renaissance or maybe not even then (maybe this is a first n all human history)
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To return to the topic at hand, governments will not cease to abuse their authority until they are forced to do so. It would be better if that goal were achieved through financial starvation of the companies who influence them rather than outright rebellion. However, it is possible that such a revolt may be the only option. A last resort, if other methods fail. Starfleet captains, at least in the 24th century, only rely on phasers when diplomacy and other methods cannot resolve the situation. It would be advisable for us to follow the same course of action.
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