As EU Politicians Insist That It's All Just 'Bots' And 'Astroturf' Tons Of People Showing Up In Real Life To Protest
from the look-at-all-those-bots dept
One of the more obnoxious elements of the EU politicians brushing off the concerns of the public concerning the EU Copyright Directive, is their repeated, insulting and incorrect, claim that there really isn't a public upswell against Articles 11 and 13 and that it's all just manufactured by Google and "bots" and "astroturfing." We've already pointed out that nearly 5 million people have signed the Change.org petition protesting Article 13 -- making it the largest petition on that site ever. And those are real people signing on.
And those real people are now showing up to protest as well. As highlighted by Drew Wilson at FreezeNet:
The ink has barely dried on the finalizing of Article 11 and Article 13 and now, protests are beginning to emerge in Europe.
All over Twitter there are examples of large protests springing up over the Copyright Directive.
Ich bin da! #Artikel13 #Artikel13Demo pic.twitter.com/KcZPkSI50V
— Jan 🤖🔋 (@Razora_DE) February 16, 2019
I especially like the text of this one which, translated, says "But we are all just bots."
Aber wir sind ja alles nur bots #Artikel13 #Artikel13Demo #NieMehrCDU pic.twitter.com/HdfMmFxw6t
— NairaKyoya (@NairaKyoya) February 16, 2019
Boy those "bots" sure crossed the uncanny valley in a hurry. Here's another one, saying: "We are currently at #Artikel13Demo the one in Cologne or as MEP of the CDU, Sven Schulze would say: "A real fake action."-Yes exactly! You see, we're all just bots!" Look at all those bots:
Wir sind gerade auf der #Artikel13Demo in Köln oder wie Europaabgeordneter der CDU, Sven Schulze sagen würde: "Eine richtige Fake Aktion." - Ja genau! Sieht man ja, wir sind alle nur Bots! 🤖#Artiekl13 🚫 #Uploadfilter #SaveYourInternet pic.twitter.com/ph7K2DwOyH
— unravel_game (@MilanUnravel) February 16, 2019
And some more bots:
Köln. Jetzt. #Artikel13Demo #Artikel13 #Kölngegen13 pic.twitter.com/lUIACCd7C7
— Dustin (@DustinNaujokat) February 16, 2019
I'm sensing a theme:
We ARE HERE ❤️ WE AREN'T BOTS @uploadfilter @Senficon #cologne #Artikel13Demo #Germany #NiewiederCDU pic.twitter.com/Xa0aLsiFeh
— Lorenz Buczek (@LorenzBuczek) February 16, 2019
Damn, that's a lot of bots.
Right now, spontaneous #Artikel13Demo, in #Cologne - just 2 days earlier announced. If already thousands of people demonstrate against #CopyLaw #CensorshipMachines (#Article13) & #LinkTax (#Article) at this occasion, how huge will the #stopACTA2 demos on 23th of March be?#EP2019 pic.twitter.com/qMgOFDbO3J
— CopyWrongs (@CopyWrongs) February 16, 2019
I'm beginning to think that European politicians who mocked critics of Articles 11 and 13 as "bots" may realize that that was a strategic mistake. The "bots" have mobilized -- and they sure look like human beings who will be voting for the EU Parliament in May...
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Filed Under: article 11, article 13, bots, copyright, eu, eu copyright directive, eu parliament, protests
Reader Comments
The First Word
“Isn't it ironic ...
...that those "bums on seats", those politicians whose job is essentially to raise their hands when their party leaders tell them to, refer to others as "bots"?
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Which politicians will be the first to comment that he did not realize that Google employed so many people?
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Fake
Since we know that Hollywood is also no longer supporting Article 13, we can reasonably assume that all these "crowds" are small groups of extras on a sound stage, with the size being multiplied by special effects. Hollywood and Google working together to destroy the European Union. Don't fall for the trick!
;)
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Wir sind Die roboten
Does Kraftwerk? www.youtube.com/watch?v=vpTRDY5XkrY
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Re: Wir sind Die roboten
Don't know about Kraf, but Miley does.
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Can someone pick up that phone?
As I noted in the previous article on this subject...
Do you want angry protests in the street? Because that's how you get angry protests in the street. Again.
Go figure, dismiss people's electronic protests as nothing but bots and they show up in person. I wonder if the idiot who tried to just brush it all under the rug has enough self-awareness to realize just how badly he screwed up with his dismissive arrogance?
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Ain't copyright sweet?
No.
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Do these bots organize through mailing-lists?
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Bots vote MEP's out of office
I am waiting for the upcoming election. I suspect that MEP's that lose their elections will be blaming 'bots' for voting for the winning person. Then the question becomes, why did the folks running the poles let all those bots in to vote?
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Re: Can someone pick up that phone?
I need to point that we dismissed a ton of comments to the FCC regarding net neutrality as bots and they never showed up in person. Maybe American bots are different?
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Well .... obviously those are fake people.
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Re:
Yes, why, it's almost like Google played a role in getting these protests organized...
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Re: Re:
By helping to make it simple and convenient for people to communicate with each other? Certainly.
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Isn't it ironic ...
...that those "bums on seats", those politicians whose job is essentially to raise their hands when their party leaders tell them to, refer to others as "bots"?
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Re: Re:
I mean, if your position is that these protests are invalid because Google supports them, what's your position on the validity of copyright laws written by the movie and record industries?
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If you have something that you cannot support without lying (EU copyright directive, FOSTA, NN repeal, CDA 230 repeal, Trump's emergency/wall), then perhaps take it as a sign you shouldn't be supporting it.
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The pirates and aggregators created the need for Article 13.
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Re:
Ehhhnnnnt! Wrong!
Piracy is already illegal and enforceable under already in-place laws. Besides, neither of these resolutions actually address piracy. They just restrict legal use even more.
Also, there is nothing illegal about aggregation. Especially when the "worst aggregation offenders" don't even copy/repost/host the aggregated content. They display the headline, maybe a subtitle, and provide a link to the originating site if you want to actually read the article. You can't actually read any news articles on Google News. Shocking, I know, since that pretty much invalidates any reason for either A11 or A13.
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Re:
Prioritizing reputation and copyright over defamation and infringement requires no lie, just a different viewpoint from your own.
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Re: Re:
Claiming that A11 and A13 are actually needed, won't do things that they actually will, won't break the internet, and make things generally worse for everyone but the companies they are trying to punish with this DOES require a lie. And also a severe divorcement from reality and understanding of how technology works.
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Re: Re:
Trying to blame aggregators is especially funny given two little tidbits that they seem to have 'forgotten'.
1) If they're talking about the likes of Google(and let's be honest, that's who's being targeted with laws like this) sites can block them with a simple change to the site's code, yet strangely enough they don't.
2) When those terrible aggregators/Google responded to previous attempts to shake them down for money for the terrible crime of sending sites free traffic by dropping the links/snippets the very sites that were complaining about how evil Google was for sending them traffic completely lost (what remained of) their minds, accusing Google of trying to strongarm them and/or abusing it's position.
It's a strange sort of 'crime' when the 'victim' whines up a storm when it stops.
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Re:
So tell me, how is article 13 going to curb piracy on sites such as the pirate bay?
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Re: Re:
Then why do you lie all the damn time? Just for fun?
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Re:
Greed and failing business models created the need.
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Re:
Piracy will still be a thing if and when Article 13 passes. A13 will not stop torrents or private trackers; if anything, A13 will send that type of activity further underground, where — like human trafficking — it will become much harder to track.
Aggregators will still be a thing, too. Search engines exist precisely because they aggregate openly available data and information of all kinds in a way that makes searching for such info (and the sites that display it) much easier for all people. The only difference is that A13 will chill aggregation within the EU, such that sites within the EU will lose traffic — especially the news sites that are fighting so hard to have that aggregation destroyed.
Article 13 would do nothing to prevent or punish currently illegal actions. It would, however, do a lot to prevent or punish actions such as content aggregation and Fair Use-protected copyright infringement that are currently legal (or seemingly legal, at least). Your holy crusade would harm the innocent more than the guilty, and I have to wonder: When you cut down all the laws to get at someone you perceive to be a criminal, what will you do when someone else thinks you are a criminal and the laws can no longer help you because you did such a magnificent job of cutting them all down?
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Re:
There is no need for Article 13.
FTFY
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Re: Re:
I never thought about this specifically before. Sure I recognized how bad this would be for news aggregators but technically, all a search engine is one giant aggregator of all types of content.
With that thought in mind, A13 is actually making all search engines illegal. This just went from stupendously stupid to completely brainless decision making in how I view it.
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As usual, you were diverted from TOPIC to whether are "bots".
You fall for this sequence EVERY time.
1) Big flap over substance.
2) One of the principals comes up with some "ridiculous" or "laughable' suggestion.
3) Off you go down the wrong trail, barking your head off, pleased and proud that you saw through the obvious diversion.
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Re: Re:
SO? That's the whole point of law. Crime is reduced when forced out of sight, that's axiomatic.
By your notion, anything that gov't wishes to stop it should actually allow in the open where can be "tracked". -- Not. Sane. As shown by all history.
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Re: Re: Re:
Forced underground is not the same as reduced. Indeed, generally when things are "forced underground", they tend to flourish and grow until you have a really massive problem on your hands, instead of being reduced to a smaller percentage of occurrence. Take prohibition for example.
No, it's really not. That's just stupid and illogical with no basis in facts or reality. Forcing it underground just means that you personally don't see it for a while until it gets too big.
Prohibition says hi. Moron.
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Re: As usual, you were diverted from TOPIC to whether are "bots"
Sorry, what? Please try to make some amount of sense at least once in a while.
The story is about an elected official who made an incorrect assumption and pissed off the population of several countries by claiming they were "just bots". He is now rightly being mocked and derided for his stupidity. Much the same as we do for you in the comments.
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although this is the topic in the EU atm, it is just the same here in the USA and many other countries. governments are doing whatever they can to stifle us ordinary people, to stop us finding out and being able to find out exactly what governments, industries corporations and businesses are up to, what the heads are up to, what the rich and famous and powerful are up to, none of which is in the interests of us ordinary people and everything that favors those above! every government seems to be doing whatever it can to ensure the people remain 'ordinary' and often 'in the dark' as to what is happening against us, while helping in every way possible, with the help of the security services, the courts and judges, to keep those above in charge and in control! in other words, whatever can be done, is being done to ensure we, the ordinary people, remain as nothing but slaves to the elite! governments especially are voted into place to do what is best for the country and the citizens, unlike how it is atm, making sure that only the top echelon of people and companies etc keep their status, at any cost and whatever law needs to be changed or introduced to achieve that is being done! sooner or later, the masses will have enough and respond accordingly! i wonder how long that will take and how many wrongs have to be done?
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Easy fix: A lot of politicians have violated copyrights in the past through the use of images, songs, and text. If only all social networks would just suspend access for EU politicians based on their "probable potential" to eventually infringe on copyright, they might get the point.
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13 reasons why
Still amused that search engines, and free speech give some people such butthurt they have to take away everyone's civil rights. Mandatory filters are nothing less than warrantless search and seizure.
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you deserve it
I keep warning you clowns that your constant desire to give governments power to "regulate all the things" will only result in businesses taking over those tools and using them against you. Government IS the rich. What kinda of moron thinks they are going to self police? Because you can vote for them? I have a bridge to sell you.
You will never learn and you will always deserve that fallout of that. Go ahead, keep walking off the cliff and blaming gravity when reality comes rushing up into your face.
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Frankly, the EU is just the same old hate group that it's always been. Google is simply one of the latest targets--always typified by wealth and success (as seen by the hate group).
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
Alcohol is bought and paid for by those who consume it.
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Re:
Reagan had that problem in 1984 when he learned that John (Cougar) Mellencamp wasn't as Republican as his patriotic songs might have led one to believe.
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Re: Re:
Pushing piracy underground means only hardcore pirates will know how to steal content. That's fine with me. The remainder will have to buy, license, or not consume the content. If a pirate "might" buy in the future (as an argument that it doesn't harm), then the piracy is a potential lost sale (otherwise the piracy can't help the business model).
With Articlel 13 becoming a reality we will see if the internet breaks or not. My guess is that it won't.
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Re: European man
European man claims briorobots employed by internet are fake.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
This has what to do with anything? Tea is bought and paid for by those who consume it as well.
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Re: Re: Re:
Unlikely. Piracy is as easy as going to a website and downloading a file. Nothing will change that.
How is this any different than today?
As opposed to "will never buy" then actually piracy is helping. Many people who pirate stuff, turn around and buy the exact same thing legally. It's essentially their own version of try before you buy. If they can't try it before they buy, then they won't buy it period, e.g. guaranteed lost sale. But if they can try before buying, then that 0% chance of a sale jumps up. Your logic is flawed.
Well then you really don't understand how technology and the internet works. And when it does break, we'll be here to laugh and tell you we told you so.
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Reports of crimes being reduced does not mean the actual rate of those crimes happening are being reduced. You can drive human trafficking underground, but that doesn’t stop it from happening.
Allow the actual act? No. But allow people to advertise the act in a way where those people can be tracked and the crime can either be prevented outright or punished soon after its commission? Hell yes.
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No, it isn’t.
A “potential” sale is a sale that has not been made yet. No monetary transaction has yet happened in the “potential” scenario. Someone who downloads an illicit copy of, say, Alita: Battle Angel might buy a legal copy of the film in the future — but that potential does not put money into someone else’s bank account. And if that person decides not to buy a legal copy, that decision does not take money out of someone else’s bank account. No money changes hands, and no money is guaranteed to change hands before being taken back.
A potential sale is not a lost sale for the fact that you cannot lose what you didn’t have in the first place. If you can prove that “potential” revenue is the exact same thing as actual revenue, such that even one single download means the artist(s) involved with creating the downloaded work lost a tangible amount of money from their bank account(s)…well, you’d be the first.
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Re: Re: Can someone pick up that phone?
We dismissed them as bot because of evidence - all submissions being in alphabetical order, coming from the same source, and including names of people who were known to hold the opposite stance or were even dead. These politicians dismissed them because they used gmail. I know you were being funny, but it's worth pointing out the difference. One had evidence of being a bot, and the other was pure ignorance and arrogance.
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Re: Re: Re:
Never under estimate the bandwidth of an Altoids tin full of Micro SD cards, and the simplicity of copying files. It is more than enough to spread copies of the annual published output of the legacy publishers, but not enough to deal with the legal hourly self published output on the Internet.
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Re: Re: Re:
The remainder will have to buy, license, or not consume the content.
Why cant we have an option?
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Re:
I think you are a bit hard on the EU. Lets simplify it a bit and be totally jaded:
A government not run by corporations will eye the corporations success as a possible revenue stream and work towards getting their hands on it.
A government run by corporations means the corporations will use the government and it's citizens as it's private piggy-bank to raid.
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Re: Re: Re:
I could hear the “oh snap” from that comment here in New Zealand.
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Re:
So that’s how Jhon boy made his money.
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Re: you three are like a Voltron of stupid
More paint for the paint eaters! More lead for the lead throne!
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Re: Re:
Do they even listen to the lyrics, much less look up text of said lyrics. They have no idea what Born In the USA is about.
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Re: Re: Re:
Reagan had a problem with that one too.
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Re:
If they "might" buy then they "might" have bought even without the piracy. The threat of stealing to extort a free copy would be criminal. The downloader's name has value on a mailing list, so money is lost by the creator and gained by the pirate every time an illegal copy is downloaded.
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Re: Re:
I have to ask, how did your teachers in school make you learn anything?
Because from the evidence of the posts you make and the factual rebuttals of the same, you are incapable of learning. And that's a fact.
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Someone boot up a Turing test. We may have reached the pinnacle of AI!
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Re: Re:
Why would a downloader leave his name on a list so that copyright enforcers can track him down afterward?
You've yet to answer this question!
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Re: you deserve it
So we should you let you police? Given your track record, I'd say hell no.
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Re:
"The pirates and aggregators created the need for Article 13."
Wait, what...you are claiming that article 13, was created as a response to the phenomenon that particular legislation does not, in any way, address.
That's even worse than claiming that invisible fairies are responsible for the need of laws against littering. What the hell are you copyright cultists smoking?
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Re: Re: Re:
"SO? That's the whole point of law. Crime is reduced when forced out of sight, that's axiomatic."
No, that's actually the OPPOSITE of law. A good law will allow for a paradigm where it is actually possible to implement the law. What article 13 does, otoh, is, to use drug laws as a comparison, the equivalent of forcing EVERYONE to hide and move fully legal accessories - like cosmetics and home electronics - using the same methods as drug smugglers use, making the job of the police impossible since absolutely EVERYONE is now behaving as if they had something to hide.
That's why a law which makes it impossible for police to reasonably act is a shit law.
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Re: Re: Re:
"Pushing piracy underground means only hardcore pirates will know how to steal content."
You mean like every "pirate" in the last thirty years?
What article 13 does - and any other such law - won't affect pirates at all.
Instead it forces LEGAL USERS to get with the pirate program and turn that "underground" into the default venue for normal citizens.
Hey, I'm all for it. It means you guys lose every last shred of the control you imagined you had.
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Re: Re:
If someone is confident in an artist or author, they buy new works sight unseen, otherwise it is try before buy by some means, or if physical goods are involved buy at bargain book stores or second hand.
Now, obviously nobody buys a copy of everything that they try, but many sales would not happen without the try. Also, while TV and radio used to be a form of try, that is no longer the case for the younger generations who find their entertainment on the Internet.
Where is the Internet equivalent of free to air radio?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Well, it is now, plenty of people distilled their own when they couldn't legally buy it, and the black market trade led to far worse consequences than the original problem. Which is kind of the point.
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Re: Re:
"The downloader's name has value on a mailing list..."
Again with this imaginary mailing list which pirates apparently happily leave their names on.
Your arguments keep suggesting that you live in a land of delusion and make-believe, bobmail, because I very much doubt there's a single pirate out there who ever left their name or traceable address on a "mailing list".
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Re: Re:
What about the people who would have bought a legal copy, but the industry's obsession with regional restrictions, DRM and other things prevent them from doing so, or makes the end product not worth buying and so they do without (not pirate)?
"The downloader's name has value on a mailing list"
Only to con artists like you, the pirate sites never ask for it in the first place.
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Re: Re: Re:
He's confused. You see, from what he's told us, his entire business model was one of those get rich quick scams, where he offers a worthless freebie in exchange for personal information, then uses the resulting list to relentlessly spam the fools who signed up until they buy further worthless content.
Due to the above, he's unable to conceive of a situation where someone gets something for free without having to give their information up to a scammer. He's not honest or intelligent to do a little research and see how things actually operate, so he pins the collapse of whatever scam he was running on pirates getting the mailing list and not the natural failure of his his dishonest trade.
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Re: Re:
And either way, it is not an actual sale until money changes hands. “Might buy” is not the same thing as “is guaranteed to buy”. If a person cannot pirate a work, their decision not to buy it in the absence of piracy is not a “lost sale” in the sense that the work’s author loses money.
…fucking what
We here in the comments section have explained this to you before, and I will explain it to you again, this time in less complicated language.
“Pirates” do not leave their names on mailing lists. “Pirate sites” do not generate mailing lists. The whole point of “piracy” is to remain anonymous. Anonymity makes “pirates” harder to track.
Time for a hypothetical!
I have ten dollars in my pocket. You have, let’s say, $100k in your bank account. I find a copy of your work online on a “pirate site” and download a copy for myself instead of buying a copy through Amazon. No money has changed hands at any point in this situation. Other than a potential sale (which is not the same as an actual sale), what money did you lose that you did not have in the first place?
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Re: Re:
Not if piracy is their only option to "try before buying". Many so-called "pirates", pirate the work in order to try it before purchasing legitimately.
No, it doesn't because there is no such thing as a pirate mailing list. It just doesn't exist.
Oh? And if by pirating a work, the "pirate" likes it so much that he is willing to then go out and buy a legitimate copy, and furthermore likes the artist's work so much he buys more of their stuff, that's not money lost. That's money gained where there originally would be none.
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Re: Re:
The politicians are also complicit in getting the protests organized, by that logic. After all, if there were no roads or trains, nobody would be able to get to the protest site.
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Re: Re: Re:
Which forces the creator to yield a "free sample" against their will to someone who obviously has interest in it or they wouldn't download it. Their value to a mailing list is lost to the creator (and gained by the pirate), and if they are in fact a "potential sale" then that is definitely lost at first.
Creators can give free samples or trials of their work or use this model on their own. That they do not suggests it's not as valuable as you might think.
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Re: Re: Re:
"Explaining" just means presenting your viewpoint.
I've lost one name off my mailing list, which has a fixed value. The pirates definitely get hit with advertising, cookies, and even more marketing content in what they steal. All lost to the creator (and gained by the pirate).
Just ask Conde Nast, whose magazines break even but whose subscriber database of thirty million for all of its publications makes them rich.
Creators are free to give samples of their work. Most don't, some do. Under no circumstances is stealing work legitimate, and since the pirates don't get the memo, it's why countries like Japan will simply start imprisoning them.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
""Explaining" just means presenting your viewpoint."
Often it also means presenting reality, a concept with which you are apparently unfamiliar.
"I've lost one name off my mailing list, which has a fixed value. The pirates definitely get hit with advertising, cookies, and even more marketing content "
So... you're saying that you lost one person that you think you can scam out of money, while people with a more diverse business model that you could easily replicate are making more money?
What's stopping you from running your business in a way that means that someone not signing up to your spam list means you don't instantly lose money? I mean, by your reckoning spam filters should be made illegal because it stops people reading your con tricks.
"Just ask Conde Nast, whose magazines break even but whose subscriber database of thirty million for all of its publications makes them rich"
What about people who buy their magazines but are not on any subscriber list? Even in your examples, the reality is far more complex than your simplistic list obsession.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
"Their value to a mailing list is lost to the creator (and gained by the pirate), and if they are in fact a "potential sale" then that is definitely lost at first."
Your spamming is probably being blocked by 80% of the people you try to defraud anyway. Why not pick a business model that can't be disrupted by people clicking "this is spam" when they see you?
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
Note that he hasn't explained how the pirates make money off this "mailing list".
Downloaders don't subscribe to pirate sites, yet Jhon is claiming that the money spent on his white elephants would have gone to the pirates. The magical motherlode of money that the IFPI has never been able to find.
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Re: Re: Re: Re:
"...from what he's told us, his entire business model was one of those get rich quick scams, where he offers a worthless freebie in exchange for personal information, then uses the resulting list to relentlessly spam the fools who signed up until they buy further worthless content."
Wait, you're telling me dear old "Bobmail"'s big hate-boner over pirates is because, for some oddball reason, he's become convinced that the key part of being a pirate involves successfully using his own old fraud scheme?
That sort of drops him from right from "religious fanatic" into "tinfoil-hatted crackpot convinced of martian mind control because drug-addled gerbils".
I used to think his demented rants were those of a poor soul unable to support himself any other way at least being handed 50 cents every now and then for humiliating himself in defense of the indefensible. The idea that he's being serious once again reveals much of what sort of mind it takes to believe in Copyright.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Re:
"he's become convinced that the key part of being a pirate involves successfully using his own old fraud scheme"
Better than that - he seems generally unaware that he was a fraudster to begin with. He seems to think that harvesting an email list to upsell people to get rick quick schemes was honest labour that's been robbed of him by pirates, and not that he was the kind of scum that's lower on the totem pole than the pirates themselves (say what you want about the supposed losses to online piracy, I've not had one hassle me for money since the VHS days when they sold in public markets).
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