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YouTube AntiPiracy Policy Likened to 'Mafia Shakedown'
Posted by
Zonk
on Sun Feb 18, 2007 02:11 PM
from the i-hear-that's-a-growth-industry dept.
from the i-hear-that's-a-growth-industry dept.
A C|Net article discusses reactions to YouTube's newly proposed antipiracy software policy. The company is now offering assistance for IP holders, allowing them to keep track of their content on the YouTube service ... if they sign up with the company for licensing agreements. A spokesman for Viacom (already in a fight with YouTube to take down numerous video clips) called this policy 'unacceptable', and another industry analyst likened it to a 'mafia shakedown.' YouTubes cites the challenges of determining ownership of a given video clip as the reason for this policy, and hopes that IP owners will cooperate in resolving these issues. Some onlookers also feel that these protestations are simply saber-rattling before an eventual deal: "'The debates are about negotiations more than anything else--who's going to pay whom and how much,' said Saul Berman, IBM's global media and entertainment strategy leader."
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Viacom Demands YouTube Remove Videos 225 comments
AlHunt writes "According to the folks at PCWorld Viacom has publicly scolded YouTube for continuing to host throngs of Viacom videos without permission. They are demanding that over 100,000 of its clips be removed from the site. This includes content from Comedy Central (no more Daily Show), MTV, Nick at Nite, Nickelodeon, Paramount Pictures, and VH1. YouTube has acknowledged receiving a DMCA request from Viacom, and the article notes what a dire precedent this could be if Google can't reach an agreement with Viacom and its fellow IP holders."
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YouTube AntiPiracy Policy Likened to 'Mafia Shakedown'
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Doesn't YouTube know (Score:1, Insightful)
Re:Doesn't YouTube know (Score:5, Funny)
(http://trolltalk.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday November 03, @08:45PM)
Tony Soprano called ... he wants the media companies to know they're infringing on his "Intellectual Property" when they use his tactics ... a couple of the boys will be by later to discuss how they can "purchase protection" or "insurance" ... you knw ... "would be a real shame if something bad were to happen ..."
Tilting at windmills (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.buran.org/)
Re:Tilting at windmills (Score:4, Insightful)
Every time I see a story like this, it just upsets me. It's going against our culture, which values sharing and building upon others' work, and making use of what we already have to create new things. What's the point of this? It's just tilting at windmills -- those values are so ingrained in us that they're not going to go away.
I agree with you, but if you log on to YouTube many uploads there are nothing more than TV broadcasts stripped of commercials. Uploaders aren't creating anything, they're just engaging in copyright infringement. I think copyright laws need to be a little more relaxed about "clip-and-snip", where people genuinely create something new by piecing together other (copyrighted) stuff, but I have no patience with people whose idea of "sharing" is just wholesale redistribution of copyrighted material.
Re:Tilting at windmills (Score:5, Interesting)
(http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Monday November 03 2003, @03:59PM)
The term "intellectual property" incorporates both aspects of the culture and gets to the crux of the conflict: we share our intellect but do not share our property. But as intellectual property can be shared without rivalry, the process is upended.
That's the answer to your question "What's the point?" We have two traditions in our culture: building on each other's work, and owning (and getting rich from) property. The easy sharing of information brings those two cultural values into conflict.
Those who claim that the argument has already been settled in favor of sharing over property are (IMO) missing the fact that property has always been a crucial driver of innovation and investment. Many intellectual things are expensive to create, movies most obvious among them, because they incorporate physical elements (sets, cameras, lights) before they become mere bits to be shared. The movie industry continues to believe that they can make money off their "intellectual property" on the basis of selling it like traditional property. If you manage to convince them that they're wrong, it's more likely that they'll stop making movies than that they'll produce them and expect to be unable to recoup their expenses.
The conflict of the two values will eventually produce a shift to a new order, and I don't know what that's going to look like.
Re:Tilting at windmills (Score:4, Insightful)
I guess the confusion here lies in the distinction between physically property and intellectual property. Is is really fair that someone can have exclusive rights to an 'idea' or should they just just be able to make money out of the application of this idea? Copyrights inhibit growth. They discourage people from reusing good ideas and building on top of them. They encourage people to rebuild their own type of wheel. so where does this fit with IP? People need to be able to make money out of the work that they do, but perhaps the current system is flawed. No matter how much they fight piracy and sharing it will always exist, it is the nature of humans to share things. "hey John have you heard this great new album by band X? its great, ..no.... you can't listen to mine go buy your own".
There will always be free riders looking for a free lunch.....as i have been in the past...and sometimes i still am. But i believe that ultimatley it is only good for the artist / producer or whatever it is that is getting ripped off. If you were a band, that made an album or a video clip, would you rather sell 10,000 albums and have 10,000 fans with no one sharing your material, or sell 10,000 albums and have them sharing your work and have 1 million fans? what is better for your music and your future in the industry? I think that being know and getting noticed counts more than actual sales. It will always eventually lead back to sales, ticket sales for concerts etc. Even if only 5,000 people bought the album because the rest copied it, if they share it they are promoting your band which is basically free marketing. That will always lead to sales.
Re:Tilting at windmills (Score:4, Interesting)
(http://slashdot.org/ | Last Journal: Monday November 03 2003, @03:59PM)
Copyright is owning a particular work: a book, a song, a recording of a song, a movie. And you need to be very careful about making up your numbers here. It's very simple: I'd rather have 10k fans buy 10k albums than have 1,000k fans buy 5k albums. If the word-of-mouth advertising is so great, why did I sell half as many albums?
Especially given the first thousand albums just go to the cost of recording. Studio time is expensive. Engineers are expensive. Mastering is expensive. Album art costs money, screen printing CDs costs money. And getting those first 10k fans to buy any copies of the album at all is expensive. Put an album out there on the web for free and nobody will download it until you play a few hundred gigs in which your money for the night MAYBE covers the gasoline it took to get there. (And god forbid the drummer should have a few beers.)
Why yes, I have been a rock band promoter, and I do know where these numbers come from. If I want to PAY the band, God forbid, I have to sell 10k albums.
Most of the things that are downloaded are things that somebody spent a LOT of money promoting in the first place. Most bands of the kind I've worked with would pay you to download their album.
There's a lot to be said for developing new models; DRM is simply holding back the ocean with a broom. But I implore you, when justifying your downloading to yourself, not to pretend that you're somehow doing the band a service until you've looked at the economics a lot more closely.
Re:Tilting at windmills (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://gort.ucsd.edu/escowles/)
This isn't actually true. Our system of copyright is rather new, as the idea is only about as old as our country. Large scale works (opera, architecture, large paintings, manuscripts, etc. in those days) existed for centuries before copyright was invented.
The old system relied on patronage. People with money and power supplied the capital needed for large projects, and hence called the shots on their production. I think this system could be resurrected pretty easily, since there are already a number of government and non-profit organizations that fund film and television productions now. I don't know if we'd ever have patronage-funded $100M-budget blockbusters, but I'm not sure that's an argument against the system.
Also, and more broadly, our experiment with copyright started with a 14-year term. Given that the last works to enter the public domain were produced before my grand-parents were born, I think we've effectively established infinite copyright terms at this point. So I think the media conglomerates have effectively forfeited any moral right to copyright they may have had by stealing the public domain from us. After all, the enrichment of the public domain is the only excuse for giving creators a temporary monopoly in the first place.
-Esme
Microsoft (Score:3, Funny)
(http://www.microsoft.com/)
Dude, You're Getting a Dell!
So they bemoan having to pay for their enforcement (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Tuesday November 06, @02:39PM)
The public has to pay for police work in taxes, the government has to pay employees for studies, every major corporation has to pay their security guards and in most cases security system contractors to keep their buildings secure.
The media industries should be no different. If they want others to be looking out for their interests, they should be paying those people for their troubles.
Irony? (Score:3, Insightful)
Or is it hipocracy?
Or more likely, with translation (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.sympato.ch/)
Daring fire-style translation :
No, we won't let you just pipe the results of your auto-suit-bots into our database.
Identifying actual copyright infrigment, from fair use, from complete false-positive is a very difficult job and if we botch it, people are going to make fun of all of us including YouTube, like it hapened before with the tutorials. So please now pay for the actual work force needed to perform what you ask.
So let me get this right? (Score:5, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Friday May 18, @11:07AM)
Sure, they host them, and perhaps can or do check them, but the law doesn't say that people need to check for IP rights before using something (IIRC) and that it is the IP holder's job to request the violator change their use of the IP or take it down.
If YouTube did this free, they would become IP policemen, and that can't be cheap. Why wouldn't they charge for this service? To me, this doesn't sound like mafia tactics so much as it sounds like business tactics. Offer a service and charge for it. I am thinking that Google et al haven't figured out how to generate ad revenue from this service so they want to charge for it.
Sounds like simple business practice to me. I might be wrong though.
Re:So let me get this right? (Score:4, Informative)
(http://www.owlmanatt.com/)
Unfortunately, copyright law is not that simple. YouTube is a 'safe harbour' under the DMCA 512(c). 512(c) is a magical section of the law that grants an online service provider which hosts content from users on their own servers immunity from IP infringement provided that they meet certain criteria.
To summarize, YouTube has to designate an agent [copyright.gov] to receive notice of infringement, publish their copyright infringement policies [google.com], disable access to repeat offenders, and respond reasonably to takedown / counter notices.
So just as long as they're processing those DMCA takedowns and tossing users out, the DMCA (in theory) shields them from litigation. So, eh, surprisingly, this is copyright law.
Disclaimer: IANAL. Go read copyright.gov/onlinesp/ or ChillingEffects.
Re:So let me get this right? (Score:4, Insightful)
(Last Journal: Friday August 17, @08:29AM)
Screw YouTube... (Score:5, Insightful)
(http://www.msgeek.org/ | Last Journal: Tuesday August 23 2005, @08:30PM)
A friend of mine's Daria fan animations (no they aren't hentai) got taken off of YouTube. Viacom has been approving of fan films in the past, the most elaborate of which being the Star Trek: The Original Series continuation "The New Voyages," hosted at http://www.newvoyages.com/ [newvoyages.com] . The fan films got swept up in the Viacom/YouTube dragnet. This pissed me off because quite a few people from the Daria fandom were involved, and they really were nicely done.
Hopefully an appeal to have the fan films reinstated will be successful.
The screwed thing is that unless you take a lot of trouble with 3rd party apps you cannot download a YouTube
There are alternatives. Metacafe, Ning, Revver...all excellent choices for showing your stuff. And there is always BIT TORRENT for something a bit higher quality and a bit more permanent.
Big media needs to grow a brain. YouTube needs to grow a spine. Everyone wins when content is up on YouTube. Everyone loses when these silly fights start up.
Re:Screw YouTube... (Score:4, Insightful)
(http://www.lazylightning.org/)
They are going to become the Napster of online video... An awesome service when it was all free and full of pirated stuff. Now that it's going legal and making deals with the industry, it's probably going to suck.
Wake up. (Score:2)
(http://www.mithral.com/~beberg/)
YouTube is the kid running a lemonade stand trying to negotiate with the local Mafia boss.
Oh, and when did YouTube remove all the English content, it's getting hard to find...
"mafia shakedown" (Score:2)
(Last Journal: Friday February 21 2003, @05:17AM)
copyrighted content (Score:1)
YouTube is dead (Score:3, Interesting)
(http://not.a.valid.url.com/ | Last Journal: Monday October 02 2006, @07:51PM)
YouTube... (Score:2)
Sad... (Score:2)
(http://aqpeag.blogspot.com/ | Last Journal: Saturday April 21 2007, @05:39AM)
Enjoy it while you can, and remember that there'll still be archive.org, videobomb, and p2p. Participatory media in general won't die when YouTube does.
Mafia shakedown (Score:2)
(http://www.unity08.com/)
Yes. YouTube is shaking down the Mafia. Turnabout is fair play, though, since the ??AA has been shaking down elderly/juvenile/disabled/computer illiterate people for years now.
But seriously, there's a huge difference between complying with the law for free (which YouTube is doing) and accepting an agreement to go above and beyond the call of duty (which YouTube is now offering).
Why do we need a 'You Tube'? (Score:1)
Baytsp was used for the job? (Score:1)
Update (Score:2)
Pah! These teenagers and their YouTube! (Score:2)
Bloody kids these days don't know that they're born!
Re:Superb (Score:1, Offtopic)
(http://projectdream.org/)