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Comment Re:Personal, explains itself (Score 1) 365

Barack's on probation with the Blackberry. Should he leak or use it for anything other than personal (what's that anyway?) He's the president 24/7. His name is Mr. President. there is no barack. everything he does is for the usa. he takes a crap. 'vin diesel goes - the things i do for my country'. he watches the football game - it's for the country. he's emailing condeeleza rice - same thing. so it's got to be the sectera edge 24/7 not the unsecure line on the blackberry. it's gonna be the target of hackers around the world. one exploit, one hole, and he's banned from the blackberry. unless RIM matches the security specs of the sectera.

Comment RTMP (Score 1) 108

I hate megavideo with their IP recording. I hate the ones that use RTMP and don't let me download the flv file. So now I need the freeware developers to update their firefox addons and freeware apps Greasemonkey scripts to support Adobe's or Abobe's (hahah) open specs on the RTMP. I know orbit says it supports RTMP, but megavideo is impossible without getting your IP add changed.

Feed Techdirt: A Year In Jail For Filming 20 Seconds Of A Movie? (techdirt.com)

For some odd reason, the movie industry has been really focused on the supposed camcorder threat this year. They've been talking it up with completely unsubstantiated numbers and getting various governments to pass stricter laws, making it a crime to record movies. The thing is, it's already against the law in most places. These laws are just much stricter. However, the bigger issue is that camcording is the least of the industry's worries. After all, a large percentage of the movies that are downloadable online aren't from camcorders, but are leaked from Hollywood insiders. More importantly, every movie is available online. You're simply not going to stop movies from getting online by throwing some kids with camcorders in jail. All it takes is for one copy to get online and then it's available to everyone. Stopping 99% of the people putting movies online won't make the movie any less available because all it takes is that one person to get a copy online and it can spread like wildfire. Finally, downloadable movies do not appear to be a substitute for the social experience of going to the movies. We've seen this over and over and over again -- most recently with the Simpsons Movie.

But what happens when you get into the habit of treating your customers like criminals and even get laws past to make it easier to accuse them of crimes? You get ridiculous situations like the story of a 19-year-old girl on her birthday who was having some fun with a video camera to record her trip to the local mall. She and her boyfriend went to see a movie and she decided to film about 20 seconds of it to later send to her brother to convince him to go see the movie (yes, to promote the movie, so her brother might become a paying customer). Instead, she was arrested and now faces fines and jailtime. You would think that anyone would recognize this wasn't a movie pirating situation and let it go -- but instead, the theater owner, Regal Cinemas, is pressing charges, while the MPAA is citing its discredited bogus stats as a reason that this type of action makes sense. It's difficult to see how this benefits the movie business in any way. It's scaring off people from going to the theaters, treating movie fans as criminals and discouraging them from promoting movies to their friends. Plus, on top of it all, a company like Regal Cinemas is making itself look like a bully. This helps the industry how exactly?

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