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paularoid
04-19-2010, 09:54 PM
http://www.tomsguide.com/us/RIAA-MPAA-Illegal-downloads-Torrent,news-6496.html

RIAA Wants Gov. to Delete Your Illegal Downloads

Copyright holders are now lobbying to be allowed access to your computer to delete content they deem bad.

Big Brother is watching you. Actually, it's the RIAA and the MPAA, especially if you're parked on a BitTorrent client. The Electronic Frontier Foundation (http://www.eff.org/deeplinks/2010/04/entertainment-industrys-dystopia-future) reports that both organizations--along with a few others--want to take the file-monitoring process a huge step further by infiltrating consumer PCs and deleting the infringing content off their hard drives. How? Through "anti-infringement" spyware developed and enforced by the government.

This is no joke.

"There are several technologies and methods that can be used by network administrators and providers...these include [consumer] tools for managing copyright infringement from the home (based on tools used to protect consumers from viruses and malware)," reads a caption in a joint comment (pdf (http://www.dga.org/news/pr-images/2010/Joint-submission-re-IPEC.pdf)) filed by the MPAA and RIAA.

The joint comment goes on to suggest other means of copyright enforcement including a mandatory scan on all internet connections to interdict transfers of illegal content, physical searches at all borders of personal media players, laptops, and USB sticks. There's even an indication that the parties want to enforce international bullying to force other countries to put similar policies in place.

But there's more. The comment said that the copyright holders want the FBI and Department of Homeland Security to fork over agents--at the taxpayer's expense--so that they can guard the media prior to distribution.

"The planned release of a blockbuster motion picture should be acknowledged as an event that attracts the focused efforts of copyright thieves, who will seek to obtain and distribute pre-release versions and/or to undermine legitimate release by unauthorized distribution through other channels," the statement reads. "Enforcement agencies (notably within DOJ and DHS) should plan a similarly focused preventive and responsive strategy. An inter-agency task force should work with industry to coordinate and make advance plans to try to interdict these most damaging forms of copyright theft, and to react swiftly with enforcement actions where necessary."

How far will they go?

DaveM
04-19-2010, 10:55 PM
Since when did copyright matters come under the jurisdiction of the Department of Homeland Security? Why does this all sound strangely familiar? And just how long do you think it will be before this passes far beyond anything resembling the excuse being employed for its creation?

Must admit, this does have me thinking of tea parties....

Bat
04-21-2010, 08:29 PM
Which Tea Parties?...Palin's or the Mad Hatter's?? Just unplug your pc when the hacker detector finds someone fiddling around in your system... Someone must have built a hacker detector...

David_Gardiner
04-22-2010, 02:35 AM
Torrent downloading leaves your computer open to intrusion I have been told. I don't know a lot about it but I've been warned that it's an excellent way to pick up unwanted viruses, adware and junk. Maybe officialdom could exploit this vulnerability and simply stop the download from working, or delete the files already downloaded.

DaveM
04-22-2010, 12:28 PM
Definitely the Mad Hatter, Bat, though I would not be surprised to find Sarah Palin and her ilk in attendance. Come to think of it, doesn't she look a bit as if she recently stumbled upon a bottle bearing a "Drink Me" note?

BAzz
06-28-2010, 03:29 AM
I'll start by saying HELLO! firstly... This is my first post here. I live in the UK so our versions of the MPAA and RIAA are somewhat toothless.

This...expletive...move by the RIAA et. al. strikes me as a little odd. I mean, are they intending, seriously, to try and hack into everyon'es PC?

Do they know about Linux? I presume they've heard of Apple and that Mac users tend not to run anti-virus packages?

Or do they simply see the 88% market share of MS Windows and figure, "Well, the rest probably don't matter"?

The logic ecapes me, if indeed, there is any to be found here.

Basically they're saying "Everyone is a thief and must be prevented from stealing media".

I object to that, so I buy very little that is DRM "protected". I pay more for the iTunes tracls that are not DRM protected, I use sites like magnatune.com and torrents from dimeadozen.org. All legal. All non-drm.

Personally, I would LOVE artists to be able to distribute their own work electronically, but it probably isn't financially feasible.

There must be some way to get rid of these idiots at the MPAA and RIAA.

BAzz

paularoid
06-28-2010, 04:11 AM
Basically they're saying "Everyone is a thief and must be prevented from stealing media".

They've been saying that from day one.