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MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research 409

Cpt_Corelli writes "Alwayson network claims that a recent survey conducted by Online Testing Exchange (OTX) and distributed by the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA) is crap. The MPAA's summary of the survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.' (It turns out this isn't true, but this is the factoid that was heard around the world the following week.) When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"
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MPAA Piracy Survey - Junk Research

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  • Well... (Score:4, Insightful)

    by wolrahnaes ( 632574 ) <sean AT seanharlow DOT info> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:49PM (#10039018) Homepage Journal
    Since when would we trust the MPAA anyways?
    • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by celeritas_2 ( 750289 ) <ranmyaku@gmail.com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:27PM (#10039216)
      It shouldn't matter whether 1 in 4 or 1 in 4000 computer users download movies, what really matters is this:

      Does movie downloading affect the economy of movie makers and all their dependancies in a major way?

      Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?

      How extensive should media creators' controls be over their 'art'?

      And finally: Who actually gives a shit?

      • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by Nos. ( 179609 ) <`ac.srrekeht' `ta' `werdna'> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:38PM (#10039271) Homepage

        Does movie downloading affect the economy of movie makers and all their dependancies in a major way?

        Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy

        Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?

        Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.

        How extensive should media creators' controls be over their 'art'?

        Relevant! I'm a firm believer that if someone creates a work of art they should be able to charge whatever they want to people who want a reproduction or to view/listen to that art. Now art is defined pretty loosely here, especially considering some of the stuff that hits the theatres. If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right. I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holders.

        • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:47PM (#10039323)
          If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.
          Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on laws.
          • Re:Well... (Score:4, Interesting)

            by Tim C ( 15259 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:23PM (#10039473)
            Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on laws.

            Ideally, the law should codify what is right and wrong, in as many cases as possible (there will always be exceptions). So while it should not depend on the law, it should certainly be reflected by the law.
            • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

              by Daniel_Staal ( 609844 ) <DStaal@usa.net> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @06:28PM (#10040062)
              Ideally, the law should codify what is right and wrong, in as many cases as possible (there will always be exceptions). So while it should not depend on the law, it should certainly be reflected by the law.

              NO!

              The law should codify only what is necessary for people to get along together in one world. Ethics should not be even brought up; they are irrelevant, except in the practical case.

              The law is not about what is right and wrong. Or even what is moral and immoral. It is about keeping society functioning. What makes it possible for you to walk around without worrying about the safety of your life, limb, and property. It makes sure you pay the costs of your actions, good or bad, right or wrong, legal or illegal. And none of those categories necessarily overlap.

              The moment the law starts to be based on what is 'right' and what is 'wrong' we start having trouble. Always

              • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

                by platypibri ( 762478 ) <platypibri@@@gmail...com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @07:24PM (#10040431) Homepage Journal
                The law should codify only what is necessary for people to get along together in one world. Ethics should not be even brought up; they are irrelevant, except in the practical case.

                This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined. We have an ethic against stealing, and a law against it. Now, you say that is only right and natural, but many Native American cultures had no sense of possesion, and therefore, NOTHING could be stolen. Our speed laws are morally derived from how fast you can go without being a danger to others "IN IDEAL CONDITIONS". Yes, this means you can rightfully get a ticket for doing 65 on the freeway in the fog, because you may not care for your life, but you are morally and legally required to not put others in danger. All law we have limits people from performing actions deemed hurtful to others which is ethics at it's very core. And I , for example COULD get a big stick and beat you till you saw it my way, but I am ethicly, and legally prevented from doing so, much to our benefit.

                In conclusion in our society you, other than through participartion or lack there of, have no rights when it comes to what another has created. None. Fair use is a courtesty extended, nothing more. And while I like the idea of fair use, my only way to lobby for it is with what I choose to buy and not buy.

                • Re:Well... (Score:4, Insightful)

                  by Viceice ( 462967 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @10:09PM (#10041373)
                  I think what the grandparent was trying to get at was that laws ought to be free of bias.

                  'Moral' and 'ethics' are very dirty words. They can be defined and abused anyway someone with an agenda wants.

                  What is needed in the legal system is something like the seperation of church and state, but instead of theology, ideology is whats seperated. Ideology in this sense is like how the all the **AA's think that the world owes them everytime soembody hums a tune. It's stupid, and doesn't benefit society.

                  In short, only laws that serve to benefit the whole of society, like speed laws and laws against murder, theft, etc should be passes and laws that serve only a small minority at the inconvinience of society at large ought to never see the light of day.
                • Re:Well... (Score:5, Informative)

                  by back_pages ( 600753 ) <back_pages&cox,net> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @10:40PM (#10041486) Journal
                  This is nonsense. ALL law is ethics defined.

                  This is refuted in any Philosophy 101 course. Why is it illegal to drive without using your seatbelt? Is it wrong to not use your seatbelt? No, but it unfairly burdens the emergency response units in the community when some dumbass splatters his face on a tree because he didn't wear his seatbelt. Therefore, it is illegal to drive without using your seatbelt.

                  It is legal to lie to my mother but it is unethical. Why is this? Because laws do not and should not codify what is ethical. You cannot enforce morality. As the poster to which you respond accurately stated, laws reflect what is necessary to keep society from falling apart.

                  We can all lie to our mothers incessantly and have a functioning society, even though lying is unethical. If we all drove around without seatbelts, which certainly is not unethical, we would quickly send our emergency care services into chaos, therefore seat belt use is mandated by law.

                  Anyway, any Philosophy 101 course will give the very same argument, and it will very likely use the examples of lying to your mother and wearing a seatbelt.

        • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by Rasta Prefect ( 250915 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:04PM (#10039402)
          Doesn't matter. Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy,

          It most certainly does in this case.

          Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.

          And again, it does in this case. Intellectual property rights are completely artificial constructs created for the purpose of providing economic benefit. From the US Constitution: "To promote the Progress of Science and useful Arts, by securing for limited Times to Authors and Inventors the exclusive Right to their respective Writings and Discoveries". Copyright is a totally artificial construct designed to promote creative work by creating a government-imposed limited monopoly. It's not even enshrined as a "The government shall not" it's a congress can if they want to. This isn't murder or theft or restriction of free speach we're talking about here, we're talking about violation of temporary monopoly granted for the public good. The entire point is to provide an economic benefit so that creators will create. If a use does not affect that incentive, then it shouldn't be considered "wrong". The MPAA/RIAA has done it's best to confuse copyright with being an actual, natural right on the level of free speech or life and liberty. Apparently it's working.

          • Re:Well... (Score:4, Interesting)

            by cdrguru ( 88047 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @07:35PM (#10040514) Homepage
            The issue isn't whether one user downloading one movie or song decimates the revenue of a large corporation.

            The issue is we are in danger of reaching a point like we did around 1982 where virtually nobody purchased software for the Apple ][ any longer - they just copied it. It was commonly believed by people in the software industry that any new game would sell two copies - one on the east coast and one on the west coast and everyone would then get copies from the myriad BBS systems. Needless to say, nobody was much interested in producing new games (or anything else) for the Apple ][. Console games (cartridges - much harder to copy) were the thing then, until the PC Jr. failed and triggered another mini-crash.

            Downloading software from a BBS in 1982 was difficult and time consuming. Downloading a song on the Internet is quick and painless. Downloading a movie is still not quick and painless for most of the Internet users, but it could get to be there.

            Where are we when the artists and music producers reach the conclusion that making a CD just isn't worthwhile anymore and that $100 concert tickets are the only way to go. Paid appearances. Sponsorships like Brittny Spears with Pepsi?. Make the music "scarce" again and keep it out of the hands of the "common people" so it is worth something again.

            That is already happening in China with like a 98% piracy rate. How long until it happens here if things continue as they are?

            • Well prior to the whole Napster thing I was buying 10-15 cds a year. Since then, I've bought or been given 5 cds. I'll admit that my interest in the RIAA's music has waned somewhat, but the drop is basically out of spite. I own four DVD movies. Two were gifts, one I requested as a gift, and one is independent (plug [bitterfilms.com]) so it doesn't count. Also spite.
        • Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

          by celeritas_2 ( 750289 )
          I don't much care for laws, what is right and wrong takes precidence over what is legal or not in my dealings, and my previous post reflects that belief.

          First off, in my mind, economics is the one and only thing to consider in this matter. I cannot think of any other reason than money for media-producers to care who can view their product. Do they object to me downloading Finding Nemo and watching it becuase they don't like me? No, they object because they're not getting paid. The question is are media co

        • Re:Well... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by NanoGator ( 522640 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:30PM (#10039509) Homepage Journal
          "If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right. I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holders."

          Perhaps not. However, the problem with movie piracy (on the net, I'm not referring to selling $1 DVD copies of screeners...) to the MPAA is that it levels the playing field to be more fair towards the consumer. They have a business model I refer to as "open your mouth and close your eyes". You cannot get your money back if you're disatisfied unlike just about anything else you can buy. As such, movie makers can get away with sup-par movies and recieve money even though the consumer did not get the satisfaction he or she was paying for.

          You're probably thinking I'm trying to justify downloading of movies. Frankly, it's not something I do. I have a substantial DVD collection but my computers only have a couple of rips I've downloaded. They are of movies I already have. I'm an artist. I make content for a living. I'm working on a movie right now. I don't want to lose my job because the movie wasn't successful, even if the blame could land squarely on piracy. However, there's something I have to think about: Content making is an art form, but it is also a business. We all paid to go see Matrix. We all paid to go see Star Wars, despite all the grumbling we did about it. If the movie I'm working on didn't generate the interest for people to run out and go see it, I can't say that piracy was the issue. The issue was that we did something wrong. Maybe the movie sucked, maybe we didn't market it well, maybe we asked too much for it. Yeah, maybe the result is a bunch of individuals did something wrong, that doesn't mean that we didn't either.

          So what do I do? I have confidence it'll be a good movie. We're all working to make it that way. It's effort that is MUCH better spent than running ads to guilt people into paying for it. I want to make money from this, but I don't want to do it and leave people saying "man, what a rip-off."/i.
        • Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

          I do not have the right to have in my posession a reporduction of that right because I don't agree with the authors/copyright holder

          Actually, you do, provided you acquired it legally. Copyright law doesn't exist to guarantee anybody any specific method of making money from their creative works, it only exists to provide an opportunity. Historically, that opportunity to make money from creative works was by charging for distribution. But copyright law doesn't say "distribution".

          Furthermore, copyright l

        • Hmmm (Score:3, Informative)

          by tkrotchko ( 124118 ) *
          "Deciding if something is wrong or right should not depend on how it effects the economy"

          Isn't the whole justification for copyrights that its good for the economy?
        • Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

          by DonGar ( 204570 )

          Do those thieving, monopolizing, overcharging bastards deserve so much of our money?


          Again, doesn't matter. If they own the rights, they can do whatever they want as long as they are not violating other laws.


          Ah, but the problem is that the definition of those rights keeps changing. And not for the benifit of all parties involved. Copyright law in the US was intended to grant a temporary monopoly over an artists creations in order to give the artist an incentive to create. This seems fair and just to me

        • Re:Well... (Score:3, Insightful)

          by Eivind ( 15695 )
          Relevant! I'm a firm believer that if someone creates a work of art they should be able to charge whatever they want to people who want a reproduction or to view/listen to that art. Now art is defined pretty loosely here, especially considering some of the stuff that hits the theatres. If I don't want to pay $x to see a movie or purchase a CD, then I have that right.

          Fine. But it's not quite that simple. Many people say, like you, that the creators gets control. An interesting question is, how much contro

    • by celeritas_2 ( 750289 ) <ranmyaku@gmail.com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:36PM (#10039267)
      Someone should start a company that does independant verification of such studies and statistics. It could be payed for with a flat rate for everybody who wants to certify the clear-and-accurateness of their study and be rated with gold stars on the company's report card. Sort of like what the BBB does but just to clear up all of this Microsoft, (R&M)PAA, SCO, etc. 'independant study' business can be somewhat legitimized.
  • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:49PM (#10039021)
    They must've gone to the RIAA School of Math [theregister.co.uk].
  • by pvt_medic ( 715692 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:50PM (#10039026)
    People wo think that statistics are the straight truth are idiots. This is just a further example of how one can easily manipulate numbers to prove a point. Simpel you take the number of downloaded movies, and divide by the number of people online, and you could create a stat that justifies this claim, or just look at subsection like china and be like everyone has pirated software on thier computer so therefore everyone must be pirating worldwide.
  • OK, And? (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:51PM (#10039031)
    So what if one in four internet users has downloaded a movie? They're posting record profits, why are they complaining? Seriously!



    Somebody needs to slap them around and make them quit bitching.

    • But, but... (Score:5, Funny)

      by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:52PM (#10039043)
      Catwoman was a flop! It must be those darn internet pirates!
      • Re:But, but... (Score:5, Interesting)

        by CountBrass ( 590228 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:17PM (#10039174)

        Well to be fair, I bought a pirate copy of Catwoman in Hong Kong: my wife and watched and stopped half way through. What a pile of shit!

        We would have gone and wasted our cash seeing it in the cinema (and walking out half way through) so in a sense piracy did cost the picture makers. But it saved us from wasting our time on some shit.

        "I, Robot" now is the exact opposite. Having heard rumours etc about it we weren't going to see it. Having watched it and thoroughly enjoyed it on the pirate copy, again bought openly in a Hong Kong street market, we're planning to see it in the cinema. In that case piracy has had actually made the film maker's money!

        • Re:But, but... (Score:5, Insightful)

          by aussersterne ( 212916 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @05:03PM (#10039635) Homepage
          The point being what so many Slashdot posters have said before:

          People hate buying shit.

          People love buying things they enjoy, because they want to see more of them made.

          Or, to put it another way, consumers aren't stupid, they understand the power of their own dollars. People are just as smart as (if not smarter than) the RIAA/MPAA bosses: they won't waste their cash until they know their cash won't be wasted.

          Solution to the problem: create a product that people WANT TO SUPPORT and that people WANT MORE OF and it will sell well FOR THOSE REASONS.

          Anything else is just attempted blackmail and theft from consumers' pockets.
          • Re:But, but... (Score:3, Insightful)

            by Facekhan ( 445017 )
            Perhaps movie studios should in addition to the previews which especially with the bad movies, tend to show the 5 minutes of good stuff only. Why not let people download say the first 15 minutes of a movie for free and then people can decide whether they want to pay to see the rest of it.
    • Re:OK, And? (Score:5, Insightful)

      by Richard_at_work ( 517087 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:27PM (#10039215)
      A bank can post record profits, but fraud against that bank is still wrong.
      • Re:OK, And? (Score:3, Insightful)

        by Anonymous Coward
        Fraud against a bank involves an actual loss of money. Copyright infringement doesn't necessarily.
    • I admit it. (Score:4, Funny)

      by 3dr ( 169908 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:31PM (#10039237)

      I was the one. I downloaded a movie from the internet.

      It was a harried time, and temptation was great. In a weak moment, I succumbed.

      I downloaded Michael Moore's "Farenheit 9/11".
    • I call BS (Score:3, Interesting)

      by grolschie ( 610666 )
      Connection speed:
      I think at least one in four internet users use dial-up. At least. So to download a movie would take at least 50 hours on a good connection.

      Demographics
      So one in four is using Kazaa, BitTorrent, or similar, and knows about divx/xvid codecs, etc? Grandma on jetstream? It appears that a larger proportion of users don't even know not to open dodgy email attachments, or how to patch their OS, let alone find, download and play a movie.
  • by iBran ( 763687 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:51PM (#10039034)
    You don't trust sponsored "research", period.
    • by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:05PM (#10039110)
      Sponsored research is not automatically bad.... there are a number of areas where interest is not widespread beyond the industry players in that industry, so they are the only ones who will foot the bill.

      Plus, there can be biased research that is not funded by insiders.... that simply is not a way to distinguish the good from the bad.

      What is really proper, is to demand that all surveys 1) release the entire raw data set, 2) release the entire question sample, and 3) all other information so it can be replicated and peer reviewed.

      This is standard fare in other industries, and most legitimate survey takers already do it.

      The better test to detect bogus research, is not to ask who paid for it, but to ask if they are complying with the above criteria.
      • Sponsored research is not automatically bad.... there are a number of areas where interest is not widespread beyond the industry players in that industry, so they are the only ones who will foot the bill.

        Sure, sort of like the IT industry, where the only *studies* done are done at the behest of the ITAA. Surprisingly, every study *released* says exactly what the industry wants Congress to hear. These are the same studies that claimed the US faced a huge shortage of IT workers while they were being laid

    • by SpaceLifeForm ( 228190 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:10PM (#10039143)
      Apparently true for some courts.

      From here: [internetnews.com]

      Upholding a lower court decision issued in April of 2003, the U.S. 9th Circuit Court of Appeals ruled P2P technology is legal even if the software itself is used for illegal purposes.

      "The technology has numerous other uses, significantly reducing the distribution costs of public domain and permissively shared art and speech, as well as reducing the centralized control of that distribution," Judge Sidney R. Thomas wrote in a unanimous opinion.

      The three-judge panel acknowledged that copyright violations do occur on the decentralized P2P networks, but the companies owning and distributing the enabling software cannot be held liable for the infringements.

    • You don't trust sponsored "research", period.

      I agree with another response to your post. Someone has to pay for research, and sometimes an impartial study just isn't feasible because impartial people have no stake or interest in the outcome.

      For instance, I'm personally in a group that has a particular interest in reducing the amount of light pollution that's produced by populated areas. There's little or no existing interest outside of our own group. About the only way we'd be able to get th

  • public domain movies (Score:5, Informative)

    by Anonymous Coward on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:51PM (#10039037)
    http://www.archive.org/movies/collection.php?colle ction=feature_films
  • "Stop" trusting? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Chmcginn ( 201645 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:52PM (#10039041) Journal
    That assumes we ever trusted it to begin with...

    Okay, seriously, for the slightly less-paranoid... It's always a good idea to find out, at the very least,

    a.)Who payed for the research

    b.)Who they work for/own stock in/represent/want you to vote for.

    While most of the time, a research group is not going to make up numbers out of whole cloth, writing the questions in a way that could influence the result is bound to happen most of the time.

    • by FunWithHeadlines ( 644929 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:09PM (#10039138) Homepage
      People in general love to think in general while avoiding the specifics. For example, everyone will agree that "nobody's perfect," but if you point out a specific mistake they made they get all defensive on you. Same thing with these misleading research studies. Everyone has at least a dim understanding that statistics can lie, but every time a shiny new study comes out they think, "Ooooh, shiny!"

      I blame the media more than the education system. Yes, it would be nice if we could get people to get out of the school system with the ability to cut through rhetoric better than they do, but let's fully blame the media here. Just as on /. we have all come to realize how often studies are distorted by sponsorship money, journalists must know this too. They have been exposed to too many examples of this not to know to check for who sponsored the study, etc. So why don't the news articles point out the flaws in the studies? If they did that, people reading them would be fortified in their knowledge.

      Of course, I can think of several reasons why journalists don't do this most of the time: Lack of time before deadline to do the research / laziness / the need to keep the sponsors of those studies happy so that they will cooperate with the journalists next time, and so on. Still, it is disheartening.

    • by EpsCylonB ( 307640 ) <eps@ep[ ]lonb.com ['scy' in gap]> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:13PM (#10039159) Homepage
      Put more simply...

      "wheres the money ?"

      this question will help you solve most of the problems you come across in life.
    • Re:"Stop" trusting? (Score:5, Interesting)

      by maxpublic ( 450413 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:20PM (#10039185) Homepage
      Let's not forget:

      c) what personal agenda they may or may not be pushing.

      Here's an example of c) in action. Back in the '80's a group of scientists used a very in-depth, well-funded study to 'prove' that women in their 20's had healthier babies than women in their teens, and therefore teen pregnancy was a Bad Thing(TM). Not for any 'moral' reason, mind you, but because it was clear that becoming pregnant as a teenager put your child at unnecessary risk, when you could wait until your 20's and avoid that risk.

      This research was so well-received by both the left and the right that it held for nearly two decades without being disputed. In fact, it wasn't disproven until last year.

      You see, it turns out that the researchers in this case had a strong interest in proving that teen pregnancy was a bad thing, because they personally thought that teen girls having sex was morally reprehensible. In order to cook their results they decided not to control for one very important factor: pre-natal care. That's right, they deliberately did not control for pre-natal care. It's a well-known fact that women in their twenties are far more likely to plan their pregnancies than women in their teens, and so tend to have much better pre-natal care, so this action wasn't accidental but deliberate.

      What happens when you control for pre-natal care? What happens is that you piss off a lot of morally conservative people, because controlling for pre-natal care shows that the healthiest babies in the world are born to women between the ages of *13 and 17*. Not exactly something you want to advertise if you're one of the folks screaming about the 'evils' of teen sex.

      Needless to say the study was blasted. Not the science of it, which was solid, but on 'moral' grounds, with people claiming it should never have been done in the first place.

      So you not only have to ask "who paid for the research" and "who do the researchers work for", but also "do they have a personal agenda they're trying to foist on others using pseudo-science"?

      Max
      • by Feztaa ( 633745 )
        Wow, that's a great story. Do you happen to have any references?
        • Re:"Stop" trusting? (Score:5, Informative)

          by maxpublic ( 450413 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:43PM (#10039564) Homepage
          Actually yes. Unfortunately it isn't the original study, but a second which was done later during the same year. I cannot find a copy of the original study online.

          The second study was published in the August 1, 2001 edition of the American Journal of Epidemiology. The primary scientist of record is Dr. Ralitza V. Gueorguieva from Yale University.

          Here's an excerpt from the summary of this study, reported in an August 8, 2001 Yahoo news article:

          "The report notes that while children of teen moms are significantly more likely to have educational disabilities overall, they are no more likely to have problems when the mother's education, marital status, income and race are taken into account.

          In fact, these youngsters may be less likely to have physical handicaps and academic problems than children of older moms, the researchers report.

          ``Children of teenage mothers are at higher risk for disabilities in kindergarten, but this increased risk appears to be due not to a biological effect of the young age of the mother per se, but to the confounding influences of associated sociodemographic and/or environmental factors,'' according to Dr. Ralitza V. Gueorguieva from Yale University in New Haven, Connecticut, and colleagues.

          To investigate whether young maternal age increased the risk of academic difficulties, the investigators examined the school records of more than 339,000 children who entered a kindergarten class in Florida between 1992 and 1994.

          Children of teenage mothers were significantly more likely to have lower IQ scores and more academic problems, the report indicates. But when social and economic factors were accounted for, teenage motherhood appeared to be protective in certain ways.

          For instance, children of mothers aged 11 to 17 had a significantly lower risk of academic problems and children of 18- and 19-year-old mothers also had a lower risk of learning disabilities. On the other hand, children whose mothers were age 36 or older were more likely to be physically impaired or have academic problems, when social and environmental factors were considered.

          According to the report, a mother's education had the greatest impact on a child's educational achievement. A mother's marital status, income and race also influenced the child's academic abilities.

          ``There is some evidence that a large number of children of teenage mothers show disabilities or academic problems not because of the effect of having a teenage mother per se but because of the confounding influences of other factors,'' Gueorguieva and colleagues write."

          Why do I call this the second study, supporting the first (which I can't find online)? Because:

          "The findings support previous research suggesting that some of the negative consequences of teen motherhood may be mediated by social and economic factors."

          The study here doesn't specifically address pre-natal care, whereas the original did. The authors of the original study had some trouble trying to account for a lack of control over prenatal care in the '80's study they disputed when it's been well known since the early 70's that prenatal care is one of THE most important factors in determining the health of a baby. You just don't 'forget' to account for prenatal care.

          Don't believe me? Type in "prenatal care" and "teen pregnancy" into Yahoo or Google and watch the web sites and papers pop up, all telling you just how vital prenatal care is and how critical it is to the health of your baby. A scientist doing research on the subject is about as likely to 'overlook' prenatal care as a mechanic looking to solve car trouble is going to miss the fact that the car has four flats.

          I wish I could find a link to the original study I was speaking of, but I can't, at least not in the 15 or so minutes I spent searching. I did find this, however, and this study was done just months after the one I was speaking of (which is why they refer to the study in their summary).

          Max
          • Re:"Stop" trusting? (Score:3, Interesting)

            by Reziac ( 43301 )
            Good points about data being ignored if it doesn't fit the agenda. I'd guess that they also failed to control for substance abuse that can impact the fetus -- which is likely far higher among pregnant teens than among pregnant adults (if only because rebellious teens do such things, often without a thought for tomorrow).

            Back to the nominal topic -- recently I received a survey from a normally-reputable consumer survey company (I've been doing their surveys for 27+ years, so I'm very familiar with them) whi
  • by Aheinz1 ( 532062 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:52PM (#10039042)
    The MPAA did say "According to British intelligence..." before citing that statistic.
  • Who else to trust? (Score:5, Insightful)

    by glpierce ( 731733 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:52PM (#10039044)
    If you're not going to trust 'sponsored' research, you've got no one to trust. All research is funded by someone, and that someone always has something to gain or lose (why else pay for it?). Who would pay for studies of internet movie downloading, aside from movie studios and internet corporations? What's important is to look at the studies from the opposing sides so that you can draw a line down the middle or test each against each other.
    • by BlueCup ( 753410 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:01PM (#10039096) Homepage Journal
      I've gotta disagree with you... there are I believe some organizations that aren't swayed by their fundings... I worked at the Gallup Organization [gallup.com] for several years, and we spent hundreds of thousands of dollars every year paying people to make sure our questions were free from bias... yes, there is always the risk of the people delivering the survey having a bias, but, they're typically weeded out before they can make a difference, and they cancel each other out (people delivering opposite biases) Surveys paid for by "Bank of America" to find out who the best bank is are much more likely to be biased than surveys payed for by CNN to find out which bank is the best... sometimes all a particular party has to gain from is presenting the most accurate statistics, and sometimes the most to gain comes from lying... I see nothing wrong with paying close attention to who's paying for the survey, and deciding based on those factors, what they have to gain or lose...
      • by chimpo13 ( 471212 )
        I've taken part in plenty of consumer surveys. It's a quick way to earn some cash. If I answer truthfully I'm usually not chosen. I think lying goes into both sides. You say Gallup weeds out questions to make them unbiased, and the 20+ surveys I've taken work that way, but the people taking the surveys are chosen according to sponsors.

        One examples: "We'll offer you $60 to show up and take the 45 minute survey. What radion stations do you listen to?" If I answer KDVS [kdvs.org], the local college station they say
  • by jsprat ( 442568 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:53PM (#10039049)
    I recently saw an old copy of Popular Mechanics from around 1950 (or so). The back page was an ad that said "4 out of 5 doctors who smoke smoke Winston".

    Wow, after research like that, I'd better take up smoking Winstons!

    • And 4 out of 5 doctors with boat payments recommend unnecessary surgery!

      Tim
  • Movie Quality (Score:4, Insightful)

    by Bruha ( 412869 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:54PM (#10039058) Homepage Journal
    For the average person the time to download a movie in the US on our abysmal brodband lines you could probably make up the cost of the movie by just being at work.

    Along with half movies, bogus titles, viruses, poor quality, people that let you download and kill it after a few minutes it's just not worth it.

    Mp3's were popular to download even on dialup because it took minutes to download vs hours or even days to obtain a movie.

    As SBC and Verizon deploy FTTH/P then you'll see the rehtoric cranked up as it would then take a 15Mbit line a few minutes to get a whole movie.

    Even so, the MPAA needs to get a clue. I can count more than 20 movies this year I have gone to see that I considered afterwards good enough for video. With the exception of the Last Samurai, iRobot, and a few others I feel ripped off. They need to quit previewing all the good parts in the movies and begin to come up with quality work.
  • Errors (Score:5, Funny)

    by GISGEOLOGYGEEK ( 708023 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:54PM (#10039059)
    In a somewhat fitting coincidence ...

    When I followed one of the links that advertises the survey results, the page loaded with javascript errors ... but of course I saw in the status bar:

    "done ... but with errors in the page"

    I didn't realize that the IE javascript engine could also filter for misleading biased survey scams.
  • I would think... (Score:4, Interesting)

    by GillBates0 ( 664202 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:54PM (#10039061) Homepage Journal
    The MPAA's summary of the survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.

    claims like this would work against them. They should be trying to convince the public that they're only against this "band" of pirates which is trying to harm the innocent population and ofcourse CHILDREN by their misdeeds.

    By claiming that 1 in 4 internet users have committed a "crime", they'll (hopefully) make the Avg Joe realize that the "filthy" pirates are actually the next door Avg Smith or even the beautiful chick across the street being chased down and convicted in court.

  • by ayeco ( 301053 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:55PM (#10039067)
    About 41% of all statistics are made up.
  • 1 in 4 (Score:4, Insightful)

    by LS ( 57954 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:56PM (#10039071) Homepage
    Perhaps they are referring to video files in general. I could believe the statistic in that case. Still misrepresentation though...
  • by almostmanda ( 774265 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @02:57PM (#10039075)
    In order to stay "qualified" for these surveys and, in the end, get paid, many users will answer "yes" to every question that may lead to more questions. Internet surveys CAN be useful for market research purposes, but only when the respondents are confident that their answers won't effect their compensation rate.
    If a survey will pay you $10 if you're a beekeeper and answer beekeeping questions, many people will claim to be beekeepers. Who's stopping them?
  • MPAA math (Score:5, Funny)

    by Saeger ( 456549 ) <(farrellj) (at) (gmail.com)> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:01PM (#10039095) Homepage
    'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.'

    Maybe the MPAA is trying RIAA-style FUD-math?

    They didn't really mean that 1 in 4 people had downloaded a 700MB divx/xvid movie, but that since more users have broadband now, these "super-users" can rightly be counted as 24X normal users. :)

    --

  • skewed (Score:5, Insightful)

    by randallschleufer ( 807425 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:02PM (#10039101)
    Surveys can easily be skewed, you just have to know how to ask the questions. If I asked my mother if she has ever downloaded a movie off the internet, she would respond "Yes"... because she considers all those little movieclips, and streaming media to be "Movies". In that respect, it would be very easy to conceive that 1 in 4 people have downloaded a movie off the internet.
  • by MrDomino ( 799876 ) <mrdomino@gma i l . com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:03PM (#10039103) Homepage
    You mean to tell me that if a study on movie piracy is paid for by the people who lose money from movie piracy, it's not going to be unbiased?

    Yeah, right. Next, you'll be telling me that classes on copyright law sponsored by the RIAA are one-sided.
  • by Cryofan ( 194126 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:08PM (#10039132) Journal
    I assume that everyone knows that the MPAA and movie studios are planning on starting to sue movie uploaders/downloaders starting in about 1 month (they were on 60 minutes a few days ago with a lot of propaganda).

    All we have to do to stop these lawsuits by the RIAA is organize to protest the lawsuits. Unlike the music business, much of the movie business is vulnerable to protests and grassroots activism. THis is because a lot of the money from movies is derived from box office receipts at the multiplex cinemas, which pack in thousands of people each day. Thus, their main revenue source is quite concentrated. A few well-placed protest signs will lose them money every day. Typically, these multiplexes are on a freeway offramp. Two or three good signs placed strategically with a good message will cost them money.

    See the freeway blogger at http://www.freewayblogger.com [freewayblogger.com] for more ideas on this technique....
    • Why should the MPAA refrain from suing Movie uploaders? I really dont see the problem with them protecting their investment and property.

      Oh, Ok I forget, this is slashdot. Its OK to infringe on the RIAAs or the MPAAs copyright, but theres hell to pay for people infringing the copyright of software under the GPL.
  • i like the stat (Score:5, Interesting)

    by protocol420 ( 758109 ) <protokolNO@SPAMgmail.com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:10PM (#10039147) Homepage Journal
    hey, if 1 in 4 people have illegally downloaded music, thats a nice voting demographic for some politician. i should run on a pro-p2p pro-tech platform. who's with me!
    • Re:i like the stat (Score:3, Interesting)

      by Xofer D ( 29055 )
      On the one hand, you're right of course. This should be a huge motivation for political change! When the people don't approve of a law, shouldn't that law be considered for the scrap heap?

      On the other hand, you're assuming that the USA is a democracy, which it isn't; decisions are not made to please the majority of the population. To see this, consider speed limits (which far more than 50% of the US population that I have observed do not follow). When the way in which your country is being governed does no

  • by lifebouy ( 115193 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:26PM (#10039211) Journal
    Way back in the good ol days, Congress decided Americans didn't need to drink alcohol anymore and forbade it. Actually changed the Constitution! Did that stop it from happening? No. Eventually, they amended the Constitution again to repeal their stupidity. The American people had spoken. They were going to have their booze no matter what the govornment decided was best for them.
    Now, we have a similar situation. The People either do not care about patent and/or copyright violations, or are actively against them. The only people who advocate our current patent and copyright catastrophies are those trying to make a quick buck. (I throw both patents and copyrights out there, because those running linux kernels right now who read slashdot know there are patent violations in the kernel, yet are using it anyway, and I'd say 99% of us will continue to do so until they pry the keyboards from our cold dead fingers, no matter who thinks they own it. And for copyrights, go ahead and delete all that porn on your harddrives, because odds are very good you do not own the rights to have it. No? Didn't think so. Same goes for most music, ebooks, whatever.)
    The point is, the People have spoken on this issue. They have said, "Copyrights and patents have the sole purpose of protecting the little guy from the big guy. Not the big guy from the next big guy and not the big guy from the little guy. It's purpose is not to help big companies enforce a monopoly on consumers."
    Any politician who advocates persecution of fileswapping or using patents by the people(that's the purpose of having a patent system at all) does not deserve his office. Don't vote for them. Because they are not listening to what the People are saying.
    • by Infonaut ( 96956 ) <infonaut@gmail.com> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:28PM (#10039498) Homepage Journal
      The thrust of your comment seems to be that nobody on the side of "The People" could in all good conscience advocate adherence to current patent and copyright laws. I'm strongly on the side of intellectual property reform, but there are many reasons why reasonable people disagree about intellectual property laws.

      For example, I have written the Representative and Senators who represent me in Congress, advocating for a reform of intellectual property laws so that big companies like Disney can't steamroll anyone who attempts to impose a more rational system. But I also happen to live in California, where a huge slice of the population makes its living off of intellectual property in one way or another. The movie, music, and computer industries all depend on intellectual property for their survival.

      The reaction from my representatives in Congress has been a fairly uniform, "We want to respond to new technologies in a way that allows for innovation but respects intellectual property laws." Basically they are concerned that if IP laws are messed with, the bread and butter for their constituents will vanish. It's about them wanting to stay in office, but it's also about them looking out for the economic interests of California.

      You can say what you want about people wanting to make a quick buck, but as a small business owner I can categorically say that business is very difficult. It's never easy, and there is always someone ready to take over your market and eat your lunch if you're not careful. That's the nature of free enterprise. When you're in business, you seek every legal advantage you can get, because if you don't, you might not survive. Copyrights and patents do not "have the sole purpose of protecting the little guy from the big guy," or "the big guy from the little guy." They are intended to encourage innovation and spur the economy, while providing for long-term benefits to society.

      It seems to me that the goal of all who would like to see the current imbalances in copyright and patent law redressed should be to show Congress and the people at large how current laws favor powerful, entrenched, and (this is vitally important) non-innovative players in the market. We need to show how if we do not change our IP laws, we will collectively be at an economic disadvantage because we have squelched innovation.

      If you want to take on big, vested interests, you need to beat them at their own game. You need to show legislators and regular people (I get nervous any time anyone uses the term "The People" because it implies that in a country as large and diverse as the United States somehow there are only two camps - the forces of Evil, and The People) that it makes economic sense to reform intellectual property laws.

      p.s. - "Back in the good 'ol days" (1920), the Prohibition Act came into being after more than 27 years [ohio-state.edu] of concerted grassroots political effort. Congress didn't just up and decide to enact Prohibition.

      • by maxpublic ( 450413 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:58PM (#10039616) Homepage
        Back in the good 'ol days" (1920), the Prohibition Act came into being after more than 27 years of concerted grassroots political effort. Congress didn't just up and decide to enact Prohibition.

        And it proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that grass roots activism can be just as fucked in the head as bought-and-paid-for lawmaking.

        Max
  • by mesmartyoudumb ( 471890 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:30PM (#10039232)
    97.35124% of all statistics are made up, including this one.

    On a serious note, 49% of Americans use dial-up. Do you think they'd even consider downloading a movie?

    I say we all "sponsor a dial-up user", for ever movie they don't download, we download 2!

    • Re:Statistics.. (Score:3, Insightful)

      by PitaBred ( 632671 )
      49% of Americans, or 49% of American Internet users? It's a big, big difference ;)
      Same kinda thing we're yelling at the MPAA/RIAA/whoever about.
  • by foobsr ( 693224 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:31PM (#10039238) Homepage Journal
    The Register has (had) it [theregister.co.uk].

    CC.
  • by thephotoman ( 791574 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:34PM (#10039250) Journal
    Well, in some fields, especially science, sponsored research is frequently the only research we can get. However, marketing research should usually be taken with a grain of salt. Same thing goes with usage/common practice research when people are wanting to hunt down everybody participating in a certain action, such as downloading movies.

    But 1 in 4 internet users download movies? Are we counting freely-distributed porn films or not? If so, that number is a lot higher. If not, it's a really low number.
  • by micron ( 164661 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:35PM (#10039254)
    I really enjoyed the idea that the MPAA took this survey as 25% of all internet users download movies. As the article points out, it never dawned on them that you can LEGALLY download movies all over the place. Given, these are not your Hollywood blockbusters, but they are still movies that are being downloaded.
    • More to the point (Score:3, Interesting)

      by tkrotchko ( 124118 ) *
      you can go to the Apple site and download trailers from upcoming big-time movie releases. My daughter does this all the time to see if a movie will be worth going to see.

      Depending on the way they ask the question, this might have gotten her lumped in with people downloading movies, because she did technically download part of a movie.

      The thing was that it was (a) Not the whole movie (b) entirely legal.

      Now lets say 10% of all teens do this...Might that inflate the stats just a bit?
  • by Hypharse ( 633766 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:35PM (#10039257)
    "When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?"
    The second it became sponsored by someone out for a profit and not for the knowledge. The MPAA is sure not winning fans and have learned from the RIAA the art of looking in the wrong direction. LOTR dvd sales alone are probably enough for a profit and everyone knows the incredible amounts of money it made at the box office. Then you realize that typically LOTR fans are geeks, and tend to be the ones that WOULD download a movie on the internet. This should lead to the conclusion that piracy doesn't mean much even if it IS as prevalent as they want you to think (even though it isn't). And what the hell is with the ads AT the movie theaters telling the people who BOUGHT A FREAKING TICKET TO THE MOVIE that it's wrong to pirate.

    Instead what they like to do is include the stats for the amount of geeks downloading LOTR, then combine it with the box office busts like Catwoman and say "See! People aren't seeing movies because they can just download it." They conveniently forget the fact that watching your cat lick herself while taking a piss in the litter box is more entertaining than watching Catwoman. Hopefully someone in congress will wise up to the RIAA and MPAA games and give them a swift kick in the caboose.

  • by Anita Coney ( 648748 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @03:44PM (#10039299) Homepage
    The press and sponsored researchers have a symbiotic relationship. The press avoids printing the truth, because the truth is generally boring. That's why the press loves "studies" that tend to show something unbelievable, e.g., 1 in 4 internet users have downloaded a movie.

    And it goes without saying that sponsored researchers exist solely to issue press releases.

    As long as there is a press, there will be sponsored research, and vice versa.

  • by mabu ( 178417 ) * on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:18PM (#10039453)
    In-a-nutshell, the last 10-15 years has shown a trend in advertisers and corporate interests to be more and more bold about asserting hyperbole as fact.

    This is most obvious when you watch tv commercials. Ten or more years ago, a "dramatization" would more accurately reflect reality: a cleaning solution or drug visually-demonstrated to eradicate dirt or infection would always leave a few traces behind in the animation. Now, every demonstration of every product shows 100% success. Just yesterday I saw a commercial during the Olympics showing an American pickup truck towing a tractor trailer loaded with a half-dozen vehicles. Completely ludicrous and impossible, but they get away with it with a fleeing "dramatization" tag, knowing full well most peoples' attention spans skip over the fine print. And speaking of fine print, they slap the tiniest disclaimers on advertisements for the shortest periods of time - virtually impossible to read. Who enforces this stuff and why aren't they doing their job?

    Nobody seems to care so corporations become more and more cavalier and bold about misrepresenting reality and misleading the populace.

    Advertising has always been the art of lying, but in this new dawn of consumerism, corporate interests have the mantra that they don't have to spew anything that's accurate, factual or close to reality if they have the power and resources to repeat their misleading message in perpetuity - that act in itself, according to them, affirms the integrity of their claims. See: GW Bush, MPAA, RIA, SCO, etc.

    Now maybe at some point we'll reach critical mass with this BS, and the public will begin to trust nobody? Perhaps in another ten years substance and truth will be popular again? Who knows.

    I suggest rather than spit into the wind of corporate america by trying to refute the never-ending stream of inaccurate propaganda, we jump on the bandwagon and hasten the eventual flashpoint of total media & corporate cynacism.

    Everyone here should come up with at least one completely ridiculous "fact" or "figure" and do their best to propagate it. Maybe if enough of us pee into the already polluted river of corporate communication we can get the public to begin to seek more pure sources?
  • by Facekhan ( 445017 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:27PM (#10039490)
    Lets say that this Twinkie represents the normal amount of junk research, junk science, and FUD produced by special interest groups and picked up by the media. Judging from this morning's sample it would be a Twinkie thirty-five feet long, weighing approximately six hundred pounds.
  • Missing the Point (Score:3, Insightful)

    by AdrianG ( 57465 ) <adrian@nerds.org> on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:32PM (#10039516) Homepage

    The remark about "trusting sponsored 'research'" misses the point. Real scientists use good methodology to help them keep their bias from influencing the outcome of research. The problem which often comes up in research that is funded to prove a point is that the methodology is bad, and anyone with a good science background should be pointing out that methodology is what matters.

    Of course there is some chance that researchers who are out to prove a specific position might fabricate data, but I don't think this is the biggest part of the problem surrounding biased research.

    Bias and reputation of the researchers and sponsors are grounds for suspicion; But, to really impeach a study, you must either demonstrate that the methodology is bad or that the data are fabricated. Science is not a popularity contest.

    The article does talk about the problems with the methods used in the study, but the SlashDot quote referencing the article seems to be about the fact that the research is "sponsored" by a bad company. In science, it takes more than that to show a study to be unsound.

    Adrian

  • by pjdepasq ( 214609 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:37PM (#10039538)

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    When I started doing it.

    Actually, as I started my Ph.D., someone I knew completed his. At the party we held after his defense, he said something that has stuck with me:

    I can't help but keep thinking two things:
    • I have a low opinion of research, and
    • I can't believe they bought this crap (as in signed off on his dissertation).
    True story.
  • by dJCL ( 183345 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @04:59PM (#10039618) Homepage
    I pay for my movies, my friends pay for their movies, we see dozens of them each year. We all have huge, non-copied, DVD and VHS collections, usually purchased first hand.

    Yet, when I walk into the movie theater tonight(leaving in about 10min here), I will see, amonth the previews, a commercial asking me to stop movie piracy! I'm being told to stop stealing movies after I paid $9(plus a ~500% markup on the food) to see one!

    That's just stupid and insulting. I don't pay to go get insulted... therefore it makes me just want to hop online and watch the movie without the insults.

    Anyway...
  • by BCW2 ( 168187 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @05:38PM (#10039800) Journal
    If we were told who the sponsor of any poll is, I bet the majority on /. could give the results within 5 points.

    Before a single question was asked!
  • by bagofbeans ( 567926 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @06:03PM (#10039950)
    If you read the Yahoo page at http://yahoo.pcworld.com/yahoo/article/0,aid,11579 3,00.asp [pcworld.com] then you will see the statistic is "The research reveals 37 percent of 18- to 24-year-olds have downloaded a full-length motion picture from the Internet."

    Also "24 percent of respondents reported that they had downloaded a movie online".

    The 24% includes perfectly free-to-download stuff shorts like http://pocketmovies.net/ [pocketmovies.net] and http://www.archive.org/movies/prelinger.php [archive.org]

    The 37%, being 'full length' is presumably meant to imply Hollywood releases, but can still include public domain stuff like the Prelinger material linked above, which includes full length movies.

    It does piss me off that the MPA tries to associate every movie download as being of their copyrighted property; that's not so.
  • by Lord Bitman ( 95493 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @06:18PM (#10040015)
    wouldnt a statistic of "one in four" people having downloaded a movie illegally merely discredit the MPAA and warn legislators that they need to wise up and make sure that laws make sense? Any time 25% of the population is guilty of something, it's time to re-think your definition of a crime.

    So why would the MPAA lie about this? To purposely make themselves look less credible?
  • by HazE_nMe ( 793041 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @08:42PM (#10040857) Homepage
    ever since the Regan administration faked a commercial that showed a brainscan of a normal adult and a brainscan of a Cannabis user. The commercial showed a lively colored brainscan for the normal adult, and the one for the Cannabis user was all dull and dark. As it turns out, the brainscan of the supposed Cannabis user was actually from a patient who was comatose. There have been other "studies" regarding MDMA and it's affects on the brain that have recently been uncovered as bogus misinformation from the federal government. I don't use MDMA, but I for one would rather be told the truth about "drugs" and be allowed to make up my own mind as to whether I want to use it or not.
  • It's an average (Score:3, Interesting)

    by drix ( 4602 ) on Sunday August 22, 2004 @09:59PM (#10041312) Homepage
    [T]he survey claims, among other hard-to-believe assertions, that 'about one in four Internet users have downloaded a movie.'

    That's really not that hard to believe, considering they're talking about an average. The average human being is (roughly) 1/2 male and 1/2 female. All it takes for this "hard-to-believe assertion" to be true is for one user in a hundred to have downloaded 400 movies, something which I wholeheartedly believe from firsthand experience.
  • by zoeblade ( 600058 ) on Monday August 23, 2004 @02:16AM (#10042235) Homepage

    When did you stop trusting sponsored 'research'?

    Ooh, I know this one! Is it when Dr. Nancy Olivieri [google.com] tested a drug on patients only to find out it may actually be hamful? After the doctor decided to tell the patients the risks, a gag order was issued by the company funding the experiment.

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