Movie Studios Unveil New Anti-Piracy Lab 495
PaulusMagnus writes "According to the BBC Walt Disney, Sony, Paramount, Warner Bros, Universal and 20th Century Fox have formed a new organisation called the Motion Picture Laboratories. They've also given them a nice tidy sum of US$30m to play with to develop new technologies to combat piracy." From the article: "There are thousands of new concepts floating around the hi-tech community about how to develop tools to fight piracy ... Researching and developing these technologies now will help save the major studios and other motion picture producers and distributors money in the future."
The first discovery.... (Score:3, Funny)
Success!
Re:The first discovery.... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:The first discovery.... (Score:2)
Re:The first discovery.... (Score:3, Funny)
But One Night in Tom Green would be going way too far.
Re:The first discovery.... (Score:3, Funny)
You think that's bad? I though of it!
I'd stab my own brain if it wouldn't kill me.
Re:The first discovery.... (Score:5, Funny)
Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2, Offtopic)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2, Insightful)
Simply put- the majority of the tax cuts were to people who live on dividends. Because people are encouraged to live on dividends, this puts downward pressure on payroll (after all, businesses only have so much profit to go around- and if the stockholders are forcing the majority out in dividends, it has to come from somewhere
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Interesting)
I am too, so at least believe me when I say I know what you're talking about.
Fine with me. All I know is that in the 1990s, businesses were willing to spend money on R&D- and now they aren't. At all.
Huh? No R&D for what industry? As someone who got one of those nonexistent R&D jobs this year, I'm going to have to question that. R&D hiring has bounced back rather well in most science fields since 2000.
Portland wasn't a high cost of living market
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
Did you notice that when Reagan cut the top tax bracket back from 70% that federal revenues actually went up? The purpose of the tax system is to fund the federal government, not to punish success. Though given that you're a self-described Marxist, you probably think the reverse should be true. Marx was a fool and his ideas have killed tens of millions.
I'm not w
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:5, Informative)
This is entirely incorrect. The taxes in dividends were reduced, but that did not have the effect described above.
Previously, the tax on long term capital gains was less. This means, instead of dividends, companies paid out profits to share holders by either buying back stock, or holding onto the cash (thereby increasing stock value). The problem with this, is that it placed pressure on companies to increase stock price, instead of simply paying higher dividends. The problem is that a higher stock price can be created through manipulation, whereas higher dividends can not be faked. This led to Enron and others, which is why the law needed to be changed.
The point of the story is that before, a hypothetical company would go from $100 to $125 whereas no it is more likely to go from $100 to $100 with a $25 dividend payout. The main point is that all the tax break did was change the channel through which the same money traveled. It did not have the effect described in the parent post.
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Interesting)
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Walk/Run 1.6 miles to make the bus after work. Check
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Wait for the buses to start again at 5am so I could go home and get some sleep before turning right around and going back to work. Check (sometimes just -walked- the 8.9 miles home in 3 hours- got home about 4am)
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Ride a bicycle 8.9 miles -each way- (~45 minutes) to get from my affordable housing to my $8/hour job. Check. (started regularly getting off after the last bus-
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2, Informative)
I can't help the fact that before October 2001, I had made all the right choices: I was slowly getting raises, I had my degree in software engineering, I was studying
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
Which he could have done something about. He could have gotten us out of the WTO, and stopped the rush to I
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
Which is just so much hogwash. When you adjust for inflation, movie tickets are actually kind of cheap [go.com] especially when compared to 1971-ish prices, where they were 50& MORE expensive than today!
A notable quote from the linked article:
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
I believe in the free market. If you don't like the price of something, don't buy it. I think that Premiership football clubs charge too much for tickets. But I don't climb over the gate and sneak into the stadium, I just don't go. Simple, no?
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
UK South, £5-6. (US$9-11)
Happy enough with that price, but never buy food / drinks there, mostly due to disgusting quality of the food and drinks. Also would be more inclined to go if the Odeon gave up trying to make us sit in allocated seats.
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:5, Interesting)
The point is that the MPAA wants to make all of their investment and profits up front- where if they'd go for volume pricing instead, and roll prices back a few years, they'd have NO problem with piracy at all.
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:4, Insightful)
I say we take on the nasty, profiteering coffee, bread, ice cream, restaraunt, housing, and auto companies...
Then again, since none of those other things cost the same now as they did then, and since what was once a million dollar movie now routinely costs $50-100 million, why is it again that you're expecting to pay decades-old admission prices?
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:5, Insightful)
why is it again that you're expecting to pay decades-old admission prices?
Because they're recycling the same decades-old plots and story lines.
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:5, Insightful)
If it's about movie price (Score:5, Interesting)
You know, I don't see a scaling of price and movie tickets. It seems to me I pay just as much to see a small budget film as I do a big budget film. This is additonally odd seeing as most big budget films make back their investment. Not universally true, of course, but generally they do. Many of them even make a lot of money.
So, if ticket prices truly were based on costs, shouldn't low-budget indy films be less? Wouldn't it even perhaps be a good business decision? I mean blockbuster effects type films are widely popular and with some marketing, it's easy to convince most people to go. However low budget indys are harder, people are used to high production values and thus often snub them. Wouldn't a lower ticket price help allure them?
Or, could it be, that it's just more of the movie industry being greedy? Remember these are the same people that are mandidating that for any HD movie spec HDCP will be REQUIRED. So be it HD-DVD or Blu-Ray, you'll have to have DVI/HDMI out to an HDCP compatible display. If you go analogue, no HD for you, if it even plays at all.
My bet? Ticket prices are atrifically inflated. The studios do NO competition on price. They've fixed one price, for all movies regardless of source and cost. The only variance is per theatre or area.
The day I start seeing cheap movies for less, and start seeing one production company trying to underprice another, maybe I believe they prices are justified. For now, I think they are in every way as reality based as CD prices: Which is to say not at all.
Re:If it's about movie price (Score:3)
All industries are greedy, all the time, or they cease to exist. Stop pretending that the movie industry is some kind of special evil. But that's tangential; on to the main point.
The studios (mostly) do not own movie theaters. Most theaters decide their own ticket prices. Per-movie pricing has several quite real economic problems:
0) Theater owners don't end up getting most of the ticket receipts. In the first weeks of a maj
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
They still exist, though they may count as second run now. We have one near us called "University Mall Theatres". They are right across the street from a
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
Re:Here's a good tool to fight piracy (Score:2)
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I believe the current income levels reflect a monopoly that existed because there were limited outlets and limited entertainment. As we reach a point where there is more quality entertainment than we can watch- then consumers will start to choose the quality entertainme
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:2)
Maybe one day UNICEF will get into the movie industry. But until then, Walt Disney, Sony, Paramount, Warner Bros, Universal and 20th Century Fox are the guys to see.
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:2, Insightful)
Sigh. Pedantry is lame, but rediculous has been a particularly virulent misspelling. ridiculous. If I can stop just one person from perpetuating this, then this post will be worth it.
Unlike this "$30 million dollars to piss in the public's faces" lab
To use some of their own lame terminology, I want the magic of the movies to continue. I want them to spend $300 million on the next hyper-realistic super-imaginary world, and I'm willing to be one of those few stupid people to see it in a th
Re:Don't be rediculous (Score:3, Insightful)
well sure thats your opinion i guess. Personally, I have never seen a well done movie that cost millions of dollars. maybe they exsist, but i am in mind that there is no correlation (except maybe an inverse one) between money and greatness. thats not what its about though. what you say, "i want the magic of movies to continue", is bizzare
Oh, isn't that just so cute (Score:5, Funny)
build a.... (Score:2)
Re:Oh, isn't that just so cute (Score:2)
They actually think they can stop piracy
I'm sure they are under no delusions that they can even make a dent in Piracy. Any technology that would represent even a speed bump for pirates would make the "product" unusable for the average consumer.
All that the implemented "anti-piracy" technologies do, indeed all they are intended to do is make it harder for people to exercise their fair use rights.
Millions for defense... (Score:3, Insightful)
Better way to spend $30M (Score:2)
Re:Better way to spend $30M (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Better way to spend $30M (Score:2)
Because that would mean that they would have to admit that the main reason for the drop in movie attendance is their shitty movies instead of piracy?
That they would actualy have to admit to their shareholders that they have run out of ideas and can't make a decent product (aka movie) anymore without rehashing old movies/remakes/sequels?
Other stuff in here as well, just can't phrase it properly. But maybe this will
Make decent product (Score:5, Insightful)
Ultimate Solution (Score:3, Funny)
Cheap porn (Score:2)
Re:Cheap porn (Score:5, Interesting)
Re:Cheap porn (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Cheap porn (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm sorry. It's puerile, I'll grant you, and the sort of humour that most of us should give up on at about the age of fourteen, but... that sentence cracked me up like nothing else.
Re:Cheap porn (Score:5, Interesting)
If Hollywood would adopt some of the business model of the porn industry they would see a marked improvement in profits. And its not like the quality of acting or writing is all that high above porn anyway...
Re:Cheap porn (Score:3, Insightful)
Movies were cheap- a buck or two by today's standards. As a result (and because there was no TV)- people saw them regularly.
Today the people who make movies are all compensated at ridiculous levels- we make 160 million dollar movies which would be $30 million do
Let's place our bets now... (Score:2)
Copy protection can and will be broken, unless the studios do things like weld the discs to the inside of the DVD players.
Re:Let's place our bets now... (Score:2)
How long before the authorities start getting serious and sending in the jack boots to sort out the pirates?
They'll just keep tightening the screws.
No more fair use (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:No more fair use (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:No more fair use (Score:3, Informative)
They already have the solution (Score:5, Insightful)
How about... (Score:2)
Sure-fire Anti-Piracy Method (Score:2)
All the while... (Score:5, Funny)
Re:All the while... (Score:2, Insightful)
Love.
(No, I'm not a Hollywood writer, I'm serious. Love for what they do, not for the Female Lead. Time and time again, we see how love outmatches the almighty dollar. Screw movies! Real life can teach us everything we need to know, like how fire hurts.)
Some In-House Cleaning (Score:5, Insightful)
Also with new digital equipment at theaters I am starting to wonder if some people working these booths haven't found some new way to offload the movies and possibly make copies that way. It just seems that there are too many HIGH quality rips coming out to possibly be the result of geeks with cameras.
Finally, while ticket prices are arguably high, I do not believe the real problem is ticket prices so much as nothing people are wanting to see. Actually I am more annoyed with the theater to dvd turn around time. I would honestly prefer this get as short as 3 months even on GOOD movies. Once again the digital formats available make this transition a lot more feasible, and most the extras are filmed during production or shortly post-prod anyway. So the three months release time should be enough to clean them up and release great DVDs....
If only the intelligent and tech-saavy people were running these industries nowadays and not the old fossils who developed the industry into what it is...
Re:Some In-House Cleaning (Score:3, Insightful)
Were the industry being run by intelligent and tech-savvy people, they likely wouldn't have the capital until they gave the proverbial pound of flesh to those you refer to as "old fossils".
Whenever anything innovative and with growth potential comes along then monied interests move in and you get last decade's basic assumptions applied to new techno
Re:Some In-House Cleaning (Score:2)
The camcorder-pirated movies are going for $4 each on a blanket on a New York sidewalk. They're not worried about HDTV owners for this particular form of piracy -- as you mentioned, you wouldn't lower yourself to watch these things filmed in craptovision. They're mostly being sold to exceedingly poor people who would never pay ticket prices to see a movie in a theater anyway.
However, these same camcord
Re:Some In-House Cleaning (Score:3, Insightful)
Then there are some other things involved. I knew a guy who was working at a TV station
Think of the job security! (Score:2, Interesting)
This will come in handy (Score:2, Funny)
Re:This will come in handy (Score:2)
Good money after bad... (Score:3, Informative)
Unexpected display of common sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Yet.
They've been trying to stop Software Copying Since (Score:2, Interesting)
Stop Pirating (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Stop Pirating (Score:2)
Even if they lower their prices, people will still buy black market copies. Why do you think most second-run theaters are out of business? Pirated copies will always be cheaper.
You want to know what their biggest profit problem is? I'll give you a hint, it's not revenues.
Obviously, Tom Cruise ain't worth 25 million if his movies don't sell well. Obviously, crazy-good special effects aren't
Best of luck... (Score:5, Insightful)
It's always a losing game. Maybe think about offering better choices and making it more CONVIENIENT to get music? Oh what do I know... I'm just a consumer!
Re:Best of luck... (Score:2)
This is rich! (Score:3, Insightful)
When Will They Get It? (Score:2, Insightful)
Have we not seen since the days of VCR's and tapes and CD's that things are NOT changing? No matter what, there is always going to be someone trying to circumvent the technology, and someone is going to succeed. I'm compare this with terrorism:
To think that we can stop terrorism is complete hogwash. We may kill a ton of bad apples, but there's always gonna be atleast one more guy that thinks he's
I remember when... (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:I remember when... (Score:2)
When they came for the people who were camming movies in the theaters, I said nothing, because I didn't watch crappy reencoded cams.
When they came for the people leaking the screeners, I said nothing because I never watched them: I hated that stupid time-counter at the top of the screen.
When they came for the P2P filesharers, I said nothing because I never downloaded movies: I hated the hassle and could never find what I wanted.
Now they're coming for my fair-use rights, and I can't watch anything a
HOWTO: Fight Movie Piracy (Score:5, Insightful)
1. Release films worldwide at the same time.
2. Stop policing movie theatres with security guards and confiscating mobile phones as potential "recording equipment" and creating customer antipathy.
3. Release films to DVD within a month of their theatre release.
4. Stop putting region coding and anti-copying measures on DVDs.
And finally, the most important:
5. Stop your own employees from stealing and duplicating your films and selling them to criminal organisations for mass duplication.
Re:HOWTO: Fight Movie Piracy (Score:4, Insightful)
remove unskippable bits fom DVDs, and dont put adverts in front of the feature on a DVD I flipping PAID FOR.
Re:HOWTO: Fight Movie Piracy (Score:3, Insightful)
1. Release films worldwide at the same time.
2. Stop policing movie theatres with security guards and confiscating mobile phones as potential "recording equipment" and creating customer antipathy.
3. Release films to DVD within a month of their theatre release.
4. Stop putting region coding and anti-copying measures on DVDs.
And finally, the most important:
5. Stop your own employees from stealing and duplicating your films and selling them to criminal organisations for
Do you want people talking on cellphones? (Score:3, Insightful)
2. Stop policing movie theatres with security guards and confiscating mobile phones as potential "recording equipment" and creating customer antipathy.
There's a legitimate reason to require customers on the theater's private property to deposit all phones in lockers: If it's in a locker, it can't ring or "chainsaw ring" in the screening rooms.
Mark the film (Score:3, Interesting)
If a pirated moved if found just go to the point in the film where the hidden serial number is located. Then track back you had access to that film. If a theater then threaten not to allow them access to your films any more and sue them for damages for allowing the piracy. If it is a pre-release reviewer edition the same actions can be taken against them.
How hard would it be to just add a serial number to 10 frames here and 10 frames there? Hidden in the back ground somewhere. In stead of just a number it could a colour or the insertion of a special object (IE: Green coffe cup of a specific style.)
I do not think the studios want to really know where the piracy is really come from - their own staff!
Re:Mark the film (Score:2)
i've seen this already (Score:3, Informative)
Market Forces: Piracy Killer (Score:2)
Ignore pirates completely. If the amount of revenue you get from your product from paying customers isn't enough to produce more product, you stop producing the product and people don't have it. People aren't entitled to always have someone producing a product, and you're
Blowing smoke (Score:2)
However, throwing $30M at an anti-piracy effort lets them point fingers as do all the RIAA lawsuits against 14-year-olds, vs. actually admitting their business model is desperately fscked.
animal testing? (Score:2)
A philosophical argument (Score:2)
Just give it to DVDjon... (Score:2)
Don't say you have not been warned... (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Don't say you have not been warned... (Score:4, Funny)
Death of a sales*IAA (Score:2)
First off all, I have difficulties with their acclaimed 'stealing' of music, as they always proclaim it is. As far as I know, stealing implies that the one that has been stolen has been derived of something. When you take a copy, you do not take the original away, thus they have not 'lost' anything. They might claim that they loose money when ppl d/l music, but even that is far from certain. Not only is
A giant step in combatting 20% of the problem (Score:3, Insightful)
Piracy might be a problem, but (Score:5, Insightful)
I just saw AVP: Aliens vs. Predator for the first time on cable. On the one hand I'm glad I knew to wait for cable (you can usually tell if a movie is dog sh*t from the trailer), but I'm also sorry I wasted two hours last night watching it. It's bad enough that it was crap -- but it's such a blatant attempt to sucker in the fanboys that it's just sickening.
As I think about this, I think there needs to be a Godwin's Movie Law:
When a movie is compared to Aliens in an effort to sell it, it is immediately relegated to the category 'Dog Sh*t' and should not be watched on any medium, ever (even free ones).
Translation: if moviemakers can't make their Sci-Fi film stand on its own and have to try to ride the popularity of Aliens to sell it, then you already know everything you need to know about it: it's crap.
And here are some of my personal movie laws:
- Do not watch a movie based on a video game, ever. It is not worth watching. If you know someone who actually paid to watch one, slap him with a large trout for being such a sucker.
- Do not star in any of the above movies -- it will wreck your career. People sometimes confuse bad writing with bad acting. Don't walk away from such a movie, RUN.
- CGI is no substitute for talent (yes, George, I'm talking to YOU)
Can't win (Score:3, Insightful)
Ran into a perfect example of this concept in operation yesterday. Heard a song on a commercial that I liked. The company had a link to the site that had the song.
I would've had to download their special player and set up an account, just to download one song. Screw that, there's no way. If I could've gone somewhere and downloaded a high res copy for .50-.75 cents that would play on my Linux box, I would have done it. But all the hoops I'd have to go through, forget it.
Getting tough didn't work, getting tougher isn't going to work any better.
When will they learn: (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:just plain wrong (Score:2, Interesting)
AND
They'll have to spend this much each year to keep up with the hackers. But at least it's nice to know that Hollywood is fighting for ethics and the little guy. And so I'm sure this useless expenditure will not be passed on to the little guy but will be footed by the pocket change from a couple movie stars and movie studios.
Re:3.5bn? (Score:5, Interesting)
I don't go to theatres because they're too expensive. Whenever I see a commercial for a movie that looks good, I make a mental note to buy that on DVD when it comes out. I figure for $3-6 more than a movie ticket, I'd rather have the DVD. Of course, by the time the movie eventually comes out on DVD, I've completely forgotten everything about it, including my past interest in purchasing their product.
I have the same problem with TV. I watch one show, and if it happens to be the one that doesn't suck, I want to purchase the season on DVD. However, they won't sell it to me until they've shown all of the episodes and gotten all the advertising money from commercials that they can get.
Movie piracy does not cost the companies anything. The people who are pirating movies wouldn't pay for them if they were a penny a piece. Claiming this as a loss is just creative bookkeeping (fraud) on the part of the movie companies.
The real harm is being done every day by people like me who could purchase their products, but don't. I'm a bad consumer. I should be taken out and shot for my crimes against the corporations.