Australian Media 'Crooks' to Come in from the Cold 273
pagefault writes "News.com is reporting that millions of Australians who tape TV shows and copy CDs will soon get the right to do it with a clear conscience. From the article: 'The Federal Government will next year legalize the video recording of television shows for personal use, and the transfer of songs from CDs to MP3 players, in a bid to overturn a ban which has made criminals of much of the population."
Everyone's a criminal! (Score:4, Insightful)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:2, Funny)
Brings a tear to my eye. Makes me want to sing!
Oh say can you see, by the boot's glistening blue light, what so proudly we booted, the establishment of Fair Use
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:3, Informative)
Much like America (Score:3, Insightful)
That's much like America... from King George's point of view, America is a country founded by "terrorists". We practically *invented* guerilla warfare, for christ's sake.
It's all a matter of perspective. My British friends celebrate July Fourth as "Good Riddance Day".
Re:Much like America (Score:2)
Re:Much like America (Score:2)
Don't you dare mention Sigourney Weaver in public ever again. It's just hurtful.
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:5, Informative)
And more to the point, many of the people originally shipped to Australia were convicted of offences which would be considered barely criminal today, like stealing a loaf of bread (or copying a CD?).
I wonder if any of the convicts on the First Fleet were sent over for stealing music? Sneaking into a concert hall for example?
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:2, Interesting)
This is not actually correct, but is a persistent myth. If you examine the records of who was on the ships for the first decade or so of transportation, almost universally they were people convicted of serious offences - murder, manslaughter, rape, serious theft and fraud. About the only ones who were probably innocent of any serious ill-doing were the quite substantial numbers of I
Re: Stealing a loaf of bread... (Score:3, Insightful)
Just because we don't send people to Australia for it doesn't make it not a crime. We don't send people to Australia for a lot of things these days.
Re: Stealing a loaf of bread... (Score:2)
Re: Stealing a loaf of bread... (Score:2, Insightful)
Of course... (Score:2)
Re:Of course... (Score:2, Interesting)
Not for long...
To learn more about debtors prisons, see: American Revolution, Causes of...
Re: Stealing a loaf of bread... (Score:2)
But if that were also the case, then gas stations would be allowed to have remote-control semi-autonomous machine gun turrets on the roofs of their buildings to shoot drive-offs.
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:3, Funny)
Of course, back then CD's were carefully carved out of wood by trained artisans. And the CD players were steam powered.
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:3, Interesting)
No, on several counts. Do you consider the British prison guards, governors, and other administrative personnel criminals? They were not. Many "free people" also immigrated from Britain much later after transportation of criminals from Britain ceased, they were not criminals either. Many people also immigrated from elsewhere (such as neighbouring Asian countries) into Australia under multiculturalism, these were not criminals either.
Re:Reminds me of a good joke (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Reminds me of a good joke (Score:3, Insightful)
No one who tells the joke does it as a sign of respect, it's a sneering putdown. Incidentally, my family came over in the Gold Rush, I don't have any convicts in my family tree that I know of, though if I did I wouldn't be ashamed, neither would I be proud. Are American blacks proud of their "slave history"? Would you joke with then (assuming you're not black) asking where the
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:2, Funny)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:5, Funny)
And America was founded by puritans. Australians are forever grateful that we got the better deal.
Back to reality, Australia was neither founded by criminals nor was everyone once a criminal. Australia was founded by the British as a penal colony. God bless America for doing a bang up job on your education.
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:3, Funny)
Ahh, how little has changed.
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:3, Informative)
Re:God Bless Australia... (Score:2)
"You're very funny... thats the first time I heard that joke... - TODAY"
Sam
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:2)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:5, Informative)
What about the fact that it's the country (a government department no less!) that invented 802.11g?
What about the fact that a hell of a lot of healthcare stuff is started in Australia?
I remember reading something a while ago about the bionic ear was an Australian invention, and probably a ton of other stuff...
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:4, Insightful)
Seriouly, Australia looks like a really cool place, and most Australian folks I know are super nice people. I'm thinking of moving there someday. The "Australia founded by criminals" is just an interesting story that gets propagated because of its novelty, I don't think that people mean it as an insult. At least, I can assure you that my own opinion of Australia isn't tainted by the story.
After all, let's not forget that the United States was founded by a bunch of insurgents. Funny how our own opinions of insurgencies have changed...
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:5, Informative)
I use it to kill weeds and small children.
Well, its funnier.. (Score:2)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:Everyone's a criminal! (Score:2)
Not really. The British, after losing the North American colonies they used to ship criminals to, used some parts of Australia for the same purpose. Some cities, such as Melbourne and Adelaide, were not penal colonies. I've also read that more people were deported to the North American colonies than to the Australian ones (googling for stats is left as an exercise for the reader). Our only "mistake" was not to revolt against the British.
Artists lose??? (Score:2)
But didn't this law change come about because it was a law that just about everybody was breaking anyway? So nothing changes. So what do the artists lose under the new laws??
Re:Artists lose??? (Score:2)
Re:Artists lose??? (Score:4, Insightful)
The truth is, this is RIAA math (not the RIAA, but same kind). Remember that 4 blank CDs may cost $2 or whatever, but their value is the $150 that a 4 disc box set might cost (because that is what you could pirate with it). Logic, as usual for these kind of groups, does not apply.
And your proof is? (Score:2)
And the law shouldn't address a levy on blank media, since so many people make their own mix CDs, dumps to their mp3 players, etc. all with legally purchased music/TV.
Re:Artists lose??? (Score:5, Insightful)
Any Enforcement? (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:5, Informative)
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:4, Interesting)
While this is being suggested as a "win" for the people I'd expect there is strong motivation from business to sort this out too. It doesn't suit them for copyright law to be seen as flexible and routinely ignored now that distribution is so easy for people to do.
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:5, Funny)
True story...
At the last federal election I rock up to the polling place, a school not too far from my house. I just walked up, got the iPod going so I don't have to listen to the local "party members" trying to hand me how to vote forms. As I walk in this guy, talking to someone on his left, bumps into me. I turn around, he turns around. It's fucking John Howard (prime minister of Oz if you don't know) - his office is just up the road from the school and he'd wandered down for a meet-and-greet. I just kept going.
He did nothing! There I was, fragantly defying the law of the land and our fearless leader, otherwise known as "the rodent", did nothing. He had his security guys there. He could of tackled me himself. Grabbed me and made a citizen's arrest or something. But he did nothing. Weak on law he is. Weak!
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:2)
Maybe he had a sensitive nose and couldn't approach due to the smell.
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Any Enforcement? (Score:2)
A change in legal status only. (Score:3, Interesting)
OTOH, I like seeing Australia taking a more friendly stance on this. Although the change will mean very little for the citizens, it's a message that they're declaring this stance instead of leaving it de facto.
Comment removed (Score:4, Insightful)
Oh I get it... (Score:2)
...which is easier than working for a living.
We had the levy for cassette tape decades ago. I think we can assume it will go on this time as well.
Re:Oh I get it... (Score:2)
No, but in pactice there will be a form you can fill out to get a refund of the levy. My years supply of backup disks may get me a couple of dollars refunded at the end of the year. Not really worth it for an individual, which is one of the assumptions behind this plan, I suppose.
Moral vs Legal (Score:5, Insightful)
Again brainwashing in action to make what's moral and what's legal the same thing.
If they outlaw living should I have bad conscience for being alive?
Re:Moral vs Legal (Score:2)
Re:Moral vs Legal (Score:2)
Would that be an imaginary moderation then?
Re:Moral vs Legal (Score:2)
Before the obvious tirades start.... (Score:2, Informative)
Yes, There were a lot of penal settlements...
However, most of the people sentenced for transportation were sentenced for quite petty "crimes", say, stealing a loaf of bread or poaching a rabbit so their kids didn't die of starvation.... obviously a hanging offense. It was the 18th century equivalent of running a red light. They still managed to tame the harshest continent on earth and prosper, creating one of the greatest egalitarian societi
Re:Before the obvious tirades start.... (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Before the obvious tirades start.... (Score:3, Funny)
Yer dreamin'.
Re:Before the obvious tirades start.... (Score:3, Funny)
*grin*
Re:Before the obvious tirades start.... (Score:2)
Fair Use (Score:2, Interesting)
Australias has to adopt DMCA under the Australian/American Free Trade agreement so I guess its a little late for this now though.
Australia does have Fair Use (Score:3, Informative)
Australian Fair Dealing provisions allow for:
- research or study
- criticism or review
- reporting of news
- professional advice given by a legal practitioner or patent attorney
Re:Fair Use (Score:3, Informative)
Advertising (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:Advertising (Score:2, Insightful)
Is it really possible for the quality of commercial prime time TV in Australia to sink lower?
Oh come on (Score:2)
Re:Advertising (Score:2)
The quality shows all end up on cable anyway, where they get much better treatment than they get at the free-to-air networks. As with so many things, "you get what you pay for".
Re:Advertising (Score:2)
You know what?
Fuck television stations. Fuck advertising revenues. Fuck people in general, because they've allowed marketing in general, including advertising, to completely brainwash them.
In the U.S., most over-the-air broadcast channels and all of the non-premium cable/satellite channels fill up every hour of airtime with 20 minutes of advertising. And most idiot Americans who watch four hours of TV a da
How is media levy divided up? (Score:3, Interesting)
So, does anyone know where there is a published policy of how such money does supposedly get allocated to artists?
USA Is not much better (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:USA Is not much better (Score:2)
Just wait a year or two (Score:5, Funny)
[AUS President]: huh?
[US President]: The FREE trade agreement?
[AUS President]: Oh yeah, I forgot. Don't worry, should be fixed in a jiffy. Btw, I got to get back to Australia in a week. The people seems to get a bit worried when their president is away for more than a few months.
[US President]: Ok, I guess I can replace you with an intern. Go ahead and get out from underneath my desk.
All hail to our Yanky overlords. I, as an Australian, welcome our inclusion into the United States of America as its newest state. I also welcome renaming our parliament to "Congress" and our Prime Minister to "President". One can only hope that the states will outsource its prison facilities over here.
Re:Just wait a year or two (Score:2, Funny)
I thought the British Empire tried that once already?
*rimshot*
Re:Just wait a year or two (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Just wait a year or two (Score:2)
I always thought we should do this with Siberia. We send them money, lets use the payments and make them useful.
Australia is too touristy to be a threat, but who would risk a stint in Siberia.
Finally somebody blinked! (Score:2)
Not criminals! (Score:4, Insightful)
Just to insert a little sanity here. In Australia, most copyright violations are prosecuted in the civil courts (exceptions include sale of couterfeit goos, called 'passing off'). It is only in corrupt countries where the media corporations can easily buy new laws that such things have fallen under criminal prosecution.
Let's not even begin to talk about the DCMA, the shiny new laws which make videotaping a movie in a theatre more heavily punished than several types of killing, or the perpetual copyright on Mickey Mouse or anything else that american corporations bother to pay supreme court justices for.
RIAA (Score:2)
cdr/ipod tax? (Score:2)
But yet to be decided is whether a levy will be slapped on the store price of blank CDs and MP3 players, such as iPods, to compensate artists for the revenue they stand to lose under the new laws.
They're kidding, right? What about the people who fill those CDs with linux installers, photos, and the countless gazillions of other things that aren't pirated music, or buy songs for their iPod from iTunes?
Re:cdr/ipod tax? (Score:2)
Welcome to taxing.
Quite frankly, at this point I would pay 10 cents more per cd, if in exchange people could copy, swap, rip and burn all they want without repercutions.
Re:cdr/ipod tax? (Score:2)
No kidding.
Notice how they're not talking about changing a single thing (most people weren't even aware of the illegality of their actions), and yet by making common behavior legal, they now need to "compensate" the artists? What would they be compensated for? The law isn't currently changing anyone's behavior, nor would the new law! Besides, what about the fact that Australians already pay more for music than Americans?
eg. On today's exchange rate, songs on iTunes cost about $1.23 USD. Also, the co
Won't be Long... (Score:3, Insightful)
because we all know that this is *exactly* what the RIAA wants here Stateside, right? To make you buy the CD, buy the MP3, and then buy it again when the license expires.
Good Thing/Bad Thing (Score:3, Insightful)
On the other hand, it is a pleasant surprise to see a government actually taking a look at reality, and adjusting it's laws thusly, rather than trying to do it the other way around.
But what about the 'FREE trade agreement'? (Score:4, Insightful)
We also did some other stupid things to ensure 'justice' prevailed, including telling judges how to do their job by insisting that they consider the retail value of copies even if that is not realised (ie if your 10y/o son downloads the latest Disney tripe, selling at the time for AUD50 as a DVD, and it sits in [insert your favourite P2P software here] for 6 months during which time 100,000 copies are made then you are to be tried for AUD5,000,000 of piracy despite having nothing to show for it but an AUD10,000 Telstra bill).
There I go confusing the issues again... downloading from P2P networks IS theft (even in a world where CD/DVD prices are extortionate); making the most of your intellectual property license (ie CD/DVD purchase) by transforming the work into more convenient formats is not.
Wrong (Score:2)
"There I go confusing the issues again... downloading from P2P networks IS theft"
What if I already own the CD? whom exactly, is now missing the song I alledgedly stole?
No, at worse it is copyright infringment, which should be a civil matter.
Perhaps using clear and accurate language you wouldn't confuse the issue so much?
Re:But what about the 'FREE trade agreement'? (Score:2)
There I go confusing the issues again... downloading from P2P networks IS theft (even in a world where CD/DVD prices are extortionate); making the most of your intellectual property license (ie CD/DVD purchase) by transforming the work into more convenient formats is not.
You really are quite confused, aren't you? Downloading from P2P, or any other type of network, is not theft...it's not even a copyright violation unless you live in a jurisdiction that requires the author's permission and that permission wa
A sensible politician? (Score:2)
I wonder who's running around with the cluestick? EFA?
One hand giveth... the other taketh away (Score:2)
Quick way to overturn out-of-date law? (Score:2, Insightful)
Possibly the fastest way to show how out-of-date the copyright laws are in a country like Australia or New Zealand (where it is technically illegal to format-shift or record shows or whatever) is to sue someone on behalf of the Music Industry as a "friend".
Make a public warning ahead of the actual action, publically stating that some unnamed poor sod will be legally sued into oblivion, and then follow through with the threat (and any subsequent appeals.
Of course, finding a person to do this and take all t
Re:weeeed (Score:3, Funny)
I hear the Canadian government is set to legalize nutmeg. You should look into immigrating.
Re:Pathetic (Score:3, Informative)
Tax? What tax? (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Tax? What tax? (Score:3, Insightful)
Immorality knows no dollar signs. If you multiply those 18 or 20 cents by millions of blank CDs and DVDs, you'll see that millions of dollars are being stolen from your fellow citizens and funneled to private interests under the assumption that each and every one of you are criminals. That's money that can be put to better use among the *productive* members of the economy. Moreover, those levies are going to an organization that represents only a small minority of the
Go back to school (Score:2)
If you multiply those 18 or 20 cents by millions of blank CDs and DVDs, you'll see that millions of dollars are being stolen...
I don't know what elementary school you went to, but here in Canada $1,000,000 * $0.01 = $10,000, hadly anything of importance to the multi-national record labels that do tens of billions on revenue a year.
I don't know what kind of pot you'd have to be smoking to think that millions of pennies would mean anything to any decent sized corperation.
Re:Go back to school (Score:2)
Huh? The cost of the disc is 18 cents, including all the taxes. Why would you think that the entire cost of the product is going taxes?
Re:Pathetic (Score:3, Informative)
Perhaps you meant AU$1.69?
Re:Pathetic (Score:2)
Mass civil disobedience wins? (Score:5, Interesting)
So I ask; how can the police enforce a law/requirement that they themselves do not respect? Further more I welcome this ruling from our great overlords (who I voted against) as it will stop most of the population being made criminals for using some thing (fairly) that they paid for. Kudos.
PS. Please don't arrest me and use this post* in court as an admittance of breaking the law!
*In the event that this post is used in the above fashion it is a complete fabrication! *Hides in his Bunker!
Re:Mass civil disobedience wins? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm an Australian and I know of a crap load of police officers who share music (burned CD's, mp3's, software) amongst each other, even doing it AT WORK.
Using the law to crack down on music file sharers in Australia is NOT about stopping the sharing. It is about extracting money from people or entities which have deep pockets. The fact that they go after ISP's and companies, instead of the file sharing use
Re:Mass civil disobedience wins? (Score:2)
However I do agree that in this particular instance, you're right (although is it really civil disobediance when NO-ONE took the ban seriously? Probably including the politicians who made the law).
Re:Wow... (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Is there a real difference between RIAA and ARI (Score:3, Interesting)
ARIA has zero political clout in Australia. Remember all that fuss about parallel importing and how it was going to destroy Australina artists? Well ARIA tried to stop it with a political and public campaign (remember the TV ads?). They failed.
Years later, the local music sce
Re:Is there a real difference between RIAA and ARI (Score:2)
As has already been mentioned, ARIA and the RIAA have essentially the same members. I think we all agree that the RIAA has a *lot* of political clout in America (too much, but then, so do most commercial industries in the US). Ruddock (the Australian Attorney General) is on the record as saying that the Australian government wants to make its copyright and IP laws as compatible as possible with America.
Blank media breakdown (Score:3, Informative)
Basically, all the people not signed by an RIAA label get a net 4% [riaa.com] of the goods taken by blank media taxes (they don't have RIAA lobby dollars working for them). RIAA-signed artists get a total of 38.4% of the take, and the RIAA member publishers get 57.6% of the take. Note that this is a description from the RIAA, so that 38.4% may potentially be siphoned off into that 57.6% via