TV Delays Driving AU Viewers To Piracy 394
Astat1ne writes in with a story in The Register about the delays Australian TV viewers are experiencing getting overseas-produced series and how this is driving many of them to download the shows via BitTorrent and other peer-to-peer networks. The problem is compounded by the fact that Australian viewers are unable to download legal copies of the episodes from the US iTunes website. Quoting: "According to a survey based on a sample of 119 current or recent free-to-air TV series, Australian viewers are waiting an average of almost 17 months for the first-run series first seen overseas. Over the past two years, average Australian broadcast delays for free-to-air television viewers have more than doubled from 7.9 to 16.7 months."
Why the delay? (Score:5, Insightful)
Seriously, 17 months?
Why the delay? What exactly is it that could possibly take so long? You could almost put the DVDs in a hot air balloon and get them there quicker.
Especially considering that this is sales. Who waits that long to make money? Especially in that industry?
Re:Why the delay? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why the delay? (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Why the delay? (Score:5, Funny)
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Give 'em a break. They need time to translate the show into Australian.
There's also a minor issue with standards conversion; although Australia uses PAL, like the UK, their programmes have to undergo further conversion to flip the image upside down (which, of course, looks the right way up in Australia). The reverse also applies; this is why Britain is a bit behind Australia when showing Neighbours.
You can take a British TV set to Australia (and vice versa), and even receive pictures, but the programmes will be the wrong way up.
It's true, I swear.
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It's fast. It's cheap. It's easy. And, best of all TVs are easily re-flipped for shows that don't need conversion. Channel surfing becomes challenging though....
MOD DOWN (-1, urban legend) (Score:2)
Then I guess I was lucky to get by mistake a super-secret military monitor when I lived in the US. I later brought that monitor to Brazil, and guess what? It worked absolutely perfect in any position at all, just like it did in the US.
The earth's magnetic field varies everywhere [wikipedia.org], not just from the northern hemisphere to the south. Besides, the
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Fair Dinkum?
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2) obviously they want to get popular shows to attract audiences. How long does it take until they decide that a US show is popular and looks like it will be around for a while?
Once they find a series that they think would also be popular in Australia (or New Zealand), how l
It's the same for new movie releases (Score:2)
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standard register article (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:standard register article (Score:5, Insightful)
And you know what? I discovered that could get an HD version with no commercials and with better sound. So, I kept doing it... just for one or two of my favourite shows. I can honestly say that if the local networks hadn't treated me (the viewer) with such contempt, I never would have bothered to look around the Net, never worked out which P2P client was the most efficient, and frankly would be watching them on local TV week to week.
Note that most of the current shows are aired only a few of months after the US. Heroes, NCIS, House and Grays Anatomy all fall into this catagory. We are about 3 or 4 episodes into the current season of each of these. I think in the US the episodes are up to the mid teens. The delay in airing doesn't bother me, but being forced to wait four months for the resolution of a double episode pushed me over the edge.
Re:standard register article (Score:4, Insightful)
I follow several "currently airing" series. Battlestar Galactica, Stargate, SG Atlantis, Rome, The Simpsons, South Park to name a few. I'd be happy to pay, for example, $2/episode for subscriptions for these if I could get them to start downloading from a trusted source as soon as they're available. Heck, I'd be willing to develop the service for a pittance. Still, the content providers are more concerned with preventing the audience from viewing their product than making it possible for the audience to view said product.
The current state of copyright no longer serves the purpose of making as much art as possible available to as many as possible. It needs an overhaul. Badly.
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$2 an episode is too much. Let's imagine I watch 12 series with an average of 24 episodes per series per year. That's $576 per year on top of the Internet bandwidth costs which are still quite significant i
Obvious... (Score:5, Interesting)
Sure it may be copyright infringement to download them, but since there's no legal way for me to see a lot of these shows in the first place, I don't have a problem with it. I can't pay for them if I wanted to, I do pay for cable, and I'm not a Nielson Rating's house, so the arguments against downloading these shows seem pretty weak.
Re:Obvious... (Score:4, Informative)
I do the same thing with Bleach, a Japanese anime show. I can either wait a few years for the dubbed english version, or get the subbed Japanese show the same day in really high quality DivX. I don't know what it will take to convince the networks that people really would like to download content and have it at home. I also don't understand why networks don't just release shows for free with targeted advertisements. It seems that if you had people sign up with some sort of basic survey about where they live, how old they are, their interests, etc. advertisers gladly pay to have commercials interjected into the programming people download. Free, but with advertising, television downloads would be a big hit, I imagine.
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The reason is really quite simple: If they start offering up content with commercials to other countries, then they are (as far as the law is concerned) doing business in that country. Which suddenly means that they have to get a business license, follow all applicable regulations,
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Free, but with advertising, television downloads would be a big hit, I imagine.
I agree. Why don't the networks just set up their own bittorrent trackers and supply TV shows with ads in them? I'd be happy to fill out a (quite intrusive, but non-identifying) survey about my habits/details in exchange for a single use torrent URL. As it is now, if I miss an episode of a TV show that I watch, the crippled version on the network web site is the last place I go because I don't want to watch it on my comput
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Why don't the networks just set up their own bittorrent trackers and supply TV shows with ads in them? ...the crippled version on the network web site is the last place I go because I don't want to watch it on my computer... And I would watch the commercials, because I know that I'm getting something in exchange. Not everyone would watch them, but people get up to go to the bathroom or the kitchen during commercials as well.
Do you really expect the networks to offer their shows (in their current form) with skippable ads? They're already throwing a hissy-fit over the ad-skipping feature on DVRs. I'm sure that's why they only offer the "crippled version" on their web site: the web site's embedded video player does not allow ad-skipping. I don't expect the networks to offer free downloadable shows (with ads) until they can find an acceptable video-playing system that can restrict ad-skipping.
Also, the few shows that I've watch
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Yeah, I don't get it. All the Doctor Who broadcast after 1989 has looked awful.
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In the days when I used to watch them, it used to be excruciatingly poor, with cringeworthy translation errors, unreadably wooden dialogue, and typos galore; most of the effort usually seemed to be put into dancing animated karaoke lyrics for the opening song, rather than actually translating the script well. I glimpse the odd screen capture on blogs and so forth from time to time, and it doesn't look like t
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Also, BBC for a while licensed Top Gear out to the discovery channel (I think) but it just isn't the same as the UK version. They re-recorded all the parts in the studio to replace "bonnet" with "hood", "boot" with "trunk", and to remove all of Clarkson's "Everything from America is rubbish". They also switched the videos such that they were reviewing cars available in the US (Ford GT, Cadillac STS-R, and like a bently or something)
Now, I don't think that Clarkson really is fair about the quality of Ameri
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If you take money from someone, you are taking something. they don't have the money. Who is being hurt by my not wanting to wait to watch Doctor Who? Or by my wanting to watch some other show that is not and probably never will be available in my country? Explain to me how I am hurting anyone and then maybe I'll think about stopping.
Piracy is bad (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Piracy is bad (Score:4, Insightful)
I don't follow how you can say that the "countries" are out to make a buck...unless you are referring to government officials who will allow their influence to be, well, "influenced" by the industry that wants to make a buck then make another one without extra effort.
I would like an explanation from somebody in the industry as to why content is not made available to more viewers/listeners/etc. Demand is there; we see that in the amount of sales that come from online digital resources and transfers via other means such as BitTorrent. If there is demand for your product, you can do business and profit. If you don't do business, somebody else will.
People download from p2p nets because YOU (the content provider/copyright holder/whatever term you want to use) won't provide quality content and a reasonable price. Do that, and you will profit. Those who continue to use p2p weren't going to buy your product anyway, so you have lost nothing.
It all seems so simple, I must be missing something somewhere.
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I agree that I made it a very simple argument--corporations hire people magnitudes smarter than I am in these areas to figure out these answers.
To counter your argument about lost station revenue;
The real problem (Score:5, Funny)
You heard it here first folks...
The whole 'entertainment' experience is wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
Cinema in Australia sucks because of long queue lines, high prices and poor quality movies, as well as the 20 mins of lead-up-to-the-main-feature advertisements.
DVD release in Australia suck because we have to wait and wait and wait for a DVD that gets superseded 1 month after arrival by the Gold Edition, then the Extra Gold Edition, then the SuperMegaHypeUltraBlaster edition shortly after.
The whole experience of entertainment via TV/DVD or cinema is completely wrong. It lacks that all important component - ENTERTAINMENT.
Why bother? I can buy a bootleg copy of just about anything, download it if I can be bothered or borrow someone else's copy of whatever it may be. Either way, these three elements of access to entertainment guarantee I get my entertainment fix.
Yes - I am an Aussie.
Re:The whole 'entertainment' experience is wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
Quite honestly, I'd say you're in the perfect position. With global commerce, you can get the DVD, rip it to disc, and watch the whole thing before the theatrical release even get to Australia! Of course, that's 6 months after you could have downloaded it of oosnet-yay (the first rule of...) as a screener or cam-capture (they're getting better you know, thanks to the Canadians).
Of course, none of this makes up for the fact that we (and I mean "we" in the most generic, ugly American sense, not me personally) are churning out an amazing volume of absolute crap every year, which we so carefully delay in sending you.
Somehow, in the era before the internet and digital cinema, it made a certain amount of sense to have a staggered release. Given enough theaters with digital projection capabilities, it shouldn't really matter. I know that time is not here yet, but it's close enough that it could be. Maybe it's a little like HDTV in the US. If the FCC had had a backbone in the 90s, we could have all been happily watching 720p already. (And for you 1080i zealots - wouldn't it have been better to have 720p that actually worked than the spaghetti that is HDTV now?)
exuse me...NO, bartender, I'm just fine...in fact you can top me off if you would. Of course I won't be driving home...
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Of course, all of these issues are a little off point. The fact is most shows are dela
No surprise (Score:5, Insightful)
Dan East
now I wished i watched television (Score:2)
seems like there are similar problems everywhere..I for example really like TopGear on the BBC..... sadly however there is no legitimate way for me to watch it here in America.... So naturally I never watch it at all =p (pro tip never admit piracy or other crimes on teh interweb)
TopGear- On later tonight. (Score:3, Interesting)
Goody, 55mins to go before this weeks edition. The lads are messing around in Tractors trying to grow their own Fuel.
Keep up the good work lads. I'll be at Dunsfold next week for the show.
Perhaps the BBC should copy UK Channel 4 and setup a pay downoad site for non serial shows like TopGear
Off Topic:-
The place where the show is filmed is the place where the
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you lucky bastard =p seriously I would be so excited I wouldn't know what to do if I could goto the filming of the show.
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Sooo... Gambon Bend is YOUR fault!
You've nearly KILLED the Stig!
The same is true in Germany (Score:4, Interesting)
As a result, I don't even own a TV anymore (just not worth it, especially since the government makes us pay >$15/month), only watch DVDs once in a while, and otherwise watch downloaded stuff from overseas.
It's like the war on drugs: wake up, nobody cares if it's illegal. When people want something, there are two choices: sell it to them in an open, competitive market, or prohibit it and live with the results (mafia gangs, illegal distribution). But you can't change people.
Other benefits to consider. (Score:2)
Good TV or Good Broadband? Hmm........ (Score:2)
Germany has a thriving torrent culture for the same reason.
I often wonder if I would trade their lack of good media with our lack in America of good fast and CHEAP broadband connectivity?
Were it not for Battlestar, Firefox and 24, I would probably vote for the broadband.
Well, duh (Score:2, Interesting)
I don't pirate movies (anything worth having is worth buying on DVD).
I don't pirate music (same as DVDs).
However I do download 7-10 TV episodes off usenet every week. I pull them the day after they are on in the US as they won't be shown here in the UK for months - if at all.
What I can never understand is why Murdoch et al don't sign deals with the American networks to show their channels as part of their cable / satellite packages. Sam
Happens in America too. (Score:2)
Scifi channel delayed finishing up Stargate Atlantis' Season 3 and Stargate SG-1's last season until April. But Canadians and UK (Sky One) have been watching it since December and January. So many Americans have to wait 4 to 5 months just to watch their favorite show.
Tape Trading (Score:4, Insightful)
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They did care, but the physical aspect of tape trading and the cost to make tapes limited potential damage. It was also constrained to the physical borders of the country of origin. The other significant issue is that it is near impossible to police this type of trading activity. The Internet changes this - the impact is huge because the reach is orders of magnitude greater, it extends well beyond physical country boundaries and duplication costs are near zero. Policing is where changes are the largest; thi
Sweden used to be like that (Score:2)
Here are some examples of the delays (Score:3, Informative)
Alias for example, according to wikipedia it was shown 2005-2006, It has not been shown in australia yet with no plans from what i can see to have it shown, There is also no release date for the dvd. Star Trek: Voyager was the worst you finished in 2001, we finished in 2005.
With Battlestar galactica we just showed the last episode of season 2 a few hours ago (started at 11:40pm but would be shown anywhere between 10:30pm and 2:30am) You are half way through season 3.
Stargate sg1, we finished season 9 last month, Stargate Atlantis we are at season 2 episode 6.
Extras started their second season last week.
The O.C. Is one exception though, channel 10 actually showed episodes of this within a week of the us, You showed it on the 22nd we showed it on the 23rd or 24th (the Australian rules pre-season has started so some regions where delayed).
Most programs are put on a 6 month delay much of this is because of the difference in ratings periods, yours is around September ours started a few weeks ago.
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Right on.
Money (Score:2)
1. Convenience. I can watch it when I want, where I want, with no commercials or similar horrors.
2. Quality. TV/iTunes just doesn't cut it. I want full widescreen 720/1080 HDTV with full quality surround and top notch bitrate
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(1) Poor penetration of high speed net access. Delivering ATSC 720p ODP programming will saturate all but the absolute fastest residential pipes, and even then there would only be one stream at a time available. Overcompression and pipe optimization help the few iptv over fiber providers. If some people have this and others don't, then its more likely to lead to
(2) Piracy. Who wants all those precious little bits out there, just waiting to be swapped for free? I mean, ex
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2. Quality. TV/iTunes just doesn't cut it. I want full widescreen 720/1080 HDTV with full quality surround and top notch bitrate choices (I'll pay the double for 2x the bitrate).
Wouldn't 720p or 1080i be much more than 2x the bitrate of iTunes Store 640x480 video?
640 * 480 = 307,200 pixels
1280 * 720 = 921,600 pixels
And that's not counting the full quality surround sound.
BTW, Xbox Live Video Marketplace offers 720p HD television downloads for $3 (240 points), but you need an Xbox to use this service.
bullshit laws just suck (Score:2, Insightful)
Would drive me batty... (Score:3, Insightful)
watched "33" on Sci-fi's website for about 10 minutes before saying "screw this".
Real media (blech, but whatever) 3 inch window (c'mon, 640x480 days are long gone)
and of course frequent pauses for buffering.
Fired up BT client and all of the rips were from Aussie satellite and looked fantastic.
Also, they were 1/2 to 3/4 through season 1, so "what the heck" snagged them all before
they even showed on Sci-fi. Still watched them on Sci-fi (hey, Sci-fi/charter how about
a hi-def channel, or ffs a bit more gamme on your output, please! This is BSG, not
DooM3).
Still bought the DVDs.
Same thing with Dr Who, heck season 2 was worth it for the Daleks vs Cybermen exchange of
"Daleks would not be at war with the cybers, it would be more like pest control" (pause)
BWAAAHAHAHAHA.
Heck, I forget where Sci-fi is with Dr Who, but doesn't matter much as the DVD's are
released shortly after the British season ends, if I'm not mistaken. 80 bucks is
rather steep, but as I said, for some eps well worth the price.
Torchwood, too. Show grew on me quite quickly. Depending on season2, might actually
be worth it to get the DVDs.
Heck, the US/UK/Aus TV ppl would make a killing money/ratings-wise with an P2P/iTunes like
distribution without the bullshit delays and some easy way to unlock it/burn it.
Heck, the shows are going to get to viewers eyeballs one way or the other, and you'd think
something that benefits the studios bottom lines (rating/$) with them in the picture would
be better than out.
Global market whether they want to admit it or not, and as one quip by a brit I recall:
Yanks get Dr Who/Torchwood, and we get Sopranos and 24...fair trade.
Agreed, heck that 7month hiatus for BSG almost hurt, tho giving American Idol to the Aussies
first and us waiting a year sounds splendid.
Blame the delays? (Score:2)
An alternate headline could have been: "Australians chose to break the law rather than patiently await delayed entertainment."
AU more ads than anywhere in the world (Score:5, Interesting)
Helpful hint for non-USians to use iTunes (Score:5, Insightful)
I keep two iTunes accounts around, one for Japan and one for the US. Thankfully they don't do geotracking or anything, and they'll both happily integrate into the same iPod/iTunes/etc.
(Incidentally, the White House address:
The White House
1600 Pennsylvania Avenue NW
Washington, DC 20500
)
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Scheduling and generally crappy performance (Score:3)
Australian TV broadcasters tend to keep only loosely to broadcasting schedules, so don't expect to be able to just watch one show. You'd best start ten minutes beforehand. And, of course, everything is on long delays as compared to the US, and often broadcast with weird gaps and sometimes even out of order.
Of course, they might just cancel the show if there's a football or cricket match on. Sure, they knew it'd be on weeks in advance, but they didn't bother planning for it.
To top things off, the ads are incessant and REALLY BAD. We're talking mind-bogglingly awful patronising badly-made crap.
So ... why would anybody endure free to air TV in Australia? Until the Internet became a useful alternative, I just stopped watching it. Borrowed the odd DVD from friends, bought the odd DVD, watched more than the odd CD of AVIs, but that's about it - it just wasn't worth enduring the suck.
So, let me see - I could put up with that miserable crap, or I could otherwise obtain the show and get it:
I'd pay for HD downloads of shows - at decent prices and without that DRM crap. Unfortunately, most services don't provide access for Australians or are TV-like ("you'll watch what we want when we want you to"). They're also all DRM'd or at best streaming-only. The DRM is pointless, since the shows are ALREADY available on the 'net, so it deeply confuses me as to why they bother.
Sure, it's dodgy, but until the media industry is willing to move a bit and meet people in the middle, I'll continue to use the alternative means available.
If you can make a copy of my Ferrari (Score:4, Insightful)
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In regards to the article:
Shocking! People want something they can't get, so they bootleg it!?! How surprising!
Come on, this is obvious. But it is still wrong.
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Newsflash! The engineers already got paid while they were designing it.
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Don't hold your breath on me crying a river for advertisers who get slightly less expo
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But Ferrari would. You didn't pay the engineers to design the car and the machines to manufacture it, or the marketers to sell it.
No, Ferrari wouldn't care, so long as you didn't attempt to make copies to sell to others, misrepresenting the copies as Ferrari originals. You could even make copies and give them away and Ferrari wouldn't care much, as the cost of materials would drive you to bankruptcy very, very quickly. This is why the "car analogy" shit fails. "Content owners" only care about digital duplication because it exposes the fraud of their business, that they've made a living out of distributing information based upon an ar
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Sounds like DeBeers and their ongoing efforts to discredit "man made" diamonds as being somehow fake, despite them being indistinguishable from the "real thing."
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
Piracy isn't justified, but if the consumers want to see a TV show, they will. The question now is, are you going to sell it to them, or are they going to have no choice but to steal it?
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
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Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:5, Interesting)
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It's Illegal, but is it Wrong? (Score:3, Interesting)
They are not stealing it. I don't know about the law down under, but in the states, if you receive a copy from someone who made the copy, not only have you not stolen it, you also have not received stolen goods nor violated copyright law. Please explain this whole stealing business.
O.K. Let me come out and say this. I live in Australia and I regularly download TV episodes from the States, and the reason, you cannot trust Aussie TV stations. Many years ago in Australia a show was broadcast called American Gothic. it had received good reviews and Network Ten had the rights to it. So I watched the first episode, it seemed good, I watched the second episode, it was alright, I watched the third episode... And I had no idea what was going on. I spoke to friends in Oz, seeing if I h
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Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:4, Interesting)
I'd say that's pretty subjective. Personally, I believe that since I pay a lot of money for cable TV, I've 'paid my dues' with respect to gaining access to the media. I don't believe that advertisers have any moral right for me to watch their ads, and I can easily show that nobody in the entire chain loses money as a result of my downloading a TV show I've paid for access for, to watch at another time and place.
Within my ethic, then, I am acting in a perfectly ethical manner. I'm simply attaining content I've paid for from another source, using an internet connection I've paid for. Since, in my ethic, I am not obliged to watch advertising just becuase some company paid for it, downloading TV shows is completely ethical for me.
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We have the media corps not giving the consumers what they want.
and
We have the consumers taking what they want, but not from the media corps because they are not giving the consumers the choice to choose what they want, legally.
No one is really right in the situation, and thus it continues to perpetuate digital theft, and aggressive li
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
I mean, geez, who's running the television industry, the Dutch East India Pictures Association? Why is their incompetence the fault of the market? Why do we have laws to protect incompetence?
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Copyright violations ARE NOT theft.
a) wrong.
b) correct.
To elaborate, piracy is robbery, not theft, committed at sea. Stealing something from a ship without getting noticed in the act would not be piracy. Threatening the crew of a ship with a cutlass while helping yourself to their booty is piracy. Possibly rape, depending on your definition of "booty".
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As far as the term "piracy" goes, I guess the last time you checked that meaning was some time before the 1990's since it has been used colloquially within this context for well over a decade. If anybody misunderstood my po
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
I love how Slashdot has become the only place to come for incorrect car analogies.
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Yes, it is still probably illegal, but when or how it is released does have an effect on the legal/moral implications of downloading.
For example, if the show was NEVER aired in Australia, and is never made available for sale on DVD, then is it still illegal to copy? It would have no impact on earning potential, or?
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In a passive/aggressive kind of way piracy is a petition for change. No stealing it is not right, but mass piracy does convey the will of the masses. People want their entertainment, fresh and cheap. Maybe in order to supply that, quality will suffer, but that is what the demand is. If a legal unlimited media-crap P2P network that cost the same as cable TV, was made availible, there would be much less piracy.
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:4, Insightful)
This situation different. If the material is not released in any pay format, the content producer cannot possibly suffer any negative consequences by banned groups' piracy.
The question is different when there is delay as in this case and there are more questions to be answered. For example, do all shows make it to Australia or just a few? Why exactly are the content producers delaying so long? Is it actually the AU media that is standing in the way of distribution?
Answers to these kinds of questions could sway my thinking (remember, it is based on the potential for lost sales, not any "moral" argument posed by either side). If it is simply a choice by the content producers not to sell to AU, then I don't really have a problem because they would never have made a dime of Australia. I would think the answer though is more complicated. Politics? Protectionism?
They can't? (Score:3, Funny)
This situation different. If the material is not released in any pay format, the content producer cannot possibly suffer any negative consequences by banned groups' piracy.
Just because they haven't released it YET doesn't mean there's no potential harm. If they can't get the content in a timely fashion and everyone has already watched it off bt, then why bother releasing it late? You don't get to decide when and how they have to release the content.
The reality is that we have a global audience now. Aussies can get on the net (except for the Tassies that are still working on that whole fire thing) and want to talk with other fans of the show, but it's impossible for them
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And I recognize that fact in my original post. However, there are questions in my mind about whether it is wrong to illegally download shows when they are 17 months behind (note I make a distinction between wrong/illegal). I believe that illegal downloads have the potential to cut into profits. However, when a content producer makes a choice to not sell their product within a reasonable time, it seems somewhat unreasonable
Re:It's Still Wrong (Score:5, Insightful)
Okay, so listen up. If you can't afford a Ferrari, that is understandable. Ferraris are spendy little cars. But DVDs? They're perfectly affordable. So is basic cable. The problem here is not cost, not at any level -- Australia is an English-speaking country with similar obscenity laws and a excellent grasp of American culture. There should not be any costs associated with "preparing" episodes for export to Australia, neither for broadcast nor for DVD.
People are pirating it because there is no other way to get it. For some inexplicable reason, the industry seems to think that there is little to no demand for importing these shows, and so they've neglected to do so. It's sort of sad, really; the industry hasn't always been this way. For example, Cartoon Network started airing late-night anime precisely because polls showed that the biggest demographic of anime fansubbers and traders was also the demographic most likely to sit up late at night and watch cartoons. While this may not seem like a big deal to you, it was an amazingly awesome thing for anime lovers, and I think that Cartoon Network got it right.
Your "wait for it" method assumes that the show in question will in fact be aired and released in Australia regardless of consumer input. This is not true. There are many shows in markets which simply never arrive in places due to a lack of demand. For every anime imported, dubbed, edited, NTSCed, and aired or released in America and Canada, there are dozens that they predict just won't sell no matter how snazzy the packaging is. The only way to show that there is a serious demand is to pirate the shows.
The TV business is usually not as receptive to input as the Adult Swim guys. They don't understand much besides money and ratings. The only way to force them to speed up their importing schedules is to create economic impetus -- to pirate the shows that are being demanded. Anything else is futile.
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Luckily I am free of the series addiction that seem to get all my colleagues, but I must say that it is very hard for those watching the series on the national network to no
Brainwashed (Score:5, Insightful)
The people who began calling the process of copying files from the network w/o the permission of the "IP owner" "piracy" and "stealing" are the **AA parasites, and they add little to no value while conspiring to hold us all back technologically and for what? To keep milking a clearly obsolete business model.
Data wants to be free; we can only restrict distribution and charge $$ for it by making some artificial arrangement (which is always going to be defeatable). Even so if they would price their "IP" at a level the market is willing to bear and provide it in a format people find useful (vs restictive) most people would rather just buy it, it's easier.
These are some *reasons* piracy happens.
So the real excuse makers and criminals here are the **AA .
All this is not big news --- do try to keep up old man!
The post about copying the ferarri is spot on and should be modded up.
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Data wants to be free;
Oh god, not that crap again - data isnt tangible, it doesnt want to *be* anything, let alone free. Its owned by someone, someone controls access to information and the price is whatever that someone says. Data doesnt sit on a hard disk somewhere tunneling under the wire, it doesnt hide in supply trucks, it sits there until an external entity does something to it.
we can only restrict distribution and charge $$ for it by making some artificial arrangement (which is always going to be defeatable).
Be very careful, because the only reason you can leave your car in a car park with a reasonable expectation of it being there when you g
Re:Brainwashed (Score:5, Insightful)
Oh god, not that crap again - data isnt tangible, it doesnt want to *be* anything, let alone free.
Note that those with "nothing to lose but [their] chains" need not actually be confined by chains, nor does a comment of "I wouldn't want to be in your shoes" have anything to do with the relative merits of footwear.
"Information wants to be free" is a catch phrase, shorthand for the larger, more complex principle that the entire purpose of information is to be shared. But you knew that. You were just being an ass.
Re:It's Still Wrong -- NOPE! (Score:2)
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Just because something is illegal does not make it morally wrong. I download shows on bittorrent, and if I like a show, then I go and buy the DVD when it is later released. So, they are making more money from me than if I were watching them on TV. Everybody wins! I get the shows when I want them, the producers get to make money. Where's the crime or immoraility?
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I mean.. I'm pro-copyright in principle. I buy loads of stuff on itunes and I think there is a case for DRM (in that content producers should control what happens with their content) but ultimately, I'd rather download the TV shows now and buy the DVD's later than wait for Australian TV networks to get their shit together.
Ultimately downloading + DVD buying = Watching good TV shows earlier for me + Extra cash for the
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