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Subject: [IP] Foiling Cinema Pirates
------ Forwarded Message From: Richard Forno <rforno@infowarrior.org> Date: Sat, 19 Apr 2003 10:12:04 -0400 To: Dave Farber <dave@farber.net> Subject: Foiling Cinema Pirates I love the note about handheld PCs. So you're telling me that someone can't come from work straight into the theater? Metal detectors? Geez. I'll say it again. These Hollywood folks are absolutely crazy....even if someone records off-the-screen on a grainly 640x480 video from a Palm, does that *really* make people not want to go see it in widescreen format with THX surround sound and vibrations under the seat?? Come on......I saw a piss-poor MPEG of Star Wars Episode 2 before it came to the theater, but still paid to see the flick 3 times with friends in the theater. Organized piracy, piracy from insiders, etc. is a threat to profits...college kids or someone with a PalmPilot are not. Again, Hollywood presumes everyone a criminal until they can be proven one in a court of law. Guilty until presumed guiltier. I guess that's part of the current American philosophy of "pre-emption" of everything that *might* be evil or bad.... Rick Infowarrior.org Foiling Cinema Pirates LOS ANGELES, April 18, 2003 http://www.cbsnews.com/stories/2003/04/18/tech/printable550005.shtml Hollywood sends enforcers with night-vision goggles into movie theaters and puts metal detectors outside advance screening rooms, but still the industry can't stop pirates from recording films and selling illegal copies before their theatrical debuts. The problem is that the pirates are adopting ever more sophisticated technology, using tiny camcorders in purses and digital recorders about the size of a fountain pen. Some handheld computers "have an attachment that can record up to 122 minutes," said Jeffrey Godsick, executive vice president of marketing at 20th Century Fox. "Well, that's a whole movie in many cases. You can take the attachment and run it through a small hole in a tie or a shirt." < snip > This technology would be a major improvement over the industry's current measures of trying to block pirate recorders, including night-vision goggles and metal detectors. Some of the piracy is an inside job: A pirate bribes a projectionist to set up a tripod in the projection booth. < snip > ------ End of Forwarded Message ------------------------------------- To manage your subscription, go to http://v2.listbox.com/member/?listname=ip Archives at: http://www.interesting-people.org/archives/interesting-people/
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