Richard Masters
Illuminator
- Joined
- Dec 27, 2007
- Messages
- 3,031
I assume it's because he's a politician, it's an election year, and he can see which way public opinion is blowing.
That basically means it doesn't matter who is president.
I assume it's because he's a politician, it's an election year, and he can see which way public opinion is blowing.
It's not far off of 95%? This sounds like RIAA math which sounds almost exactly like police math when they do a drug bust and give a monetary value for what they seized. I don't believe either one and to be quite honest it makes the rest of their claims weaker by using those types of numbers without hard data to back it up.
iTunes alone has sold how many songs so far? Over 16 billion songs back in August of 2011. Even if iTunes were the only possible way on earth to get music (no CDs, no other online stores) that means that well over 300 billion songs have been stolen using your RIAA-ish math.
That's about 45 stolen songs for every person on the face of the earth. EVERY person on earth. From infants to the very old. From the tech savvy in Silicon Valley to someone who doesn't even have electricity much less internet access in the middle of a rain forest.
That doesn't even account for the legitimately free music that you can find out there or any of the other legitimate online music retailers.
Do you still want to stick with that 95%?
That basically means it doesn't matter who is president.
Are... are you being serious?
Yes I am being totally serious.
It's also used for more obscure, hard to find programming. Not all networks really feel the need to do online viewing.
And the, more or less, ignored little brother of piracy: fansubbing of foreign language programming. And, to another extent, all foreign programming. Say you got hooked on Bondi Vet while visiting Australia, as an example, you might find it hard to find new episodes aired here. For more obscure things even DVD copies of it might be hard to legally purchase overseas.
Try being a fan of obscure British television while living in the US. Most of the shows can't even be purchased with US region encoded DVDs.
I wish I could pay the BBC the tax or fee or whatever it is the Limey's pay and get access to all of their programming.
Anecdotal evidence and hypothetical arguments: not compelling.Well it's just not true. TV piracy is alive and well, including several well known "scene" groups. I know a few reasons for it:
I've known some "collectors" who like to keep shows, lots of shows, to watch at later dates (not all online tv show viewers have extensive back catalogs) or for offline viewing.
It's also used for more obscure, hard to find programming. Not all networks really feel the need to do online viewing.
And the, more or less, ignored little brother of piracy: fansubbing of foreign language programming. And, to another extent, all foreign programming. Say you got hooked on Bondi Vet while visiting Australia, as an example, you might find it hard to find new episodes aired here. For more obscure things even DVD copies of it might be hard to legally purchase overseas.
Anecdotal evidence and hypothetical arguments: not compelling.
...compelling that...? What, TV piracy exists? Really??
Seriously. I'm all for skepticism, but this is like asking for evidence of the Pope's Catholicism.
The UK is one of the easier nations to pick up material for (though, by volume, the top spot might be Japan - or Canada if you count all the CA made US shows), but, yeah, there are tough things to find. Online viewing is still tricky because it, too, is often region locked. If memory serves, BBC material is probably still not viewable in the States and Viacom isn't viewable in Europe (unless you use a proxy, but isn't that, too, skirting the laws?). In this one case, though, the more material comes to BBC America the easier it will be to buy - so, everyone who enjoys British television, get on the horn to BBC-America and tell them to stop airing old American shows like Star Trek: TNG (as much as I like that show) and put on more British made programming! You might get lucky with your PBS affiliate, but not always.
You can, of course, buy region free DVD players, but those aren't always easy to find and may not be as feature rich as the mainstream players.
Well it's just not true. TV piracy is alive and well, including several well known "scene" groups. I know a few reasons for it:
I've known some "collectors" who like to keep shows, lots of shows, to watch at later dates (not all online tv show viewers have extensive back catalogs) or for offline viewing.
It's also used for more obscure, hard to find programming. Not all networks really feel the need to do online viewing.
And the, more or less, ignored little brother of piracy: fansubbing of foreign language programming. And, to another extent, all foreign programming. Say you got hooked on Bondi Vet while visiting Australia, as an example, you might find it hard to find new episodes aired here. For more obscure things even DVD copies of it might be hard to legally purchase overseas.
My parents have BBC America, and all it plays is X-Files, ST:TNG and Top Gear. It's distressing.
Our PBS station here is pretty good about getting shows like Downton Abbey a year after it airs in the Britain. But unless it's something that is part of the Masterpiece Theater brand, we don't get it.
Buying a DVD from amazon.co.uk and then watching it in the US is also illegal. Can you believe that? Ugh.
Good news, but why are we hearing about this for the first time? Why couldn't Obama make his intentions clear before any such legislation were even proposed? Shouldn't it have been obvious where he stood on this issue? Only two days ago, it was basically a coin-flip.
The NDAA would've been passed regardless if it had the "controversial provision" or not. This bill on the other hand isn't a provision bundled inside a bill that's passed yearly. I don't see Obama signing this into law despite not vetoing the NDAA.And I'm sure he'll continue voicing his dissent as he signs the bill, just as he did with the national defense authorization act.
And I'm sure he'll continue voicing his dissent as he signs the bill, just as he did with the national defense authorization act.
In about 24 hours from now, wikipedia has decided to black out America for 24 hours as a protest against SOPA and PIPA. It will begin at midnight, Wednesday, Jan 18, EST.
http://wikimediafoundation.org/wiki/English_Wikipedia_anti-SOPA_blackout