💼 Careercow Joe Cracker / Robert C. McGee

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Well, technically J.K. Rowling published a few more books after the last Harry Potter book. I can't say they're as popular as her main books, but I've heard rumors of another Rowling movie. I don't think it's true, sadly.

As for Twilight, well, let's just leave it at THANK GOD they're not making more.
Yea the tales of beetle bard, which was referenced in the 7th movies
 
You're just lazy and don't want to work.

I'm not lazy, the fact I've done all I have done so far is proof I'm not lazy from Unknown to Ziggy I've been a busy bee. I'm guessing you thought Unknown wasn't copyrighted at all you bet allot of money on that but you where proven wrong. Do you feel the pressure to settle getting stronger?
 
I can put my copy of Jackass the movie in my BD-RW Drive but I can't copy it. Paramount put up only a few million to make the movie which is pennies to them but a fortune to me. I know it's been pirated before because file sharing sites like Morphious and Napster where big back then plus it's only a 40mb encryption on a DVD and 128mb encryption on Blu-Ray and I don't see how it can be snake oil.

I got curious, so I went to AACS LA website. AACS is the DRM system used in Blu-Ray, and if you want to produce copy-protected content, you need to sign the contracts and pay the fees they're asking. I looked at the Interim Agreement which (as far as I gather) is supposed to be the first step in becoming a full licensor. Exhibit B says that you need to pay $15,000 per year to become a AACS Licensed Content Producer.

Meanwhile, while you're apparently unable to work out how to download BackupBluRay (I haven't personally bothered to rip Blu-Rays so I had completely forgotten AACS has been busted since 2007), anyone can walk in their favourite BitTorrent site and slurp the Jackass movie at full BR resolution without paying a dime.
Or - here's the fun part - any other Blu-Ray film.

I know, I know, $15,000 is a drop in a bucket for a major company like Paramount, but one can still wonder what else they could have paid for with that money. They clearly wasted money on something that doesn't actually prevent people from pirating their films, and in the age of perfect digital copies, the redistributing pirates either.

Oh, and how are you going to pay the $15,000 fee? I know, as an indie producer it's probably far more reasonable to contact a media manufacturer that has already licensed the technology and would be willing to produce Blu-Rays... for a modest, no doubt negotiable fee. A significant portion of which goes toward that company's AACS licencing bill. (No, they're not suckers for licencing AACS. They figured that they can profit from suckers who think copy protection is worth wasting money on. The whole scam is set up so that everyone profits!)
All the while you know that it's going to hit BitTorrents a week later, whether you buy that service or not.

Tell me this isn't snake oil.
 
I got curious, so I went to AACS LA website. AACS is the DRM system used in Blu-Ray, and if you want to produce copy-protected content, you need to sign the contracts and pay the fees they're asking. I looked at the Interim Agreement which (as far as I gather) is supposed to be the first step in becoming a full licensor. Exhibit B says that you need to pay $15,000 per year to become a AACS Licensed Content Producer.

Meanwhile, while you're apparently unable to work out how to download BackupBluRay (I haven't personally bothered to rip Blu-Rays so I had completely forgotten AACS has been busted since 2007), anyone can walk in their favourite BitTorrent site and slurp the Jackass movie at full BR resolution without paying a dime.
Or - here's the fun part - any other Blu-Ray film.

I know, I know, $15,000 is a drop in a bucket for a major company like Paramount, but one can still wonder what else they could have paid for with that money. They clearly wasted money on something that doesn't actually prevent people from pirating their films, and in the age of perfect digital copies, the redistributing pirates either.

Oh, and how are you going to pay the $15,000 fee? I know, as an indie producer it's probably far more reasonable to contact a media manufacturer that has already licensed the technology and would be willing to produce Blu-Rays... for a modest, no doubt negotiable fee. A significant portion of which goes toward that company's AACS licencing bill. (No, they're not suckers for licencing AACS. They figured that they can profit from suckers who think copy protection is worth wasting money on. The whole scam is set up so that everyone profits!)
All the while you know that it's going to hit BitTorrents a week later, whether you buy that service or not.

Tell me this isn't snake oil.

I've been to allot of torrent sites looking for movies and they want you to pay money to get in, if people are as stubborn as you say they are they ain't gonna pay ex amount just to download full HD quality video.

Plus they are constantly checking those sites themselves and so is the FBI's anti-piracy unit. Vivid entertainment is notorious for going after sites that illegally stream there stuff. CNBC did a hole special on the porn industry and on camera they had a guy at the computer and he's paid to monitor porn video and torrent sites.

Some guy could be pirating James Cameron's next movie and he would still make $2 billion in ticket sales. I have to go after the pirates myself so far I've beaten all of them because where DRM fails, then there's always plan B and you know what that is.
 
Have you had any successful legal actions against pirates?
 
Were any of these actual legal actions, or just Youtube flagging?
 
I don't know what plan B is. :(

Federal Bureau of Investigation

Were any of these actual legal actions, or just Youtube flagging?

The man in Florida already had several parties suing him, never found out the full details but Hollywood movies and few Indies Unknown just happen to be in the pile

The website was a simpler deal, a woman put it up as an mp4 download

And a simple google search turned this thread and the youtube posting.
 
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The man in Florida already had several parties suing him, never found out the full details but Hollywood movies and few Indies Unknown just happen to be in the pile

The website was a simpler deal, a woman put it up as an mp4 download

And a simple google search turned this thread and the youtube posting.

I meant what actions did you take directly against them
 
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