Law ‘Time for U.S. Lawmakers to Discuss Pirate Site Blocking’

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The CreativeFuture coalition, which represents companies and individuals in the film, TV, music, and publishing industries, wants pirate site blocking put back on the political agenda. CEO Ruth Vitale finds it incomprehensible that an anti-piracy measure commonplace in other Western democracies is unavailable in the United States.

Over the years, copyright holders have tried a multitude of measures to curb online piracy, with varying levels of success.

Site blocking has emerged as one of the preferred solutions. While blocking measures are not bulletproof, the general idea is that they pose a large enough hurdle for casual pirates to choose legal options instead.

The blocking approach was very controversial at the start of the last decade, particularly in the U.S., but elsewhere it’s increasingly being normalized. Dozens of countries have legal or procedural options to request ISP blockades, which currently block in excess of 20,000 sites around the world.

The Star-Spangled Elephant​

American entertainment companies are the driving force behind most pro-blocking campaigns, which currently span all inhabited continents. This can be seen as a great achievement but there’s a star-spangled elephant that’s rarely brought up in site-blocking discussions; the lack of pirate site blocking in the U.S.

This isn’t a minor oversight as the United States actually harbors many millions of online pirates, more than any other country in the world. At the same time, however, the U.S. was also where the first major site-blocking legislation push failed more than a decade ago, following fierce protests from the public.

In recent years major rightsholders have slowly started to put the issue back on the political agenda. This week, CreativeFuture CEO Ruth Vitale wrote an op-ed for The Hill, calling for action.

CreativeFuture is an organization that represents the interests of over 500 copyright-reliant companies, as well as 300,000 individuals who work in the creative industries. The group is a fierce proponent of stricter copyright legislation including site blocking.

“Despite the long history of innovation in our creative communities, the U.S. is somehow lacking a commonsense and extremely effective anti-piracy tool: site blocking. And we need it now more than ever,” Vitale writes.

According to Vitale, it is “incomprehensible” that the U.S. sits on the sidelines while other countries are taking these “commonsense measures”.

No-Fault Injunctions​

Technically, U.S. courts can already order intermediaries to block sites, and that has happened in the past. However, the text of the law is not entirely clear on whether ISPs have to be held liable or not. This makes it a complicated legal issue.

Ideally, rightsholders would like to change the legal framework in the United States to allow for these orders on home turf. Concrete proposals are yet to be formed but according to Vitale, it’s clear that site-blocking schemes work.

With proper judicial oversight, courts should be able to require Internet providers to block foreign pirate sites, without holding the intermediaries liable.

“Such site blocking has proven to be an effective remedy against piracy in the more than 40 countries that have implemented court-adjudicated site blocking — including western democracies like Canada and the UK,” Vitale notes.

Western Democracy-Approved​

The earlier “SOPA” site-blocking legislation became stranded after massive public protests were supported by tech giants including Google and Wikipedia. The main fear was that blocking would eventually lead to over-blocking and other problems affecting core internet infrastructure.

According to Vitale, those fears were overblown and unproven. There have been few issues in countries where site-blocking is operational. In fact, several of these counties rank higher on core democratic values than the United States.

“Many of the countries that permit judicial site blocking, including Canada, Australia, and the UK, ranked higher than the U.S. in the Economist Intelligence Unit’s latest annual index of the state of democracy around the world.

“The takeaway? There is little, if any, evidence of a negative correlation between site blocking and freedom of expression,” Vitale adds.

Calling on Congress​

Opponents have pointed out that site blocking is a slippery slope that threatens free speech. In addition, the effectiveness of the measures are also in question, as they are easy to bypass or circumvent.

Vitale counters the latter by pointing to research that shows how site blocking can decrease piracy and increase legal consumption. It may not be perfect, but that’s besides the point.

“It is time for these outdated arguments against commonsense anti-piracy tools to stop. Protecting the creative industries has always been a bipartisan issue, and I hope that members of Congress on both sides of the aisle will soon be ready to discuss site blocking legislation,” Vitale concludes.

The fact that the headline of Vitale’s op-ed avoids the term ‘site blocking’ suggests that sensitivities remain. At this point, however, completely ignoring the site blocking issue is becoming increasingly uncomfortable.

There is some movement already, however. US Senator Thom Tillis previously asked the public to share their views on site blocking. This triggered unanimous support from the Motion Picture Association, but there was plenty of opposition too, as always.
 
To be Honest Modern day television and media is so horrible I wouldn't even Pirate it. Imagine making media so political, woke and gay that people won't even steal it. Great buisness model and they can cover it up with inflation because hey the new Blue furry movie beat records failing to explain a familly of 3 to see would cost a Benjamin.
 
To quote gaben,
One thing that we have learned is that piracy is not a pricing issue. It’s a service issue. The easiest way to stop piracy is not by putting antipiracy technology to work. It’s by giving those people a service that’s better than what they’re receiving from the pirates.
Steam works because its more convenient than pirating. Netflix ten years ago was successful because it was easier than pirating. Everything people wanted to watch was in one place. Now with content being scattered to several services and those same ones having their own exclusives, pirating makes sense.

The MPAA et al won't take down piracy. Once they kill one site, another three will pop up to replace it. Its a hydra with hundreds of heads.
 
To quote gaben,

Steam works because its more convenient than pirating. Netflix ten years ago was successful because it was easier than pirating. Everything people wanted to watch was in one place. Now with content being scattered to several services and those same ones having their own exclusives, pirating makes sense.

The MPAA et al won't take down piracy. Once they kill one site, another three will pop up to replace it. Its a hydra will hundreds of heads.
OG Netflix worked for one reason: no one in the industry thought it would, so they let Netflix host it for a song. Now that it's been proven, every empty suit wants their cut, thus obliterating the convenience streaming once provided.
The fact that most of what's being produced today is dogshit is a secondary concern.
 
To anyone that says that piracy prevents hard working people getting their money, take a fucking look at the industry, look me in the face and say that these mfs are running out of money anytime soon?

And if you are referring to the pleb workers, then piracy has nothing to do with their bottom line, instead it has to do with the comically rich that write their cheap checks and throw a tantrum saying that piracy will be the "end of this hard working industry"

Fuck off, you corrupt fucktards, go rape another minor like you always do once you are grumpy, you immoral fucks.
 
To anyone that says that piracy prevents hard working people getting their money, take a fucking look at the industry, look me in the face and say that these mfs are running out of money anytime soon?

And if you are referring to the pleb workers, then piracy has nothing to do with their bottom line, instead it has to do with the comically rich that write their cheap checks and throw a tantrum saying that piracy will be the "end of this hard working industry"

Fuck off, you corrupt fucktards, go rape another minor like you always do once you are grumpy, you immoral fucks.
I feal the same way to an extent. Back in the day you bought a VHS or a DVD and you watched it 100 times with your familly or friends. The model today and they want ever more is that every time you watch there IP the bean counters will get a cut, Fuck that indeed!

I still have VHS and DVD's recorded from TV and telivision channels. And honestly Pirating can help sell good products. when word got out about a good movie I used to get a CAM leak in shit quality but if the movie was good go out and buy it. Now days even if there is a great movie that I see and want to own I won't even buy it first hand. I goto a second hand Record store DVD store and buy it used . They can suck my dick for all the shit they ruined remaking in the last 10+ years.
 
Stopping piracy (dubious) just puts more marginal customers and thus cultural power out of reach.

The value of media is making your ideas ubiquitous. It’s more valuable to put your ideas into the minds of even your enemies, than to make a few bucks.

I assume it’s the dumber Jews pushing for this.
 
To anyone that says that piracy prevents hard working people getting their money, take a fucking look at the industry, look me in the face and say that these mfs are running out of money anytime soon?
This is a weak argument. Piracy isn't theft, but it is copyright infringement. And it's accessing the work of other people without paying for it. No matter how rich they are, that's not morally defensible. It's not morally okay to steal from Walmart just because they're huge and wealthy as a chain.

That said, I don't give a shit. I'm going to do it anyway, because I care more about art and seeing as much of it as I can than I do rewarding the assholes who run Hollywood. They outright hate me for not being a dindu-worshipping tranny-fellating shitlib, so fuck them.
 
>pass law to block websites pirating content
>includes copyrighted content
>now any and all DMCAs have the full immediacy of the U.S. federal government blocking your website behind them
>internet dies
Lowercase-I internet will become even more like TV. YouTube, Facebook, etc. can adapt, smaller sites will get the boot.

Except if we just get national DNS blocking like some other countries do, that can be worked around.
 
OG Netflix worked for one reason: no one in the industry thought it would, so they let Netflix host it for a song. Now that it's been proven, every empty suit wants their cut, thus obliterating the convenience streaming once provided.
The fact that most of what's being produced today is dogshit is a secondary concern.
I think I remember that the first time Netflix started making their originals on the platform, it was more of a novelty than anything else, not their main bread and butter since everything else has been delisted as contracts expired and moved off-site.

The suits also have fanned the flames of piracy by nuking or editing "problematic" episodes or other content.
 
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