Canada’s Captain Copyright
p2pnet news view | Kids & Kartels:- Captain Copyright represents an effort by Access Copyright to cloud the minds of Canadian children and teachers.
Specious ‘education’ programs are now de rigueur around the world for the entertainment and software cartels, and the Captain Copyright cartoon would be totally ridiculous were it not so alarming.
Because the chances are, it’ll be touted enthusiastically by the mainstream media and picked up by gullible teachers and educational authorities, as have other ‘educational’ efforts in the past.
“Keep checking back here for more activities for you to do, stuff that can help you with homework your teacher might give you, games you can play, and much, much more,” says the site.
IP homework? Entirely possible.
In Hong Kong, where scouts now have ‘earn’ Intellectual Property Merit Badges, the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) has managed to dragoon the government into using 200,000 children as Hollywood copyright spies.
And, “In order to promote respect of intellectual property rights (IPRs) and the World Intellectual Property Day, set on April 26 annually, the Intellectual Property Department and the Hong Kong Scout Association (HKSA) today (April 23) held the ‘Respect for Intellectual Property Rights Fun Fair’ at Kowloon Park Piazza,” says a Hong Kong government press statement.
“But lately, it has also been trying to send a different message: we care about families, too.”
The BSA, owned by the likes of Microsoft and Apple, is trying to spam surfers with a bizarre online version of Cluedo as, “part of its campaign to stamp out software piracy”.
In the US, the Hollywood owned the MPAA (Motion Picture Association of America) is promoting Copyright Awareness Week and it’s, “partnering” with “other groups” to, “promote education of students about the history and importance of copyright laws”.
And Alberto Gonzales, America’s self-described Top Cop, was recently part of a deeply cynical dog-and-pony show set up by the Big Four record labels and Big Six movie studios.
These propaganda blitzes go on. And on. And on. Like a dripping tap. Until eventually, they�re accepted as reality.
“While my first reaction to the [Captain Copyright] site was that it is just silly, as I dug deeper, I now find it shameful,” says professor Michael Geist. “These materials, targeting kids as young as six years old, misrepresents many issues and proposes classroom activities that are offensive.”
But they’re nothing new. Rather, they’re yet another manifestation of a horror p2pnet has been highlighting ever since it went online, and they’re among the reasons why my wife, Liz, and I home-school our daughter, Emma, who’s now almost 10.
If you’d like to contact Captain Copyright, you can email him here.
Meanwhile, below is an item we ran almost a year ago. >>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>>
They’re brainwashing YOUR child
By Jon Newton – p2pnet.net
A very dark, very frightening corporate scheme is being carefully orchestrated around the world with the full and active support and cooperation of governments and public administrations.
The inter-linked, multi-national corporations are slowly and surely brainwashing our children. And many of you – especially if you’re teachers or are involved in institutions administering to children – are helping.
As a parent, do you really think copyright law should be an integral part of your child�s education, or the subject for a scouting merit badge? Should it be the focus of ‘educational’ pamphlets distributed by Childnet? And should your son or daughter be thinking up names for a ridiculous “copyright crusading ferret”?The answer is, of course, that IP law has a legitimate place only in a law school or special interest classes. But the software, movie studio and recording industries are using publicly funded schools and teaching staffs and institutions around the world to try to make you believe that protecting industry product is of primary importance to you and your children.
And carrying the corporate message that young children need to be subjected to intensive indoctrination on copyright laws are the same on- and offline newspapers, magazine and radio and tv stations that depend almost wholly on corporate advertising cash and goodwill to survive.
They’re brainwashing our children
New technologies always threaten the old and their owners inevitably do everything they can to maintain the status quo, up to and including using the media of the day to hammer their messages home. And that’s exactly what�s happening now.
The entertainment and software cartels, principally, are trying desperately to stay afloat, using outdated business models from the 1970s in the digital 21st century. They’ve lost control of their consumer bases and to regain it, they’re painting everyone who uses non-corporate p2p applications to download digital files, and the companies which make them, as hard-core criminals.
As the Live8 shows proved, the labels could easily and effectively harness p2p power, using it to rope in hundreds of millions of paying file-sharers and their discretionary dollars.
Instead, to achieve the same end, our children are being force-fed warped values through schools and organizations such as the scouting movement and Childnet International under the pretext of ‘education’.
The BSA (Business Software Alliance) is a major trade group owned by such heavyweights as Microsoft and Adobe and they’re using it to weasel their way into your child’s head with a “copyright-crusading ferret” which “teaches tech-savvy kids about cyber ethics”.
For cyber-ethics read copyright law.
Even the FCC is in on it. And the aim of all of these apparently separate, but in reality closely interlinked, entities is to firmly implant industry compliant behaviour patterns and attitudes into kids’ brains while they’re still young and highly impressionable.
Pliable ‘consumers’
Over time, say industry strategists, using schools as pre-marketing units will become accepted practice and properly obedient cash-cows will replace the people who, thanks to the emergence of the Net and blogs, are for the moment showing alarming tendencies to think for themselves and to make their own decisions about what they want and don’t want, and to use online outlets which aren’t corporate-owned or controlled.
Clearly, this must stop, say the corporate leaders. How better than to indoctrinate ‘consumers’ while they’re still at school and while they’re still relatively uninformed and, therefore, pliable?
No need to worry about in-depth media cooperation because the landscape is “very, very heavily dominated” by a tiny handful of “gigantic media transnational media corporations,” says Mark Crispin Miller, the most important being Disney, Time Warner, Viacom, the News Corporation and Universal-Vivendi.
Viacom owns, among other important media entities, MTV. And MTV, in turn, now owns NeoPets.
Advertisers spend about $15 billion a year, targeting kids through sites like NeoPets which has product advertising cleverly hidden in games and links to websites run by McDonald’s, General Mills and Procter & Gamble. Other NeoPets ‘consumer’ clients include Carl’s Jr, Hasbro, Hershey, Kellogg’s, Kraft Foods / Nabisco, LEGO, Mattel, Nestl�, Pepperidge Farm, Thinkway Toys and Wrigley.
More than 40% of the NeoPets �audience� is under the age of 13.
America’s Children Now says it’s a “national organization for people who care about children and want to ensure that they are the top public policy priority”. But its chairwoman, Jane Gardner, is a marketing consultant, and its vice chairman, Peter D. Bewley, is the Clorox Company’s senior vp, general counsel and secretary. On the board are the likes of Neal Baer, Wolf Films/Universal Television’s ‘Law & Order: Special Victims Unit’ executive producer and Suzanne Nora Johnson, vice chairwoman, Goldman, Sachs & Co.
‘Breaking the law for years’
“Gina Harkell was, putting the final touches to her third CD when the full weight of the music industry came crashing through her letter box,”said Britain’s prestigious The Times recently.
“It was a legal document,” she recalls. “There were all these huge names – 14 of them – Universal, Polydor, EMI, Capitol, Virgin, Mercury, Sony � versus, well, me, my partner, but principally my son.
“A hundred miles away, at about the same time, Richard French, a respectable financial adviser, was calling his wife, Louise, with the news that he and his two young children had apparently been breaking the law for years, and they hadn’t even known it. If they wanted to keep out of the courts, he told her, they would have to pay 2,500 pounds.
“In fact, all over the country on that day in mid-April, the opening of dull white envelopes elicited gasps of astonishment and despair among parents as they found out that they – usually because of their children – had become the first in Britain to be hit by a clampdown on internet music piracy. After losing sales amounting to some 300 million pounds because of music-sharing software, the industry had decided it could take no more; there was no option but to use the courts.”
The industry could “take no more”. And the article goes on and on in this vein, treating the 300 million pound claim as though it’s based on reality and as though it comes from credible sources.
And behind this victimization of children and their parents in the UK is the BPI (British Phonographic Industry), owned by the members of the Big Four record label cartel with their direct and indirect associations with the major print and electronic media outlets.
The BPI is also a leader in the UK government backed move to ‘educate’ British school children during class time and at tax-payer expense. And the many other cartel owned and funded organizations such as the RIAA, CRIA, JRIA, ARIA, IFPI, and etcetera, also feature the creation and implementation of ‘child education’ programs in their mandates.
‘Consumer’ of tomorrow
Our daughter, Emma, is now almost nine. She went to kindergarten but ever since, we’ve home-schooled her.
And we thank God we made that decision.
To some extent, we’ve been able to filter the outside world for her, which isn’t to say she’s cloistered. She has, for example, a room almost filled with Barbies and she’s exposed to TV advertising aimed at kids every time she tunes into one of her favourite TV programs during the two-hours-a-day she’s allowed to watch.
But thankfully, the kind of materialistic, pernicious garbage now being fed to kids in schools (which these days can be counted as media outlets of the third kind) doesn’t reach her.
We hope she’ll grow up having a value system garnered not only from us, but also from other people with independent mindsets, as well as from the books she chooses to read, from the music she chooses to listen to and from the movies she chooses to watch, none of them suggested by the cartels.
Although Emma will make make up her own mind about what’s good for her, and what’s bad, where she’ll spend her money, and when, sadly, she’s part of a small minority.
But it needn’t be that way if you and your teachers love and care about our children enough to take back control of what happens to them, what they’re taught and by whom.
If you don’t, the corporations, of which Hollywood is only the most visible, will.
Digg this story.
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June 1st, 2006 at 5:30 pm
Cool! I am going to make little figures of Captain Copyright and sell them on the streets. Of course, I am not asking for permission, or getting any licenses. I will however change the “C” for “P2P”.
June 1st, 2006 at 6:31 pm
Sick Sad World
June 2nd, 2006 at 12:01 am
This troll post is the same as, or along the lines of, similar rants found elsewhere and has therefore been deleted.
NMFR means No More Free Rides
Cheers!
June 2nd, 2006 at 1:18 am
Looks like there is a necessity of an “anti-site” that would explain how corporate propaganda works. Target audience – the same as the one targeted by captaincopyright or similar sites.
June 2nd, 2006 at 1:46 am
Most kids would laugh at this when it comes to there school. Just say no to drugs was a big failure (though a great idea and worthy cause) So how sucessful does the entertainment mafia cartel think it’ll be trying to convince the youngesters it’s a no no.
Rick
June 2nd, 2006 at 3:04 am
I would personally like to say, “Thank you Jon” for removing the troll posts. I’m a long term member here and enjoy both the site and it’s contents. I’ve nothing against constructive criticsim and respect that for the most part those with decent comments pro or con stand.
The trolls posts’ were annoying. I haven’t responded but to one of “it’s” posts and with the note I would not again. I don’t believe in feeding trolls. It’s one thing to say don’t feed them but somehow it seems that a lot of members just could not resist baiting and flaming. It takes way from the subject matter in discussion and is a large time waster with no way to filter them out prior to opening the post.
Good riddence I say!
June 2nd, 2006 at 7:23 am
Captain c*nt more like!
June 2nd, 2006 at 12:37 pm
Well… IN a way I think its good to teach kids how to obtain permission of copyright material from an author of a magazine or the photographer of a picture etc. Its a good educational excersize. But for kids in high school. NOT for kids aged 5 to 12, this is absolutely ridiculus, Kids that age don’t know right from wrong, they just “do it” regardless.
Is Captain Copyright going to show them how illegal it is when the dentist gives them that coloring page of bugs bunny downloaded and printed from the internet?
We may as well have chalk-boards sponsored by pepsi-cola with big neon lights flashing drink pepsi in the class room too.
I see it as capitolizing on 6 year olds.
Anyhow i have to go now and print off that bugs bunny picture for my 6 yrs old. Or maybe i should start now and say Captain Copyright doesn’t want me to print that stolen pic. She will see how villianous C.C. is after 2 refusals of bugs bunny and mickey mouse coloring pages.
Absolutely ridiculous…. it equates to nother other than propaganda aimed directly at young children.
June 2nd, 2006 at 2:13 pm
Just read this, err the kids thought it just naff. Alll did thought is got them nagging at me to start download that song they heared on radio. Yes they forgot about this junky tune on radio untill they read that and then wanted to download it.
So that proves one thing they dont have clue, in fact they are promiting what they dont want to happen. Kids of 10 are no as dum as they are!
June 2nd, 2006 at 5:23 pm
i am very sad to read this,big mafia cartel are using are schools and teachers to educate are children telling them to buy all of there CORPORATE CRAP because they need to have more of your money…..
See children,think for yourself.The only thing they want is your MONEYYYYYYYYY.
GO to H*ll CAPTAIN CRAP
June 2nd, 2006 at 5:33 pm
We need a Captain P2P who does Captain Copyright’s wife, while Captain CR’s not home.
June 2nd, 2006 at 6:08 pm
“We may as well have chalk-boards sponsored by pepsi-cola with big neon lights flashing drink pepsi in the class room too.”
In a lot of US school districts it’s just about that bad. Pepsico fast food franchises supplying branded “food” and of course, soft drinks in the lunchrooms. Logos & high fructose corn syrup abound.
BTW, Pepsi no worse than the others, just an easy target.
June 2nd, 2006 at 6:14 pm
That is a funny idea, there’s a handfull of “coloring book” illustrations on the “Captain Contemptible” web site that would be a great place to start for the Photoshop crowd.
June 2nd, 2006 at 6:44 pm
Let’s all just use TOR and Privoxy from now on!
June 2nd, 2006 at 7:00 pm
Ive seen this guys posts a couple of times.
June 2nd, 2006 at 7:21 pm
read this:
http://www.cippic.ca/en/faqs-resources/online-anonymity/
if you are non-canadian, I don’t know.
What was the nature of the request? they have to supplt this to you by law (in canada).
What should I do if I receive notice that my ISP has received a motion for a court order to disclose my personal information? What are my rights of action?
First you should decide whether you wish to fight to protect your identity, Internet usage records, or whatever else is being sought. You should ask your ISP for a copy of the motion if they haven’t already provided one. If you decide to fight it, you should inform the ISP immediately and, if necessary, request that it ask the court to delay arguments on the motion in order to give you time to find a lawyer.
all on the above link.
This is a joke right??
June 2nd, 2006 at 7:25 pm
This is the troll stirring up more shit right?
June 2nd, 2006 at 7:35 pm
I would think this is the troll stirring it up again. Why post something like that in public and not an Email to jon? He is very reachable.
June 3rd, 2006 at 12:11 am
Propaganda comic strips?
Propaganda stickers?
Propaganda discussions?
Propaganda coloring books?
Propaganda strips portraying copyright violators as vampires or werewolves (like nazi’s were portraid during WW-II).
Capt’n CR arresting music stealers?
…and so forth.
That crap sticks in a kids mind…
A little while ago i went to the war museum in Ottawa. They had an exhibit all about propaganda. How it works, the effects, the age brackets of target on and on… if anyone is in that area, Its a must see. Don’t know if its an all summer long thing, or if its online at their web site… worth a look.
Then you will see how you can target kids even younger than 5.
June 3rd, 2006 at 2:03 am
i agree with that. but that’s NOT what i’m referring to.
i’m talking about the classroom exercises detailed here:
http://p2pnet.net/story/8945
“Activity Four, which provides a situational exercise, is designed to teach kids about the limits of copyright law. The kids are to be asked about a music download and the printing of a class exercise in a textbook.
Teachers are advised in the Line Master that “a person can download a song off the Internet where they pay for it or get permission” and “a person cannot copy a song that they have legally downloaded for someone else.” There is no mention of private copying which may cover the first example. In the second example, it is true that you cannot private copy for someone else, but that person can make their own private copy. The lesson continues by stating that “permission is needed to reproduce all of the work that you have written.”
Activity Two seeks to build respect for the copyright symbol by asking the grade one students to role play by seeking copyright permission and to sell their copyright work. Activity Three asks the students to picture a world without copyright and to discuss whether their favourite book or song would still be created. Activity Six celebrates creativity by having the class create a group book with an additional page for the copyright notice. Activity Seven envisions grade one students creating their own copyright permission form.
June 3rd, 2006 at 2:33 am
oh i misunderstood… sorry!
Yes, you are 100% right there.
June 4th, 2006 at 10:32 pm
I can barely follow that crap and i’m over 40
June 5th, 2006 at 6:48 pm
This is the mail I sent to Cap CR. Sorry for my bad English
Hello.
First of all, let me say that I am a musician. As a musician, I have seen with my own eyes the way that record labels STEAL from us, impose draconian conditions on us, squeze the shit out of us, actually keep more then 90% of the money they make from the sales, and keep the rights of the music that I HAVE WRITTEN AND RECORDED MYSELF.
Thus, I have not purchased a single song for years already, and I am always telling all my friends and family to do the same. We musicians get the money from the gigs, not the record companies, so when I download my music and use the money saved to go to the gig I am making sure that the musician is getting what he/she should get from me for listening to his/her music.
Obviously I am explaining this to the kids, and I am also explaining them the way record labels LIE to them about copyrights and all that, using the tools provided to them by the government, who, as usual, cares about the rich folks, not normal citizens. Kids may be kids, but they are not stupid at all, do not underestimate them. They won´t get fooled by your stupid cartoon if an adult is around to tell them the TRUTH.
Thank God, now with technologies getting cheaper, many musicians are able to produce their stuff at home and distribute it for free over the internet. Soon all your efforts are going to be as laughable as Captain Copyright.
Finally, let me just say that there is now way you can stop this file sharing thing, not a single way, the same way many ppl keep smoking pot after so many years of prohibition, (as an example). Adapt to the new times or perish.
Yours, Dave.
Pd: Yes, I gave you my real name, and I wrote to you from my work mail so you can easily locate me. I download music. So what?