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Sony camcorder crook

p2pnet.net News:- “We never had one like this before,” said a spokeswoman for the Lombard police.

One like what?

Like arresting someone wielding a loaded camcorder in a movie house.

And guess what kind, exactly?

A Sony Handycam, as advertised in the Windows Marketplace.

p2pnet has been consistently pointing out that Sony is at one and the same time a founding member of the Big Four Organized Music gang (which is trying to sue its own customers into buying DRM-infested, high-priced, low-quality product), a provider of spyware hidden in music CDs, one of the multi-billion-dollar Big Six movie studios which claim they’re being “ruined” by file sharers, and a major developer and manufacturer of easily concealed cameras it and its Hollywood brethren swear are being used to “devastate” them.

“Hollywood industry sources [read Hollywood’s MPAA, Motion Picture Association of America] say camcorders are used in 90 percent of the newly released movies that end up on the Internet and on black market DVDs,” says the Chicago Sun-Times, without clarifying how the studios arrive at such a precise figure.

If counterfeiting movies and then re-selling them is a crime, which it is, then isn’t making and marketing the tools used by the criminals to do so also a crime?

A hoary entertainment cartel claim, regurgitated in mainstream media reports to convince the general public that file sharing is evil, is that file sharing funds drug pushing.

If that’s so, doesn’t it follow that making devices which contribute to the drug menace not only in the US, but around the world, is criminal as well?

And if that’s the case, why aren’t Time Warner, Viacom, Fox, NBC Universal and Disney, the other five movies studios, not to mention international police forces and government administrations, all over Sony?

The Chicago Sun-Times has AMC Theaters spokesman Zach Blaze saying he wasn’t able to describe how the man was caught: “Because piracy is a security matter, we cannot discuss the specific measures AMC takes to fight piracy.”

“Last month, the FBI arrested 13 people in theaters in New York City as they were about to record ‘Superman Returns’,” adds the story, somehow failing to mention, in the interests of fair and balanced reporting, that Hollywood movie studio insiders are themselves significant providers of movies which ultimately show up on the p2p networks.

Also See:
Chicago Sun-Times - Police: Camcorder used in movie piracy, July 29, 2006
drug pushing - Anti-pirate blow-off lines ….., July 31, 2006
significant providers - Star Wars ‘Sith’ p2p uploader, January 26, 2006


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5 Responses to “Sony camcorder crook”

  1. Reader's Write Says:

    ANDREW HERRMANN Staff Reporter of the Chicago Sun Times wrote:

    1.
    “More types of people are getting involved in the crime, said Kaltman. For example, when “Mission Impossible 3″ opened earlier this year, a 50-year-old woman was caught with a camcorder at a Los Angeles screening, she said.”

    2.
    “Authorities are taking notice. Last month, the FBI arrested 13 people in theaters in New York City as they were about to record “Superman Returns.””

    Meaning what?
    That tourists who walk into theaters with a camcorder can be arrested? Nice way to kill tourism.

    That a blank tape will be used as FBI evidence that it was about to be used to comit a crime? Is this the same FBI who did nothing whn the 9/11 hijackers were taking flight training? Why not then arrest all buyers of blank dvd disks as they walk out the store? After all they could be acused of being “about to record” illegally too.

    Funny thing, while the USA seurity forces are arresting inocent persons in our case, the USA federal judge did not even slap the wrists of those that massively stole the music of my father and authorized the illegal manufacture of millions of records.

    Shame on ANDREW HERRMANN and the Chicago Sun Times for publishing nonsense ad not asking the right questions and not caring about the real important stories, such as ours.

    Rafael Venegas
    http://www.gvenegas.com

  2. Reader's Write Says:

    i mean what kind of priorities does the FBI have these days?

    i mean when we can afford to put TAX PAID FBI AGENTS into a movie theater, or outside in the lobby or whatever.

    i will never go to the theater again. I mean are they frisking people down now before they go into theaters?

    pretty soon they will have XRAY scanners you have to walk through before going into the theater. Some Total Recall bullshit.

  3. Reader's Write Says:

    Here is how it works:

    The cartels need a new news story to scare the copyright criminal kids…keep them nervous. The cartels tell the FBI to just check some patrons at a theater visited by many tourists. New York is the ideal place. Since many tourists walk about with camcordes, the fishing will be easy. Chance are good that at any theater some camcorder criminals will be cought.

  4. Reader's Write Says:

    Sadly this type of problem is not unique.

    Working in Japan as a reporter for a computer magazine, I often have a chance to talk with the hardware developers for many major firm, Sony being one.

    Living in Japan, I am not quite sure how much people know of Sony’s PC division “VAIO”, but here in Japan, Sony has a strong foothold in high-end desktop PC’s as well as Notebook computers. Sony VAIO developers pride themselves in creating some of the highest quality Multi-media PCs, with the most recent VAIOs (desktop and notebook) toting Blue Ray drives, and DVR capabilities.

    Yet, they have been faced with having to fight another branch of Sony, namely Sony Music, on the ability to play back Audio CDs on a PC (DRM anyone?). I remember talking with one of the developers of the VAIO series really angered, when they were told that their sister company had crippled their CD library, so it wouldn’t play on the PC.

    Of course this wasn’t the only people who were a more than a little “miffed”.

    Sony’s other divisions, Car navigation systems, CD walkmans, DVD players (not confirmed) customer’s were also stuck with not being able to play Sony’s CDs.

    Of course this DRM’d music caused enough complaints in Japan that the Major Record labels that were pushing these crippled CD (Sony Music, Avex Records etc…) were forced to go back to “real” CDs.

    BTW communication within the Sony hierarchy is close to nill, with one department creating a product that competes with a different department (Sony’s Playstation department sold a PS2 compatible DVR the “PSX”, when a different division was already selling a different DVR on the market “RokuRaku”. Eventually the PSX died).

    It will be interesting to see where this goes in the future

  5. Reader's Write Says:

    Sadly this type of problem is not unique.

    Working in Japan as a reporter for a computer magazine, I often have a chance to talk with the hardware developers for many major firm, Sony being one.

    Living in Japan, I am not quite sure how much people know of Sony’s PC division “VAIO”, but here in Japan, Sony has a strong foothold in high-end desktop PC’s as well as Notebook computers. Sony VAIO developers pride themselves in creating some of the highest quality Multi-media PCs, with the most recent VAIOs (desktop and notebook) toting Blue Ray drives, and DVR capabilities.

    Yet, they have been faced with having to fight another branch of Sony, namely Sony Music, on the ability to play back Audio CDs on a PC (DRM anyone?). I remember talking with one of the developers of the VAIO series really angered, when they were told that their sister company had crippled their CD library, so it wouldn’t play on the PC.

    Of course this wasn’t the only people who were a more than a little “miffed”.

    Sony’s other divisions, Car navigation systems, CD walkmans, DVD players (not confirmed) customer’s were also stuck with not being able to play Sony’s CDs.

    Of course this DRM’d music caused enough complaints in Japan that the Major Record labels that were pushing these crippled CD (Sony Music, Avex Records etc…) were forced to go back to “real” CDs.

    BTW communication within the Sony hierarchy is close to nill, with one department creating a product that competes with a different department (Sony’s Playstation department sold a PS2 compatible DVR the “PSX”, when a different division was already selling a different DVR on the market “RokuRaku”. Eventually the PSX died).

    It will be interesting to see where this goes in the future

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