Ed Price is Hungry

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Piracy: The Good, The Bad and The Indifferent (cont.)

The Indifferent

Thus far it appears to all intents and purposes that the battle against piracy has been fought with a profound lack of focus. Technology moves too fast for corporations to adapt their business models, so their plan of attack either constantly changes or is fragmented across several fronts. Either way, it’s largely been a losing battle because the biggest consumers of pirated goods are those who have the least interest in the ramifications.

Measures such as adding DRM to downloadable content are ultimately futile: any technological measure will always be hacked or cracked by die-hard pirates, enabling those who actively want to acquire the content for free to do so.  Conversely, the only effect something like DRM will have on people who are otherwise happy to pay for their downloads is either none or it’ll prove a discouraging inconvenience.

In between these two extremes is a majority who simply download from torrents or newsgroups because they can: because it’s easy and because it’s free. These are the ‘indifferent’ – they have no particular agenda, they just do what they do through habit and convenience. The problem facing copyright holders is best exemplified by this article: http://keithcalder.com/post/178866083/this-is-why-piracy-will-be-hard-to-stop. It reveals an attitude not borne from an active wish to buck the system, or even a righteous conviction that content should be free to all, but from a simple and naïve lack of awareness. Targeting these people with lawsuits won’t go very far towards recovering any (if there are any) lost earnings, but it does create bad press and runs the risk of ‘radicalising’ the indifferent – turning them and their peers into people with an agenda against the system, rather than casual downloaders. Nevertheless, this seems to be the latest anti-piracy tactic.

Recently Lily Allen has provided a superb example of how much confusion surrounds what is and isn’t piracy. While she publically espouses the evils of piracy it’s been pointed out that she’s also guilty of offering illegal downloads on her own site (comprising mix tapes of other people’s songs). There’s been enough said about Ms Allen that I don’t really need to add any comment, merely to highlight the fact that some people don’t even realise they’re doing anything wrong.

Posted:  January 11, 2010 at 09:43

Filed under: Miscilliness

Author: Justin (contact)

Last edit: January 11, 2010 - 09:48

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Ed Price Is Hungry by Justin Cawthorne is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Non-Commercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 Unported License.
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