EU to Ban Pirates from the Internet?

Some of you may be aware of the "three strikes" plan recently approved in France, where suspected copyright infringers are liable to be banned from the internet for up to a year if they persist after two warnings, and failed efforts to push similar laws across the entire EU a few months back.

Not content to be rebuffed, proponents of the laws have put them back on the table in Brussels, where they were set to be voted on yesterday. No news seems to be available online yet about how it went (any Europeans visitors have details on that?). 

Is banning pirates from the internet going too far, or is it justified? [more] It seems that no amount of DRM ever deters them for long, so perhaps cutting them off from their sources entirely would be the solution to large-scale piracy. Or maybe it just might drive them underground, and result in innocent users being banned on suspicions only. What do you guys think? Could this possibly work, or will it only make matters worse?

983,145 views 381 replies
Reply #1 Top
Eh, I won't miss them. ;) If they are driven underground there is less piracy and I don't really believe in innocent users. Dumb ones maybe, but not innocent. :)
Reply #2 Top
in all honesty, it would be damn near impossible to enforce, considering the amount of wireless internet devices that are out there. besides, Warez and DDL sites can be taken down, but torrents and P2P apps are a lot harder to police. besides, it's a little late to stop music piracy now, anyway. It'd be interesting to see how this worked if it gets passed
Reply #3 Top
Well... for that to happen, you're implying that various national governments have the right to control access and content on-line. Who exactly "Owns" the internet anyways? And isn't it closer to a private enterprise (AT&T runs most of the servers in the united states) then a part of national communications infrastructure? Who has the right to say who stays on and who doesn't? That's like sewing a mans mouth shut so he can't speak.
Reply #4 Top
Well... for that to happen, you're implying that various national governments have the right to control access and content on-line.


Um, they do. Not necessarily content, but certainly access. If the government has the right to deny you access to your children should you be found abusing them (let alone your very freedom, by throwing you in jail), they certainly can deny you the right to access the internet if you are found committing crimes on it.

The Internet is not a magical, mystical construct; it is a bunch of computers that live somewhere connected by various cables. Access to the internet is tied into your house and the various wireless devices that you use. Even wireless devices are short-range, ultimately going to "nearby" landlines that talk to the actual internet. Landlines that were placed there by corporations under government-regulated monopolies.

If you break laws, you are bound to certain consequences, certain restrictions on your freedoms as deemed fit by the laws you live under.
Reply #5 Top
95% of the disconnects will most likely be false alarms.
Reply #6 Top
I Know a few people who have got emails about pirating here from telus, and from our cable connection its smaller but more regulated the telus's. So far they are only going after movies here in BC anyway. Software and music is pretty much free game though. I'd be fine without piracy. hopefully if it got slowed down we'd see some games with more thought and support like sins. On the other hand Crytec said the wouldn't be doing PC specific games because Piracy "Killed" Crysis apparently even though it made sold millions of copies. On the other hand I wasn't fond of Crysis so maybe the piracy was a good thing in that Case lol.

LeeG
Reply #7 Top
My problem is the definition of "Piracy" - I typically find that what I define as Piracy involves a much more narrow definition of the term than what industry advocates (Or possibly even our gracious hosts) define as piracy.

Now, if they mean the same thing *I* mean, then by all means, they can go to it.

Jonnan
Reply #8 Top

Sounds pretty difficult, and there could potentially be some false positives, but overall it could mean really good things for developers and in return legit gamers if it can be executed properly.

Reply #9 Top
Good. People would be faced with the fact that their commiting a crime, and this will lower game prices by $5-10.

I hope the 4th time (going online illegally) means jail. If it was up to me, thieves would go to prison.
Reply #10 Top
Thats why nobody votes you into office :D
Anyway hope they can take down the darknet LOL
Reply #11 Top
^

Apparantly people who think alike are already in office.

Enjoy prison.
Reply #12 Top
Good. People would be faced with the fact that their commiting a crime, and this will lower game prices by $5-10.I hope the 4th time (going online illegally) means jail. If it was up to me, thieves would go to prison.


Worse, forced to pay the company they ripped off the equivalent of alimony for the next 10 years.
Reply #13 Top
While I am very much against piracy, I am conerned that this might go so far, and just as with some of the things that have happened on youtube and elsewhere, people that are doing nothing wrong will be caught too, or the rules will be changed as things go along.
Reply #14 Top
O rly? :CONGRAT: the chances of this working is only when you deprive people of their privacy, they aren't to give it up either.
Reply #15 Top

Wow another shining example of why politicians are a waste.  Copyright is way out of control, not that there shouldn't be something but the way it is currently is just terrible.

Reply #16 Top
Could be interesting, this will depend on how they police the policemen. The ISPs are going to have to invest in many more packet sniffers than they do at present to get round packet spoofing. It certainly is feasible, but there will need to be some kind of mechanism in place that ensures ISPs really are doing this, and not raised their prices to cover the substantial cost base increase for nothing.

The privacy issues will be a joy to behold as this unfurls, could be interesting ..... at least they are trying, because something needs to be done to curb what is blatant theft by any measure or excuse. Anything that replaces - in a practical way - DRM is welcome.

The other danger is other part of the infrastructure may gladly wash their hands of other measures - "not our business, ISPs do that" (etc).

Regards
Zy
Reply #17 Top
EU to Ban Pirates from the Internet?

Are you still allowed them for Single Player or LAN games???  :LOL:
Reply #18 Top
Good. People would be faced with the fact that their commiting a crime, and this will lower game prices by $5-10.I hope the 4th time (going online illegally) means jail. If it was up to me, thieves would go to prison.


So don't bet on it saving you money - Theft diminishes supply and demand in a balanced fashion both the supply and the demand are reduced, and the change in price is going to depend on the elasticity of the market.

IP piracy cannot diminish supply (Which effectively is equivalent to whatever demand is, barring trivial reproduction/server costs), only demand, so the cost equations work differently.

If most profitable end price is determined by supply and demand, then piracy can not (by definition, presuming idealized markets) raise the cost of a game - the price point that maximizes ((cash per copy) * (Copies sold)) is fixed. It's like the argument that eliminating the gas tax will lower gas prices - if the market price is 4.10/gal, then eliminating the gas tax just means that money goes straight to the gas station instead of being set aside to fix roads - the supply and demand have not changed, so, *by definition*, the market price has not changed.

By the same token - reproduction costs being trivial on a per item basis, piracy can'y really affect supply (Only if it becomes so rampant as to make the fixed expenses of production higher than the profit from the market, at which point supply goes from infinite to zero.) and can only marginally affect demand (Since it can only decrease the demand in the market already unwilling to pay the for the item - i.e., in the market that wasn't actually part of the market.)

So you still have the same effective supply and demand as you did before. The only thing fighting piracy can do is, ah, slim your profit margins by wasting money fighting it without actually affecting either the supply or the demand for your product, raising your overhead without any corresponding raise in price.

Which, come to think of it, I seem to vaguely recall somebody posting something about - uh - -frog something? Sorry, I'm a newbie here, I think he must be a fan of the Iconians or something? Anybody know him?

{G} - Jonnan
Reply #19 Top
Which, come to think of it, I seem to vaguely recall somebody posting something about - uh - -frog something? Sorry, I'm a newbie here, I think he must be a fan of the Iconians or something? Anybody know him?

Frogboy, the CEO of Stardock.
Reply #20 Top
Okay - attempts at sardonic, no longer to be attempted.

I'll mark that right under "Romulan Ale no longer to be served at diplomatic functions"

{G} - Jonnan
Reply #21 Top

I always considered piracy as a great tool for countering poor entertainment making, if something is worth it, most people tend to go out and buy it.

I have one worry, i use the internet to download episodes of battlestar galactica and so on (as their released in the US before they are over here), will these also be targetted by anti-piracy laws? I imagine they will be unfortunatley, as less people will naturally purchase the boxed DVD sets.

I think one counter to this, would be online TV channels, so you still get the adverts and the makers of the shows still get payed. I've noticed this with the likes of SkySports News (Rupert Murdochs Satellite sports channel over here in the UK), their web site has interviews with players and coaches etc. These are usually slotted between two adverts.

 Thats not say though i won't just switch off while the adverts are on, or turn my attention on something more productive.

I think most people agree that you deserve to get payed for what you've done, but a lot of people have a hard time feeling sympathy for the thing we relate most to the entertainment industry, which is wealthy actors and directors living lifestyles we can only dream of. I know naturally that these people will be the last to feel any effect of piracy however and instead it may actually be cut backs on other members of staff in production companies etc. that will take the hit.

Finally on the issue of game companies, well i think if you take stardock as an example of how to handle piracy, that is to provide good support and updates to your products, but only if you are reigstered with them online, then you can see that if you just apply a bit of thinking and deliver a quality product and service, then you have very little to fear in regards to piracy.

Reply #22 Top

Doubt it will go through and not something that would really be tolerated in any progressive free society. ISPs don't want to do anything that will destroy the trust with their customers. They have a hard enough time to keep them already, this will just completely chase them away. 

 

Reply #23 Top
If a quality product is a determining factor on whether your not some kind of 5 finger discount asshole, what does that say about your own morals?

Are you gonna shoot somebody if he doesn't live up to your standards?

That food wasn't good. Next time take it.

That car had poor mpg. Hold the dealership hostage.

Your an asshole (If ya pirate). You deserve prison. Hopefully now you'll get it.

And the lawmakers feel the same way, so don't have another person make a long winded speech on how stopping piracy will do nothing (Which is contradicted by every study on piracy btw)

A kid (or adult) goes off and steals something, goes to prison. Intellectual theft is even worse, as the idea is worth more then the product itself.

Little pirate thugs need to be sent to prison.
Reply #24 Top
Something like this will only succeed if the lissabon thingy is ratified since all the individual countries have their own laws.

It's good that they want to stop piracy, but will it affect encrypted traffic like uTorrent? Will it capture the veterans or just casuals?
Reply #25 Top
If a quality product is a determining factor on whether your not some kind of 5 finger discount asshole, what does that say about your own morals?

Hi there,

I'd like to reply to this comment...I do agree that ideally piracy is a problem for many reasons, but I'd like to put forward an experience that I had.

I live in South Africa which has a weaker currency than the US, UK and Euro. Manufacturers of games, cd's, dvd's etc do not reduce their price proportionately with the value of the currency of the country they ship to - meaning its a bigger sacrifice for foreigners to but the product. So anyway, I went and bought a certain space strategy game (not Stardock made) a few years ago - legally - and I even got a friend to bring back my much anticipated game for me from the UK. The cost was about 30 pounds (much more in my currency) or something - which in my currency is a hell of a lot especially if you are a student. So I paid in good faith, and found the game a complete and total disappointment with minumum tech support or anything - it was like it was released and then forgotten. I felt really annoyed about this and it irritated me that I had no way of returning something or getting support for something that seemed like rubbish to me.

It would help, in my opinion, if games could be allowed to be tested for a limited period (trial period) and then the buyer must pay up e.g. what is done with Eve online. If I had been able to do that, I would never have wasted so much money.

So, if a buyer is sure he's going to like what he's paying for (like trying on a pair of shoes, or a jacket) you may find piracy becomes less prevalent. I also feel that many products (especially games) are directed at a younger audience which cannot necessarily afford to buy all the new games they would like because of being in school or students, that of course encourages piracy.

I'd prefer it if piracy didn't exist, but that is highly unlikely, people (developers and manufacturers) will always try to make as much as they can from their product meaning that there will be those who cannot afford it and will find other means of getting what they want - unfortunately :-(