mpaa

Consumers Ambush MPAA at SXSW

How The Pirate Bay Fights Big Media Business

How The Pirate Bay Fights Big Media Business

Despite the claims of the software industry and organizations like the MPAA and RIAA, file sharers are not thieves. They may be copyright infringers, certainly, But no matter what the claims of the RIAA, downloading K-Fed’s PopoZao off of Limewire is not the same as walking up to a small child, turning him upside down, tucking his head between your knees and then — his tiny limbs flailing impotently about you — pile-driving him into the sidewalk for his milk money.

DRM Link Barf

  • Yahoo exec: Labels should sell music without DRM. How’d this guy get in?

  • Brookyln Grandma Sued for $150,000 by MPAA.

    Brookyln Grandma Sued for $150,000 by MPAA.

    63-year old Janice McBride is getting sued by Hollywood for pirating the Adam Sandler flick, The Longest Yard.

    MPAA Says: “DRM Exists To Annoy Honest Customers”

    We saw this astonishing quote from Dan Glickman of the MPAA over at the Beeb, when asked about the effectiveness of DRM:

    MPAA Pirates Documentary In The Name Of The Children

    MPAA Pirates Documentary In The Name Of The Children

    In a delicious turn of events that could only be matched by Microsoft discovering it was using warezed copies of Windows on its office computers, the MPAA has been busted for pirating a film submitted to them for rating—called, appropriately enough, ‘This Film Is Not Yet Rated.’ The film’s a documentary currently debuting at Sundance, investigating the unaccountability of the MPAA’s rating board, the inscrutability of its unpublished ratings guidelines and the hypocrisy of Hollywood’s preference for sadistic violence over soft-core sex. Apparently, the film was worrying enough for the MPAA to secretly distribute unauthorized copies to many of its employees. The problem? By the MPAA’s own definition, “ALL forms of piracy are illegal and carry serious legal consequences.”