AFACT v iiNet: it's like an episode of The Wire

Renai LeMay
25 February 2010, 3:11 PM


It came to me the other night, when I was watching The Wire, that the drug trade it focuses on are very similar to that of the online copyright infringement struggle.


opinion It came to me the other night, when I was watching an episode of that excellent TV show The Wire, that the particulars of the drug trade it focuses on are very similar to that of the online copyright infringement struggle.

In both cases, you have a category of users who are highly addicted to a tightly controlled commodity. In The Wire’s gritty Baltimore streets, it’s dope, coke, sex, and whatever else is going around at the time. In loungerooms around Australia, users are desperately passing around the latest episode of FlashForward, Lost, or even Avatar to get their fix.

Similar too, are the extremes to which enforcement authorities go in order to get a wiretap on the communications devices of their respective junkies. Although probably far too many Australian file sharers talk on the phone about their illegal habits.

Now, the analogy only goes so far. For example, I’d have a lot of difficulty comparing Neil Gane, the executive director of the Australian Federation Against Copyright Theft (AFACT) to that bastard detective Jimmy McNulty, despite Gane’s admittable tenacity when it comes to pursuing the case against file sharers.

And it’s even harder to imagine iiNet chief Michael Malone as a behind-the-scenes mastermind shuffling money around like the nefarious Stringer Bell, although Malone does sometimes seem to have a hint of Bell’s calm demeanour in a crisis, and like the kingpin druglords, Australia’s ISPs are undisputably making money from users’ habits — in their case through the daily terabytes of pirate data coursing through their networks.

The degree to which the ISPs are or should policing what that data consists of is the very debate at the heart of the case.

But this morning’s announcement that AFACT would appeal its losing verdict in its long-running court case against iiNet only strengthens the bond between the two narratives.

You see, I didn’t expect AFACT to appeal the case this morning.

I thought, like The Wire’s Major Colvin, the film and movie studios involved in the case would decide they had had enough of their never-ending war against addiction — a war that many people believe they cannot win unless they provide a rival commercial (and legal) model in the mould that the music industry has found with Apple’s iTunes and even the legal sale of MP3 files.

Colvin, in The Wire, is a thirty-year police veteran who decides to virtually legalise the drug trade in a small section of his jurisdiction — without the knowledge of his superiors — in order to draw the dealers, the gun deaths, the junkies and the prostitutes away from the rest of the area.

I haven’t seen the outcome yet, so I don’t know whether Colvin’s little social experiment will succeed or fail, although clearly Apple and the music studios are currently cashing in on iTunes’ success.

But I do know that after listening to Justice Cowdroy’s conclusive judgement for iiNet and reading his reasons and the ongoing follow-up commentary on why AFACT lost, I had thought the studios would abandon iiNet as a lost cause and either go after the end users themselves, or take Malone up on his offer and start talking turkey on legal options.

Instead, they appear to have taken Cowdroy’s shotgun verdict to the head as little more than a flesh wound, and like any good police force, have waded back into the street corner fight with all guns blazing. And why not? For the content providers, the costs involved in the case (iiNet has so far spent $3.7 million) must amount to little more than pocket change.

As Omar would say: “All in the game, yo. All in the game.”

Delimiter - Image credit: HBO


Post your comment



Comments

RSS feed Email alert

srhardy (New user):

I will have to watch the new series of the wire... but i think this was tried in Amsterdam long ago until it couldn't be tolerated any more & they moved in to clean up the mess & misery.

Watching a torrented movie is hardly the same, is it?

Im watching the ABC's series in FAKES, seems more appropriate to me as an analogy IMO

25 February 2010, 9:48 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jammit (New user):

Not only are the "bad guys" doofuss - aka Corporate Moron America from the US and A;

- They are greedy stupid doofuss...


e.g. Microsoft sold Win 7. Online and in box (pretend figure) it went for say $200.

They sold it in Australia for $400 - and they stopped people in Australia from buying from the US and A; by ----- get this:

1. Blocking their IP address; and

2. If they did things like use a proxy server, they blocked the sale via shipping address.

With the DRM and the Microsoft dirty antics and the rigging of the hardware etc., etc., etc....

Well I bought a laptop a few years back - fine; plays DVD's too.

But here is where I did all my research on this:

These pricks in AFACT and Co., use staged releases; First at the movies in the US and A, and then selectively into SOME of the other regions.

OK that means globally about 85% of what is released - is not released in Australia and does not make it to Australia.

After the cinemas, then come the DVD rentals, and then wayyyy down the track it comes on TV.

AFACT rigs the prices of DVD's and CD's etc., so that consumers in Australia pay substantially more for their media, that people do in the USA etc.,

AFACT and Co opposed the use of Parallel importing, where consumers could buy their own material oversease, at a substantial saving to buying the same media in the shops here.

Then we have the region encoding.

These pricks have it stitched up to only release the proprietary firmware that reads the disk content, to the manufactures who make things like DVD players etc...

I mean THIS by and of it's self is a HUGE long running sore to the consumer - remember Sony installing root kits on ones hard drive? etc., etc., etc...

So with the region encoding, these pricks make it so that one I install a region encoded disk, the unit "locks" to that region. When I insert a disk from the US and A, it registers that the disk is from a different region. As soon as I say stick in another Aussi disk, that registers as the THIRD change, and then when I insert a disk from the UK, the drive region LOCKS it's self to only playing disks from the UK.

No more Aussi disks, no more USA disks etc.....

So that is only ONE small example of how these pricks meddle with everything.

The issue goes on that in Australia we only get about 15% of the global media content. What is not is neither released here nor distributed here.

As far as how these organisations control what is shown here.....

Australian media such as the TV stations and the radio stations and the press, are some of the craptiest in the world. And they are controlled for the most part by the members of AFACT.

We suffer enormous advertisment loading - and after 11 pm - we have the equivalent of porn spam adds, in 5 minute blocks, for five minutes, every five minutes half the night - dumping crap which is basically "go masturbate over videos of strippers and lesbian sex on your mobile phone" - at only $5.99 a minute.

I mean I love women!!!! but these adds are too much - because it's the same adds over and over and over - night after night after night... and they have long since ceased to be tittilating and are now purely annoying.

We get "fans of assorted series" and the series have random and unannounced schedule changes, we get stuff that is mostly 2 or so years after the current stuff is screening in the USA, and frequently the series are taken off air mid season and replaced with other programs or old episodes etc....

Most of the Free to Air TV in Australia is basically crap.

And I do digress about the issue of free to air. Assume that one watches 20 hours per week - that is about 10 hours of "show" and 10 hours of adds - if I was earning a wage for those 10 hours of adds, vs. watching adds on TV., then I would be way in front.

TV and the adds, actually cost me enormous amounts of loss through the unproductive and wasteful use of my time.

Could I go hire a movie if I was inclined.... yeah - with the "new releases" still being classified as "new releases" 2 years after it was seen at the cinema at $5 a night, vs the not new releases that are of movies like "The Terminator" that came out 20 years ago for $2 weekly.


As far as music goes - I am not into the latest flavour of the month, being shoved down my neck., and I also kind of like much of all that has been produced - spanning the last 100 years or so.

Even if we limit the material to say the last 30 years - almost NONE of it is available in the record shops, very little of it is available online - but people do share it via P2P...

Again being musically inclined - when buying "proper" sheet music - most of it is very poorly written - probably by dope smoking jerks on minimum wages., and for the larger part no one from their managers to the musicians ever checks the quality or the accuracy of the work.

So we get wrong wording, bar chords to fill in for 2 guitars playing complex note sequences and riffs... and the copyright nazis went after sites who hosted people's interpretations of the music, in tab notation... with them listening to the recording and writing down in "guitar code" (tabs) how they thought the actual riff went, where guitar 1 and guitar 2 cut in and out, and each guitars chord and fingering sequence and techniques.

I thought that was getting to the point of beating up people and arresting them for whistling tunes when walking the dog.

Again AFACT and it's greedy, lazy and stupid "corporate moron" constituents, do everything they can to obstruct, control and gouge the consumer with every device and means possible., but they deliberately do nothing to make the content affordable or available.

Do I like them or respect them? No.

Will I ever buy from them again or support them?

Not when they are rigging their own copyright laws to suit themselves - so they can keep on plastering licensed versions of Mickey Mouse on every school bag, lunch box and pencil case for the next 500 years...

These companies are rotten and corrupt.

And now they have consolidated themselves into about 4 or 5 global multinationals who own and control the movie and music studios, the TV stations and the print media.

In Australia - the news is almost identical on all networks.... and it's stupid corporate moron based news.... except for the haircuts of the news readers., it would be hard to tell them apart.

Things of relevance like this; such as the oil states in the middle east are investing heavily in solar and renewables.... well that has never been reported by the stupids in Australia - what makes our news is pointless and irrelevant crap like, "A man caught fricking his dog was sentenced today" or some other rubbish - while real matters of great import go ignored and disregarded.

Or the idiot political sensationalising and point scoring etc...

The media in Australia is run by idiots.

AFACT are the front face of the global conglomerates, trying to lock everyone via vertical integration - into their product lines.

They want power and control over everyone using everything.

And they don't like it when people say "I am not a commodity on a balance sheet - designed to sit here and make revenue for you".

The more I see just how corrupt these buiness's are - are what cheek they have to try it on, the more I am inclined to have subversive inclinations.....

Like "Turn off, Don't Watch and Don't Buy" and support free press and unsigned artists and the local productions by real people - in community cinemas and halls.....

Learn to read, write and play your own music..

And dump the spoon fed nazi rubbish from AFACT and it's constituent members.


26 February 2010, 11:44 AM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

pmx (New user):

The ruling wasn't a 'shotgun blast to the head' at all.

iiNet got off on a technicality.

iiNet and others are tryng to equate ISP's to the postal service, electricity provides, main roads etc.

These comparisons are fallacious.

Service delivery companys such as Australia Post are high regulated, tightly controlled organistations with well documented and enforcable responsibilities to ensure that they're service does not harm its users or facilitate crime.

If Australia Post allowed someone to continue to send you pornographic or threatening material and you complained and they did nothing about it they would be liable.

If the electricity providers and regulators did not ensure that you had to have RCD's or overload protection on your circruits and could supply voltage at old old frequency or voltage which meant that you house would catch fire and burn down or your electical equipment was damaged, then they would be liable. Have a look at what is happening at the moment with electrical tranmission equipment causing bushfires.

The same goes for main roads. They can't put in any old crap and call it a road that is safe to drive on.

The law is catching up the ISP's the way it didn't with all these groups.

ISP's are private companys almost completly unregulated with no accoutabilty to anyone.

They are perfectly entilted to monitor your internet traffic, the contract you've agreed to probably says that it all the traffic belongs to them. Many of them do monitor it on a continous basis. How else would they be able to tell if you are accessing one of their partner sites and give you the appropriate discount ?

Did you all know that that any email you send from your employers account belongs your employer ? Its not like telephones .. Telstra, Optus etc, are subject to regulations .. ISPs are not.



26 February 2010, 12:52 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jeff (User):

Quoting pmx:
iiNet got off on a technicality.

iiNet and others are tryng to equate ISP's to the postal service, electricity provides, main roads etc.

These comparisons are fallacious.

You seem to be completly missing the point...

Quoting pmx:
If Australia Post allowed someone to continue to send you pornographic or threatening material and you complained and they did nothing about it they would be liable.

And what does this have to do with piracy? Nothing. That has more to do with spam than anything else (well, the pornographic part at least).

Quoting pmx:
The law is catching up the ISP's the way it didn't with all these groups.

Really? Happen to have a link to a case where Australia Post was sued for transporting pirated copies of games, movies, etc.? (That's exactly what's happening to iiNet.)

...Didn't think so.

28 February 2010, 3:40 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

Jammit (New user):

AFACT's members ripping people off.

AFACT's members involved in price fixing? Conspiring to rip off the consumers? Noooooooo

A home electronics retail store has filed a class-action lawsuit against Sony Corp., Samsung Electronics Co. Ltd., Toshiba Corp., LG Electronics Inc., Hitachi Ltd. and several subsidiaries, accusing the electronics manufacturers of colluding to fix prices in the U.S. optical disc drive (ODD) market.

http://www.p2pnet.net/story/33826

MDL Docket No. 1361 read:

"The Plaintiffs have alleged in two separate amended complaints that the Defendants conspired to illegally fix and control the pricing of Music Products sold to consumers through Defendant Distributors adoption and utilization of Minimum Advertised Price (MAP) programs in violation of the Sherman Act, state antitrust and unfair competition and/or consumer protection laws. The Plaintiffs have further alleged that as a result of the conspiracy residents of the Plaintiff States and members of the Plaintiff Settlement Class have been injured by paying more for Music Products than they would have paid in the absence of the illegal conduct. The Defendants have denied and continue to deny each and all of the claims and contentions alleged by the Plaintiffs and any violation of law. The Court has not made any determination as to the merits of any of the claims or defenses of the parties to this Litigation."

In the hot seat were:

* LABELS: Capitol Records, Inc d/b/a EMI Music Distribution, Virgin Records America, Inc, and Priority Records LLC; Time Warner, Inc, Warner-Elektra-Atlantic Corp, WEA, Inc, Warner Music Group, Inc, Warner Bros Records, Inc, Atlantic Recording Corporation, Elektra Entertainment Group, Inc, and Rhino Entertainment Company; Universal Music & Video Distribution Corporation, Universal Music Group, Inc, and UMG Recordings, Inc; Bertelsmann Music Group, Inc and BMG Music; and, Sony Music Entertainment Inc.
* RETAILERS: MTS, Inc d/b/a Tower Records, Musicland Stores Corp, and Trans World Entertainment Corp.


01 March 2010, 3:31 PM (2 years ago)report abuse Send to a friend reply

anonymous user Anonymous user