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News: Verizon’s Anti-Piracy Measures Unveiled
Member Since: 3/16/2012
Posts: 13,657
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Verizon’s Anti-Piracy Measures Unveiled
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Guilty of online piracy? Verizon may slow your high-speed Internet service to a crawl.
The company is considering punishing subscribers who illegally share movies or songs on the Internet by temporarily throttling their Web service to dial-up speeds.
An internal Verizon document leaked online Friday outlines the proposed "copyright alert program." The plan is part of a controversial strategy being rolled out in coming weeks by the entertainment industry and major Internet providers to crack down on Internet piracy, which content creators say costs them billions in lost revenue each year.
Under Verizon's proposed program, subscribers accused of copyright infringement will receive a series of alerts, which critics of such programs call "six strikes." After the first two offenses, Verizon will send emails to subscribers with a link allowing them to see if illegal file-sharing is operating on their computers and how to remove it, according to the leaked document, which was confirmed as authentic by a Verizon spokesman.
After the next two offenses, Verizon will redirect subscribers' browsers to a website where they must acknowledge receiving the alerts and watch a short video about "the consequence of copyright infringement," according to the document. After the fifth and sixth notices, accused copyright violators have the option of either accepting slower Internet speeds for two to three days or asking an arbitrator to review whether they are guilty of Internet piracy -- for the price of $35. If the arbitrator rules in the user's favor, the $35 is refunded and his or her Internet speeds go untouched.
Verizon spokesman Ed McFadden said the leaked document was "a discussion draft" and had not been finalized. He said the company would send notices to subscribers about the copyright alert program in coming weeks.
Verizon, which has about 23 million landline customers in the mid-Atlantic and Northeast, is one of five major Internet service providers -- along with AT&T, Comcast, Cablevision and Time Warner Cable -- who have partnered with the recording and movie industries on a new strategy to deter copyright violators. The shift in strategy comes one year after controversial anti-piracy legislation, known as SOPA and PIPA, sparked an Internet outcry and failed to pass Congress.
Time Warner Cable's plan is similar to Verizon's, but instead of throttling Internet speeds of accused copyright violators, the company plans to temporarily suspend their service until they call a customer service representative and agree to stop pirating copyrighted material, according to spokesman Alex Dudley. It was unclear when Time Warner Cable's program would take effect, he said.
Representatives for Comcast and Cablevision did not return requests for comment about their copyright alert programs. An AT&T spokesman declined to comment.
Some industry observers questioned whether the plans will be effective. Internet users who frequently engage in illegal file-sharing often use private networks or proxy services to disguise the location of their computers, noted Karl Bode, editor of the blog DSL Reports, which covers the broadband industry.
"As a result, these plans are much more about scaring most users away from piracy, as opposed to accomplishing the impossible task of trying to completely stop piracy on ISP networks," Bode wrote Friday.
In addition, accused copyright violators will not be allowed to repeatedly blame unsecured wireless routers for illegal file-sharing on their networks, a restriction that could affect small businesses that provide Wi-Fi access to customers or subscribers who leave their Wi-Fi unsecured, the Electronic Frontier Foundation noted when the program was first discussed in 2011.
In a blog post last fall, the Center for Copyright Information -- which is coordinating the program between the movie and music industries and the Internet service providers -- sought to clarify misconceptions that accused copyright violators could permanently lose Internet service.
"This is not a 'six-strikes-and-you’re-out' system that would result in termination," the post said. Instead, it called the copyright alert system a "progressive system aimed at educating Internet subscribers about digital copyright and the potential consequences of inadvertent or purposeful copyright violations through peer-to-peer networks."
But beyond the new strategy, Internet users could still have their service terminated for engaging in Internet piracy. Under Time Warner Cable's subscriber agreement, the company reserves the right to terminate or suspend the service of account holders "even for a single act of copyright infringement."
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Leaked document:

HP
Other sources: 1, 2, 3, 4
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Member Since: 5/13/2011
Posts: 22,581
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Member Since: 2/25/2012
Posts: 3,102
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And people will continue to pirate and copyright anyway just in spite 
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Member Since: 9/18/2011
Posts: 18,295
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Member Since: 6/13/2011
Posts: 11,601
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Well, this program was bound to happen.... 
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Member Since: 5/22/2011
Posts: 21,227
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I really don't see the issue, I purchase all my albums legally anyways. 
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Member Since: 5/3/2012
Posts: 42,099
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Well, I'm not doing illegal downloading on my horrible AT&T 0.42 Mbps connection anyway 
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Member Since: 1/8/2011
Posts: 27,650
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Oh boy. 
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Member Since: 5/14/2007
Posts: 25,912
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And people will still download because they can 
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Member Since: 11/13/2008
Posts: 4,129
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Verizon, the RIAA, and the MPAA are dinosaurs living in the past where they actually had some sort of power. The world has changed. Catch up or go bankrupt.
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Member Since: 9/3/2011
Posts: 22,014
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This is so stupid. People CAN'T AFFORD $30 movies or $60 video games. The industry needs to learn that with the digital age taking over, they need to lower prices or piracy will become to rampant that they can do nothing about it. And now that downloading a movie or an album or anything is as simple as going on ThePirateBay and clicking download, they'll need to do something eventually.
Anyway, I'm not gonna worry, we use Charter 
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Member Since: 3/16/2012
Posts: 13,657
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I agree that RIAA and MPAA pretty much don't want to adapt. The movie industry isn't even tanking, 2012 was the biggest year in domestic Box Office ever. The experience watching a movie at the theater hasn't lost its value.
The music industry is another story. Some of these markets would thriving if the opportunities to download music online (legally) were as fast, easy and global as downloading them illegally. It's not that easy since this generation is being raised with P2P software as their music providers. Music leak all the time and mostly only fans will spend money on it.
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Originally posted by Haus
This is so stupid. People CAN'T AFFORD $30 movies or $60 video games. The industry needs to learn that with the digital age taking over, they need to lower prices or piracy will become to rampant that they can do nothing about it. And now that downloading a movie or an album or anything is as simple as going on ThePirateBay and clicking download, they'll need to do something eventually.
Anyway, I'm not gonna worry, we use Charter 
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Yes. This too. If they want to win the new generation back they should start playing with the aspect that made people resort to illegal downloads in the first place: the price (or lack of it for that matter).
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Member Since: 2/16/2012
Posts: 8,740
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Well, the reason the music industry did take that dip was because iTunes took so long to come out after Rhapsody. Had the iPod not been successful, iTunes wouldnt have (because people like to use what their devices are paired to) and piracy may have gotten a lot bigger.
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Member Since: 10/28/2011
Posts: 6,626
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Time to park outside McDonalds to get my movies 
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Member Since: 2/16/2012
Posts: 8,740
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Quote:
Originally posted by Ghandi
Verizon, the RIAA, and the MPAA are dinosaurs living in the past where they actually had some sort of power. The world has changed. Catch up or go bankrupt.
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We need a new FCC board in the USA. They're all old and I dont have anything against old people but they're obviously not as experienced with the internet and tech as younger people. They should put some smart tech nerds or somebody new on there. The FCC needs to bring down the prices of things and create competition in broadband services. Internet prices are outrageous in America in comparison to the rest of the world. It's crazy. They do good things from time to time but I feel like they could do a ton more.
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