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A lesson in mob rule on the Web

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    A lesson in mob rule on the Web

    Sophisticated Internet users have banded together over the last two days to publish and widely distribute a secret code used by the technology and movie industries to prevent piracy of high-definition movies.

    The broader distribution of the code may not pose a serious threat to the studios, because it requires some technical expertise and specialized software to use it to defeat the copy protection on Blu-ray and HD DVD discs. But its relentless spread has already become a lesson in mob power on the Internet and the futility of censorship in the digital world.

    An online uproar came in response to a series of cease-and-desist letters from lawyers for a group of companies that use the copy protection system, demanding that the code be removed from several Web sites.

    Rather than wiping out the code — a string of 32 digits and letters in a specialized counting system — the legal notices sparked its proliferation on Web sites, in chat rooms, inside cleverly doctored digital photographs and on user-submitted news sites like Digg.com. full article
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    #2
    Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

    Or it could just be a conspiracy by the HD-DVD industry to try and sock it to Blu-Ray. I have no idea, really, but it sounds alot like the old fiasco with Half Life 2 being "leaked." You could tell in that case that it was a bunch of balogne about it being leaked. I think pretty much everyone agreed that they did it on purpose for hype/advertising. Especially, since at the time it was much more believable that Duke Nukem Forever was going to be released. LoL!
    Presonus Audiobox USB, Schiit Magni 3, Sony MDR-V700

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      #3
      Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

      never got into the pirated movie craze, I'm not much of a movie fan. It's rare that a movie comes out that I actually want to see more than once. In the event I do want to see it again, I'll spend the 20 bucks and buy the original. MP3's on the other hand....... God, I miss the open FTP days!!
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        #4
        Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

        i pirated a buttload of movies and never watched them more than twice

        porn on the other hand....muahahahahaha
        capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

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          #5
          Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

          Yeah, the whole pirating every damn movie, tv show, is nothing but OCD at its core.
          Hording such stuff, and only to never watch it more than 5 times in one's lifetime, is a big waste of time and resources.
          Then to start all over again because a new superior format is released....talk about mental illness.

          My brother did this with VHS, that massive archive is tossed out in favor of disc formats.
          First a few dozen laser discs.
          Then CDRs of VCD format.
          Then CDRs of MP4 encoding.
          Then DVDRs of MP4 encodings.
          Then DVDRs of reformatted DVDs.
          Then DVDR DL of DVDs.
          Next, DVDRs of HD re-encodes.
          Next, HD DVD or blue ray.

          He spends all his waking hours in front of a PC, downloading videos and now, mp3s, from around the world.
          He has not held a real job in his life, lives at home with parents, in the basement.
          The proverbial 40-year old virgin.
          Sad and pathetic, but he finds nothing wrong, or any need to change.


          Two other friends took advantage of NetFlix, rented tons of DVDs, and burned DVDRs.
          Must be thousands of DVDRs between them, each coordinating their rental list.

          Now, the talk is how to reburn in HD.


          There is only one good reason to pirate so much, and that is to make a profit off of it.
          Most movies and shows are NOT worth the cost of the blank disc.


          Music on the other hand, fits into a different category. It can be enjoyed while during another simultaneous activity.

          Video requires you to be idle and have one's undivided attention.
          Couch potato syndrome.
          (excluding porn....if you don't follow, please ask Willa!)
          “We the willing, led by the unknowing, are doing the impossible for the ungrateful.
          We have done so much, with so little, for so long, we are now qualified to do anything, with nothing.”

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            #6
            Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

            There is something inherently wrong about attempting to munch the muffin while watching Independence Day. MP3 are so much more appropriate here..



            I have friends who Torrent movies before they purchase for their library. The got the big Cease And Desist letter from Comcast. Evidently the new release movies have a staff of Big Brother types watching the torrents. The letter put them on notice, and said a 2nd offense is $10k in fines.

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              #7
              Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

              munch the muffin

              ...
              .....
              .......


              ....I'm not gonna ask.
              Find Nedry!


              Check the Vending machines!!

              <----Computer says I need more beer.

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                #8
                Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

                cunning linguist?
                capacitor lab yachtmati techmati

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                  #9
                  Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

                  Originally posted by pentium
                  ...
                  .....
                  .......


                  ....I'm not gonna ask.
                  I am

                  How did this thread come in this direction?

                  Haha, keep it coming (flowing?)
                  "The one who says it cannot be done should never interrupt the one who is doing it."

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                    #10
                    Re: A lesson in mob rule on the Web

                    Cunning linguist... izzat like the comparinson between smart pygmies vs. female joggers, where the pygmies are cunning runts?

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