Jump to content

Will the Upcoming Six Strikes Scheme Stop Piracy?


nsane.forums

Recommended Posts

The much-discussed U.S. six strikes anti-piracy scheme is expected to go live within a month. A reputable source told TorrentFreak that February 18 has been selected as the provisional launch date, but CCI denies this. In the meantime we’ll take a look at the expected effectiveness of the copyright alerts system. Will it be able to turn pirates into legitimate customers or will it drive people to VPNs and other means of sharing?

In a few weeks the MPAA, RIAA and five major U.S. Internet providers will start to warn BitTorrent pirates.

The parties founded the Center for Copyright Information (CCI) and agreed on a system through which copyright infringers are told that their behavior is unacceptable. After five or six warnings ISPs will then take a variety of repressive measures.

This week TorrentFreak learned from a source close to CCI that the system is currently scheduled to launch on February 18. However, a spokesperson for the copyright alerts system denies that there is a hard launch date at the moment, and stated that they are “still working towards implementation.”

Exact launch date or not, it appears that after more than a year of delays the copyright alerts will soon go live. The question remains, however, if the plan will be an effective tool to decrease piracy.

The answer to this question is not an easy one to arrive at, but it’s evident that not all copyright infringers are at risk of being caught.

First it has to be noted that the copyright alerts only target a subgroup of online pirates, namely BitTorrent users. The millions of users of file-hosting services, Usenet and streaming sites are not going to be affected.

Needless to say, piracy on these services is likely to increase rather than decrease.

And that’s just half of the story. Even those who keep using BitTorrent can avoid the warnings by signing up for one of many anonymizer services.

BitTorrent proxies and VPN services are the preferred way for people to remain anonymous while downloading. These services replace a user’s home IP-address with one provided by the proxy service, making it impossible for tracking companies to identify who is doing the file-sharing.

In the U.S. 16% of all file-sharers already hide their IP-address, and this is likely to increase when the copyright alert system goes live.

The above doesn’t mean that the copyright alert system will have no effect whatsoever. In fact, it may be quite effective in deterring a small percentage of casual ‘pirates’. However, we expect that the overwhelming majority of copyright infringers will simply take measures to avoid being caught, while continuing their downloading habits.

Of course this is not news to the copyright holders or the ISPs.

When CCI Executive Director Jill Lesser was confronted with these circumvention options she stressed that the main purpose of the alerts is to educate the public. The participating parties realize that determined individuals can circumvent the system by using a VPN or switching to other means of file-sharing.

“Yes, there are ways around it, and yes there are other ways to pirate,” Lesser previously said, adding that these hardcore pirates are not the target of the system.

How big the real target group is will become apparent in the months to come, when the first statistics on U.S. BitTorrent usage are published after the six strikes come in.

view.gifView: Original Article

Link to comment
Share on other sites


  • Replies 4
  • Views 855
  • Created
  • Last Reply

I'm not on there side,but they have the right to fight,a fight that will be ussesles all the time because internet piracy will always be here and i LOVE INTERNET PIRACY ! As a matter of fact even if i will be the dev of some app,even then i think i will love piracy ( maybe ) :))

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Make everything payable

And everything will B ok in the end

Not alone with software but with everything in the world.

Everybody must have a chance to buy what he likes and to eat what he needs

But everything is expensive and so we keep the crisis alive.....

Just my way of thinking

Link to comment
Share on other sites


well they can go after bittorrent system and all but they will never stop people from sharing stuff... the scene will just evolve either to find ways to go around the bittorrent issues or just move to another way all together, and like the one statement says they are not going after the hard core pirates, they want to stop the casual pirates lol i dont think i know what a causal pirate is? maybe thats me with servers and all lol

now that i think about it does the casual pirate have so many hard drives that they dont have anymore drive letters available? heh

Link to comment
Share on other sites


Archived

This topic is now archived and is closed to further replies.

  • Recently Browsing   0 members

    • No registered users viewing this page.
×
×
  • Create New...