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Comments on: The hypocrisy about Web video

CNET News.com's Charles Cooper says outrage in some quarters triggered by Viacom's lawsuit against YouTube betrays a less obvious bias.

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Hypocrisy?
by bcjrslu20 March 14, 2007 5:28 AM PDT
I do not think that this article cites any hypocritical action on the part of Google or Viacom, furthermore, it meanders aimlessly without really addressing any one issue, then uses foul language at the end.
Reply to this comment
Have another coffee
by Tadmin March 14, 2007 6:12 AM PDT
You should have another coffee before posting. It's obviously a stab at the hypocrisy of the content leaches... and a well-written one.
View reply
Hypocrisy?
by bcjrslu20 March 14, 2007 5:28 AM PDT
I do not think that this article cites any hypocritical action on the part of Google or Viacom, furthermore, it meanders aimlessly without really addressing any one issue, then uses foul language at the end.
Reply to this comment
Have another coffee
by Tadmin March 14, 2007 6:12 AM PDT
You should have another coffee before posting. It's obviously a stab at the hypocrisy of the content leaches... and a well-written one.
View reply
Is YouTube Really Competing?
by ferricoxide March 14, 2007 5:47 AM PDT
I think it's a bit disingenuous to say that YouTube is actually competing with ViaCom offerings. Have you ever even watched a video on YouTube? It's kind of like saying that a 10th generation dub of a VHS copy of Phantom Menace competes with a showing of Phantom Menace at one of the digital movie theatres.

Yes, theft of content is still theft of content, but to say that what YouTube offers would be a sufficiently good alternative as to negatively impact ViaCom's own offerings seems laughable.
Reply to this comment
head in sand
by skeptik March 14, 2007 6:21 AM PDT
No arguing YouTube's video quality is crap. I don't watch much YouTube for that reason.
But are you honestly saying that someone who goes to YouTube to watch a video clip will then go elsewhere and pay to watch the clip? If so, you're seriously deluded or just flat out lying.

You could have made the argument that someone watching the free crappy video would never have bought the clip anyway, and there is room for debate on that view. But YouTube most certainly is competing with Viacom offering the same video clip. If Viacom was claiming every viewing on YouTube was a lost sale (ala RIAA reasoning) I'd strongly disagree, but that's not the issue here. They simply don't want their clips hosted and it's their right.
View all 4 replies
An issue for damages
by phillynets March 14, 2007 6:26 AM PDT
You raise an issue for the extent of damages - like $1 Billion, but this totally off-point when it comes to whether Google violated Viacom's copyrights. Even if YouTube/Google is incompetent in distributing the pirated content - it is still copyright piracy. If, however, there is not a lot damage the Billion Dollar price tag will get chopped down. Of course, the best thing for both companies is to make a deal so they can both go about making more money together.
View all 2 replies
It's about Attention
by csven March 14, 2007 8:01 AM PDT
Anything... anything... that takes viewers away from the television is competition. That it is the same content is rubbing salt in the wound of those who helped create it to acquire viewers in the first place.

The issue is Attention. Without it, there's no advertising revenue and that's how both of these companies stay in business.
Is YouTube Really Competing?
by ferricoxide March 14, 2007 5:47 AM PDT
I think it's a bit disingenuous to say that YouTube is actually competing with ViaCom offerings. Have you ever even watched a video on YouTube? It's kind of like saying that a 10th generation dub of a VHS copy of Phantom Menace competes with a showing of Phantom Menace at one of the digital movie theatres.

Yes, theft of content is still theft of content, but to say that what YouTube offers would be a sufficiently good alternative as to negatively impact ViaCom's own offerings seems laughable.
Reply to this comment
head in sand
by skeptik March 14, 2007 6:21 AM PDT
No arguing YouTube's video quality is crap. I don't watch much YouTube for that reason.
But are you honestly saying that someone who goes to YouTube to watch a video clip will then go elsewhere and pay to watch the clip? If so, you're seriously deluded or just flat out lying.

You could have made the argument that someone watching the free crappy video would never have bought the clip anyway, and there is room for debate on that view. But YouTube most certainly is competing with Viacom offering the same video clip. If Viacom was claiming every viewing on YouTube was a lost sale (ala RIAA reasoning) I'd strongly disagree, but that's not the issue here. They simply don't want their clips hosted and it's their right.
View all 4 replies
An issue for damages
by phillynets March 14, 2007 6:26 AM PDT
You raise an issue for the extent of damages - like $1 Billion, but this totally off-point when it comes to whether Google violated Viacom's copyrights. Even if YouTube/Google is incompetent in distributing the pirated content - it is still copyright piracy. If, however, there is not a lot damage the Billion Dollar price tag will get chopped down. Of course, the best thing for both companies is to make a deal so they can both go about making more money together.
View all 2 replies
It's about Attention
by csven March 14, 2007 8:01 AM PDT
Anything... anything... that takes viewers away from the television is competition. That it is the same content is rubbing salt in the wound of those who helped create it to acquire viewers in the first place.

The issue is Attention. Without it, there's no advertising revenue and that's how both of these companies stay in business.
Well said.
by technewsjunkie March 14, 2007 6:10 AM PDT
As a (professional) content creator I look forward to this all working
out. So I can get a piece of the pie!
Reply to this comment
Well said.
by technewsjunkie March 14, 2007 6:10 AM PDT
As a (professional) content creator I look forward to this all working
out. So I can get a piece of the pie!
Reply to this comment
Yep
by phillynets March 14, 2007 6:17 AM PDT
An excellent run-down of the salient issues at hand.

Just one question: When Google purchased YouTube, I wonder if they agreed to accept all of the liability for this easily forseable problem. If you buy a company with a physical space that has environmental liabilities, unless the buyer assumes the responsibility, the seller retains significant liability. What happens when you buy a company like YouTube? Do they have to clean up some of their mess - like a problematic business model - or is Google on the hook for it all?
Reply to this comment
Yes they did...
by dargon19888 March 14, 2007 10:26 AM PDT
And Mark Cuban was one of the first to point out the fact that this is a major lawsuit waiting to happen.

When Google bought YouTube, they became on the hook.
Even though they are "technically" complying with the DCMA act by removing the video as soon as its reported, they are still on the hook because as soon as it goes down, it comes back up.

What is interesting is that Viacom didn't go after the posters who are putting up the material in the first place.
View reply
Yep
by phillynets March 14, 2007 6:17 AM PDT
An excellent run-down of the salient issues at hand.

Just one question: When Google purchased YouTube, I wonder if they agreed to accept all of the liability for this easily forseable problem. If you buy a company with a physical space that has environmental liabilities, unless the buyer assumes the responsibility, the seller retains significant liability. What happens when you buy a company like YouTube? Do they have to clean up some of their mess - like a problematic business model - or is Google on the hook for it all?
Reply to this comment
Yes they did...
by dargon19888 March 14, 2007 10:26 AM PDT
And Mark Cuban was one of the first to point out the fact that this is a major lawsuit waiting to happen.

When Google bought YouTube, they became on the hook.
Even though they are "technically" complying with the DCMA act by removing the video as soon as its reported, they are still on the hook because as soon as it goes down, it comes back up.

What is interesting is that Viacom didn't go after the posters who are putting up the material in the first place.
View reply
blurry line
by befuddledms March 14, 2007 6:28 AM PDT
I have come across content on YouTube that I did not know was available. Stuff that the copyright holder is not actively marketing. That has lead me to either rent it legally or purchase a legal copy. Maybe I am in the minority but I am sure that a lot of people do the same. These big media companies need to get it through their head that they will die if they don't embrace the internet as a medium for promoting and selling their wares. VW came out with the incredibly funny "unpimp your auto" commercials a while back. They were immediately on YouTube. Everyone wanted to see them. You can't tell me that this free advertising didn't help VW sell more GTI's.
YouTube has overhead for running their service so they need to make money. Viacom and the others need to let loose of the reins a little bit and think of a way to work with YouTube and other internet services and it will benefit them a lot more than suing everyone. The more people who view a clip from the Daily Show the more people it bring to actually watch the show. Sure some people don't have basic cable and technically should not be able to watch the clips but at some point that person might decide that it is worth getting basic cable because of things that they saw on YouTube.
Viacom and the like want total control and instant gratification rather than trying to use new technology to nurture future paying customers. And no, I don't work for YouTube.
Reply to this comment
advertising part 3
by gggg sssss March 14, 2007 2:10 PM PDT
so if I shot a video of your mother and put it up on YouTube, I could claim that you should be grateful for the free advertising?
View reply
blurry line
by befuddledms March 14, 2007 6:28 AM PDT
I have come across content on YouTube that I did not know was available. Stuff that the copyright holder is not actively marketing. That has lead me to either rent it legally or purchase a legal copy. Maybe I am in the minority but I am sure that a lot of people do the same. These big media companies need to get it through their head that they will die if they don't embrace the internet as a medium for promoting and selling their wares. VW came out with the incredibly funny "unpimp your auto" commercials a while back. They were immediately on YouTube. Everyone wanted to see them. You can't tell me that this free advertising didn't help VW sell more GTI's.
YouTube has overhead for running their service so they need to make money. Viacom and the others need to let loose of the reins a little bit and think of a way to work with YouTube and other internet services and it will benefit them a lot more than suing everyone. The more people who view a clip from the Daily Show the more people it bring to actually watch the show. Sure some people don't have basic cable and technically should not be able to watch the clips but at some point that person might decide that it is worth getting basic cable because of things that they saw on YouTube.
Viacom and the like want total control and instant gratification rather than trying to use new technology to nurture future paying customers. And no, I don't work for YouTube.
Reply to this comment
advertising part 3
by gggg sssss March 14, 2007 2:10 PM PDT
so if I shot a video of your mother and put it up on YouTube, I could claim that you should be grateful for the free advertising?
View reply
Youtube killed the MTV star
by garrywdm March 14, 2007 6:36 AM PDT
It's just Youtube envy. Youtube took down the clips, and Viacom should be booming...but it isn't is it. Viacom is a spent force, who the hell watches mtv these days anyway and whatever that other show was? Never heard of it, never seen it, couldn't give a damn. The youtube market is the world...not just north america.
Reply to this comment
Youtube killed the MTV star
by garrywdm March 14, 2007 6:36 AM PDT
It's just Youtube envy. Youtube took down the clips, and Viacom should be booming...but it isn't is it. Viacom is a spent force, who the hell watches mtv these days anyway and whatever that other show was? Never heard of it, never seen it, couldn't give a damn. The youtube market is the world...not just north america.
Reply to this comment
Finally Something Rooted In Real
by seankirk March 14, 2007 6:46 AM PDT
I was starting to wonder if had missed something. I have seen all the web posts screaming for the blood of eveyone at Viacom. But most people forget the time and effort that goes into producing any show/movie on any TV network. Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. In school you get expelled for copying another students work. As the web progresses we should not forget to respect the work of others.
Reply to this comment
dunno what real you're referring to
by pjhenry1216 March 14, 2007 7:07 AM PDT
Viacom requested clips to be removed. YouTube complied. Viacom set up its own site with clips. It failed. Viacom sues YouTube. YouTube never argued with them and always removed clips that Viacom requested be removed... EVEN CLIPS THAT VIACOM HAD NO CONTROL OVER WHATSOEVER. Viacom is just upset that it can't compete with YouTube on its own merits, so its suing. *Thats* the American way these days apparently.

Copying work and posted it on the web is *not* plagiarism. Plagiarism is copying work and then calling it your own. Your analogy doesn't apply in any way, shape, or form. As the web progresses, society should keep up. Just because something used to be one way doesn't mean it always should be. Tradition doesn't justify itself. As the web progresses, society, culture, and economics should do its best to progress as well instead of spending all this money holding onto a business model that is dying in the electronic world.
View all 2 replies
Ok Step One....
by nuckelhedd March 14, 2007 10:43 AM PDT
The American way has always been to benefit from someone elses creative work or if that isn't possible to utterly discredit or destroy the competition. (Anyone remember Tesla an Tucker)Lets also not forget our own govermnents' efforte to steal inventions which happen to be useful to the military (i.e. free energy machines, wind generators, solar) all of which were stifled until they couldn't be ignored. (wind farms were illegal at one point because it would have blocked the utilities profits and to some extent they still are unless they are owned by the utilities). Let's also not forget Rockafellers attempts to stop the federal highway system because it would have and effectively did destroy his railroads consumer base. Enough said on that.
Step Two...
by nuckelhedd March 14, 2007 10:50 AM PDT
These media conglomerates have less to do with so called content creation than you think, and even if everything they ever did was out of their own pockets it still doesn't follow that people are as you said plagarising anything. That requires someone to pass off someone elses work as their own. Do you see how ridiculous your comments sound now? No one is going to get expelled from You Tube or Google for showing a clip of the daily show or Apocalypse Now or anything else that shows up in small portions. Even RIAA has to concede that replay of up to 8 seconds worth of audio content doesn't constitute copyright infringement. Again these companies need to come to an agreement as to sharing revenue because the genie is out and you can't put it back and to tell the unmitigated truth sales and viewership are up for most of the so called "Pirated" content in it's original forms. Be they TV or DVD or whathave you. It's time they quit whining and started living in the real world. Boo Hoo i don't my $1 billion bonus. Poo on them
Yeah, I think it's really funny how many posters here...
by fcekuahd March 14, 2007 1:06 PM PDT
seem to have absolutely no idea what copyright means. But fortunately, none of them are going to have any influence on the future of copyright law.
View reply
Learn the definitions.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:26 PM PDT
>> Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. <<

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use
Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as use for scholarship or review. It provides for the legal, non-licensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. It is based on free speech rights provided by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The term "fair use" is unique to the United States; a similar principle, fair dealing, exists in some other common law jurisdictions. Civil law jurisdictions have other limitations and exceptions to copyright.

>> Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. <<

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use
Plagiarism?using someone's words, ideas images, etc. without acknowledgment?is a matter of professional ethics. Copyright is a matter of law.
Learn the definitions.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:27 PM PDT
>> Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. <<

From Wikipedia:
Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as use for scholarship or review. It provides for the legal, non-licensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. It is based on free speech rights provided by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The term "fair use" is unique to the United States; a similar principle, fair dealing, exists in some other common law jurisdictions. Civil law jurisdictions have other limitations and exceptions to copyright.

>> Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. <<

From Wikipedia:
Plagiarism?using someone's words, ideas images, etc. without acknowledgment?is a matter of professional ethics. Copyright is a matter of law.
Finally Something Rooted In Real
by seankirk March 14, 2007 6:46 AM PDT
I was starting to wonder if had missed something. I have seen all the web posts screaming for the blood of eveyone at Viacom. But most people forget the time and effort that goes into producing any show/movie on any TV network. Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. In school you get expelled for copying another students work. As the web progresses we should not forget to respect the work of others.
Reply to this comment
dunno what real you're referring to
by pjhenry1216 March 14, 2007 7:07 AM PDT
Viacom requested clips to be removed. YouTube complied. Viacom set up its own site with clips. It failed. Viacom sues YouTube. YouTube never argued with them and always removed clips that Viacom requested be removed... EVEN CLIPS THAT VIACOM HAD NO CONTROL OVER WHATSOEVER. Viacom is just upset that it can't compete with YouTube on its own merits, so its suing. *Thats* the American way these days apparently.

Copying work and posted it on the web is *not* plagiarism. Plagiarism is copying work and then calling it your own. Your analogy doesn't apply in any way, shape, or form. As the web progresses, society should keep up. Just because something used to be one way doesn't mean it always should be. Tradition doesn't justify itself. As the web progresses, society, culture, and economics should do its best to progress as well instead of spending all this money holding onto a business model that is dying in the electronic world.
View all 2 replies
Ok Step One....
by nuckelhedd March 14, 2007 10:43 AM PDT
The American way has always been to benefit from someone elses creative work or if that isn't possible to utterly discredit or destroy the competition. (Anyone remember Tesla an Tucker)Lets also not forget our own govermnents' efforte to steal inventions which happen to be useful to the military (i.e. free energy machines, wind generators, solar) all of which were stifled until they couldn't be ignored. (wind farms were illegal at one point because it would have blocked the utilities profits and to some extent they still are unless they are owned by the utilities). Let's also not forget Rockafellers attempts to stop the federal highway system because it would have and effectively did destroy his railroads consumer base. Enough said on that.
Step Two...
by nuckelhedd March 14, 2007 10:50 AM PDT
These media conglomerates have less to do with so called content creation than you think, and even if everything they ever did was out of their own pockets it still doesn't follow that people are as you said plagarising anything. That requires someone to pass off someone elses work as their own. Do you see how ridiculous your comments sound now? No one is going to get expelled from You Tube or Google for showing a clip of the daily show or Apocalypse Now or anything else that shows up in small portions. Even RIAA has to concede that replay of up to 8 seconds worth of audio content doesn't constitute copyright infringement. Again these companies need to come to an agreement as to sharing revenue because the genie is out and you can't put it back and to tell the unmitigated truth sales and viewership are up for most of the so called "Pirated" content in it's original forms. Be they TV or DVD or whathave you. It's time they quit whining and started living in the real world. Boo Hoo i don't my $1 billion bonus. Poo on them
Yeah, I think it's really funny how many posters here...
by fcekuahd March 14, 2007 1:06 PM PDT
seem to have absolutely no idea what copyright means. But fortunately, none of them are going to have any influence on the future of copyright law.
View reply
Learn the definitions.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:26 PM PDT
>> Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. <<

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use
Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as use for scholarship or review. It provides for the legal, non-licensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. It is based on free speech rights provided by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The term "fair use" is unique to the United States; a similar principle, fair dealing, exists in some other common law jurisdictions. Civil law jurisdictions have other limitations and exceptions to copyright.

>> Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. <<

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Fair_use
Plagiarism?using someone's words, ideas images, etc. without acknowledgment?is a matter of professional ethics. Copyright is a matter of law.
Learn the definitions.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:27 PM PDT
>> Being able to take someone elses creative works and do whatever you like with it has never been the American way. <<

From Wikipedia:
Fair use is a doctrine in United States copyright law that allows limited use of copyrighted material without requiring permission from the rights holders, such as use for scholarship or review. It provides for the legal, non-licensed citation or incorporation of copyrighted material in another author's work under a four-factor balancing test. It is based on free speech rights provided by the First Amendment to the United States Constitution. The term "fair use" is unique to the United States; a similar principle, fair dealing, exists in some other common law jurisdictions. Civil law jurisdictions have other limitations and exceptions to copyright.

>> Before web videos ruled the net, copying someones work and posting on the web was called plagiarism and is still scorned upon. <<

From Wikipedia:
Plagiarism?using someone's words, ideas images, etc. without acknowledgment?is a matter of professional ethics. Copyright is a matter of law.
Holy Bad Metaphors, Batman!
by Penguinisto March 14, 2007 8:52 AM PDT
To wit:

[i]"They recognize the risks of walking around with a veritable sword of Damocles trailing everywhere."[/i]

Okay, dude - that was just very painful to read.

You do know that the sword in question [i]hung by a hair right over Damocles' scalp[/i], right? So, umm, how exactly does that sword go about "trailing" around everywhere?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damocles

Sorry 'mano, but that sorta blew it for me. Was too busy going "***?" in my head a lot to bother w/ the rest of the blog...

/P
Reply to this comment
Did you bother to read from the link you give?
by catch23 March 14, 2007 11:33 AM PDT
I'll paste in the important part

>>More generally, it is used to denote a precarious situation and sense of foreboding thereof, especially one in which the onset of tragedy is restrained only by a delicate trigger or chance.
View reply
My thoughts exactly.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:32 PM PDT
I was like, "So, it trails everywhere and then they trip and fall on it, or maybe someone gets annoyed at the trailing sword and retaliates somehow."
Holy Bad Metaphors, Batman!
by Penguinisto March 14, 2007 8:52 AM PDT
To wit:

[i]"They recognize the risks of walking around with a veritable sword of Damocles trailing everywhere."[/i]

Okay, dude - that was just very painful to read.

You do know that the sword in question [i]hung by a hair right over Damocles' scalp[/i], right? So, umm, how exactly does that sword go about "trailing" around everywhere?

http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Damocles

Sorry 'mano, but that sorta blew it for me. Was too busy going "***?" in my head a lot to bother w/ the rest of the blog...

/P
Reply to this comment
Did you bother to read from the link you give?
by catch23 March 14, 2007 11:33 AM PDT
I'll paste in the important part

>>More generally, it is used to denote a precarious situation and sense of foreboding thereof, especially one in which the onset of tragedy is restrained only by a delicate trigger or chance.
View reply
My thoughts exactly.
by CommandHerTaco March 14, 2007 9:32 PM PDT
I was like, "So, it trails everywhere and then they trip and fall on it, or maybe someone gets annoyed at the trailing sword and retaliates somehow."
incredible, especially from a CNET editor
by idiotkiller March 14, 2007 9:43 AM PDT
this opinion is incredible, especially coming from an editor of a website that professes to be on the cutting edge of technology.

copyrights and intellectual property as concepts are outdated and no longer apply. YouTube is the actual reflection of reality, a social site where people gather and share what they like in common, original and "copyrighted" alike. it's what people ALREADY do in real life and HAVE been doing ever since culture as a concept came about for humans.

this is just the natural evolution of what the internet can and MUST be. Viacom, ironically enough, represents old media that needs to evolve with the times or get OUT of the way.
Reply to this comment
Here's a suggestion for you, other than suicide
by peteraltschuler March 14, 2007 11:47 AM PDT
If copyrights and intellectual property no longer apply, then you should do whatever job you do... for free! After all, once you're paid the first time for creating a report or making a latte or delivering a package, all the other times should be done without charge. Your boss isn't getting any additional value from something you've already done, so why pay you? Of course, you'll still have to pay for food, gas, rent, and the rest -- just like the artists and authors and composers who turn out the material you "share." If they're not going to be paid for their work, why create it? Then, with nothing new, you may just have to hum to yourself. If you're ready to barter, exchanging something of value for something that, apparently, has some worth to you (or you wouldn't want to "share" it), then you're opinion may be valid. Or, if you're open to the idea that, if someone needs transportation, they should just "share" your car... without telling you... or bringing it back, then you might be better positioned to "share" what belongs to others. Until then, you're just a common thief.
View all 3 replies
Yes, that is an incredibly ironic nickname you have...
by fcekuahd March 14, 2007 12:40 PM PDT
It really does imply that you are planning to kill yourself.

"Copyrights and intellectual property as concepts are outdated and no longer apply?" What kind of fantasy world do you live in? They apply as much now as they did with the invention of the printing press. What do you think that the Internet is? It's another communication medium. It's made it technically easy to violate copyright, but it certainly hasn't changed the need for the underlying principles.
View reply
talk to hand
by gggg sssss March 14, 2007 2:20 PM PDT
so if youtube took down all of the copyrighted material, and left only the videos of people talking to their hand, or writing ONE WORLD on their hand, how many viewers will they have left?

And what content that anybody wants to watch have YOU created?
View reply
Huh?
by Penguinisto March 15, 2007 7:35 PM PDT
No, let me reprhase that ...***?

Lookit - copyright in and of itself is needed. Linux and the GPL
rely on copyright just as much as Windows and its EULA does.

Intellectual Property (the proper term, not the abused version
bandied about in certain quarters) is a necessary product and
currency of the Information Age (at least at this time).

Dunno what you were thinking when you wrote your post...

/P
incredible, especially from a CNET editor
by idiotkiller March 14, 2007 9:43 AM PDT
this opinion is incredible, especially coming from an editor of a website that professes to be on the cutting edge of technology.

copyrights and intellectual property as concepts are outdated and no longer apply. YouTube is the actual reflection of reality, a social site where people gather and share what they like in common, original and "copyrighted" alike. it's what people ALREADY do in real life and HAVE been doing ever since culture as a concept came about for humans.

this is just the natural evolution of what the internet can and MUST be. Viacom, ironically enough, represents old media that needs to evolve with the times or get OUT of the way.
Reply to this comment
Here's a suggestion for you, other than suicide
by peteraltschuler March 14, 2007 11:47 AM PDT
If copyrights and intellectual property no longer apply, then you should do whatever job you do... for free! After all, once you're paid the first time for creating a report or making a latte or delivering a package, all the other times should be done without charge. Your boss isn't getting any additional value from something you've already done, so why pay you? Of course, you'll still have to pay for food, gas, rent, and the rest -- just like the artists and authors and composers who turn out the material you "share." If they're not going to be paid for their work, why create it? Then, with nothing new, you may just have to hum to yourself. If you're ready to barter, exchanging something of value for something that, apparently, has some worth to you (or you wouldn't want to "share" it), then you're opinion may be valid. Or, if you're open to the idea that, if someone needs transportation, they should just "share" your car... without telling you... or bringing it back, then you might be better positioned to "share" what belongs to others. Until then, you're just a common thief.
View all 3 replies
Yes, that is an incredibly ironic nickname you have...
by fcekuahd March 14, 2007 12:40 PM PDT
It really does imply that you are planning to kill yourself.

"Copyrights and intellectual property as concepts are outdated and no longer apply?" What kind of fantasy world do you live in? They apply as much now as they did with the invention of the printing press. What do you think that the Internet is? It's another communication medium. It's made it technically easy to violate copyright, but it certainly hasn't changed the need for the underlying principles.
View reply
talk to hand
by gggg sssss March 14, 2007 2:20 PM PDT
so if youtube took down all of the copyrighted material, and left only the videos of people talking to their hand, or writing ONE WORLD on their hand, how many viewers will they have left?

And what content that anybody wants to watch have YOU created?
View reply
Huh?
by Penguinisto March 15, 2007 7:35 PM PDT
No, let me reprhase that ...***?

Lookit - copyright in and of itself is needed. Linux and the GPL
rely on copyright just as much as Windows and its EULA does.

Intellectual Property (the proper term, not the abused version
bandied about in certain quarters) is a necessary product and
currency of the Information Age (at least at this time).

Dunno what you were thinking when you wrote your post...

/P
maybe a better idea...
by randymorris March 14, 2007 9:43 AM PDT
yesterday i had heard about a movie called idiocracy while listening to the twit podcast (free). i watched a few clips on youtube and this solidified my interest and i purchased the dvd last night. the movie retailed at walmart for $20 and i normally would not pay that much for a dvd. but because i was certain i would like the movie, i made the purchase. a similar effect occurred with me and a bunch of my friends concerning a video game called world of warcraft. none of us had any interest in playing a computer video game at the time. however, we came across a clip on youtube about a character name leeroy jenkins. this clip peaked our interest so much we had to try the game. two years later we have $3000 invested in this game between the three of us in subscription fees, upgrades, and buying online gold, all due to one video clip on youtube. i have heard many other player of world of warcraft that have admitted to having the same clip have the same effect on them.

my point?

that there is a tremendous value in these video clips. and yes, maybe from a short sighted view, protecting the "traditional" business paradigm might seem logical and "safe", but the only true logic takes into account what we have learned from experience, not just what makes sense on paper. and experience has very unfailingly shown is that people will share information and media. like the war on drugs, no matter how much money or people or tracking or anything you throw at it, people WILL find a way. so is it smarter to anger all those who have any interest in your product by making it more difficult and frustrating to use. and one of the biggest truths about life is that some things change and some things stay the same. a much wiser approach would be to try and determine which things will change (medium of information we use to make decisions) and which things will not (people are visual, gregarious and like free stuff. youtube provided a community that well addresses all these, and it is obvious they are successful).
so viacom needs to step up, find a way to use to take advantage of the new situation instead of wasting more money on legal crap than they would have lost in protecting their old scheme of things.
Reply to this comment
maybe a better idea...
by randymorris March 14, 2007 9:43 AM PDT
yesterday i had heard about a movie called idiocracy while listening to the twit podcast (free). i watched a few clips on youtube and this solidified my interest and i purchased the dvd last night. the movie retailed at walmart for $20 and i normally would not pay that much for a dvd. but because i was certain i would like the movie, i made the purchase. a similar effect occurred with me and a bunch of my friends concerning a video game called world of warcraft. none of us had any interest in playing a computer video game at the time. however, we came across a clip on youtube about a character name leeroy jenkins. this clip peaked our interest so much we had to try the game. two years later we have $3000 invested in this game between the three of us in subscription fees, upgrades, and buying online gold, all due to one video clip on youtube. i have heard many other player of world of warcraft that have admitted to having the same clip have the same effect on them.

my point?

that there is a tremendous value in these video clips. and yes, maybe from a short sighted view, protecting the "traditional" business paradigm might seem logical and "safe", but the only true logic takes into account what we have learned from experience, not just what makes sense on paper. and experience has very unfailingly shown is that people will share information and media. like the war on drugs, no matter how much money or people or tracking or anything you throw at it, people WILL find a way. so is it smarter to anger all those who have any interest in your product by making it more difficult and frustrating to use. and one of the biggest truths about life is that some things change and some things stay the same. a much wiser approach would be to try and determine which things will change (medium of information we use to make decisions) and which things will not (people are visual, gregarious and like free stuff. youtube provided a community that well addresses all these, and it is obvious they are successful).
so viacom needs to step up, find a way to use to take advantage of the new situation instead of wasting more money on legal crap than they would have lost in protecting their old scheme of things.
Reply to this comment
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