Old Fashioned 'Pirates' Steal 6,000 Copies Of The New Call Of Duty Game

from the time-to-institute-some-PRM,-perhaps? dept

In this day and age of digital goods, where the waters are constantly muddied by the use of phrases like “stealing” or “content theft” in place of “copying” or “infringement,” it’s refreshing to see a youthful group of go-getters shaming their basement-dwelling peers by leaving the house and, you know, actually stealing something.

Via Computer and Video Games comes the somewhat surprising news of actual theft(!).

French site TFI News reports that the truck suffered a collision with a car on saturday morning in Créteil, south Paris, before two masked individuals emerged.

The criminals reportedly used tear gas to neutralise the truck drivers before hopping in and making off with the video game shipment said to be worth 400,000 Euros.

Separate reports say the truck contained a delivery of Activision’s much-anticipated shooter, Modern Warfare 3 – an estimated 6000 copies of it.

Additional details from the source article (via Google Translate) indicate that a second truck was hit later in the day, bringing the total loss to nearly 800,000 euros.

This time the bad guys, three hooded people, used a weapon to commandeer the vehicle after having blocked the road. They quickly escape the wheel of the delivery van containing the same game.

While stealing physical product would seem to be completely redundant in this age of “epidemic level” piracy, there’s something to be said about putting in a dishonest day’s work. Of course, these stolen goods will likely be useless, considering Activision will likely have already pinned down the serial numbers affected by the time Jean Q. Publique has purchased his copy via LeBay or whatever. While pirating in the physical realm allows you to wear kickass hoods and toss around tear gas, the pirated digital equivalent will contain none of the damning evidence (invalid serial numbers, tear gas residue) and all of the fun of the original. I mean, this is a Call of Duty game and you’re going to want to get online, right? Nobody buys/steals CoD for the single player.

On the other hand, maybe there’s another lesson to be learned from this. Perhaps the “new” piracy will start to resemble the “old” piracy again. After all, the content industries would much rather have you stealing their physical product than downloading the hell out of it, as is evidenced by CreativeAccountingAmerica’s nifty new coffee mug, which blatantly invites passersby to make off with this beautifully photoshopped item, rather than their non-rivalrous goods. (Hood and tear gas optional.)

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Comments on “Old Fashioned 'Pirates' Steal 6,000 Copies Of The New Call Of Duty Game”

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70 Comments
Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

I bet the games end up back in the retail distribution channel somehow and consumers end up being the ones that lose out in the long run because Activision “disables” completely valid copies of their games which some consumers bought innocently.

In the end, I bet some mom-and-pop retailer ends up taking the fall for buying completely legitimate-looking games on the cheap from a supplier that they can’t track down after the fact.

Original thieves will probably get away with it.

Steve R. (profile) says:

But why be honest? Target BAD,

There is little reason to be “honest”. If you actually buy the software there seems to be no method to return the product for a refund. Given that,why should the consumer be honest when a company takes your money and refuses to give it back. With that Target – BAD.

The TOS and EULA deprive you of any rights and to my knowledge none of the software offers a return policy. So if you reject the terms of service, the product does not work on your computer, or you are otherwise displeased it you just spent big $$$ for useless cheap plastic.

Honesty needs to work both ways, not just to the benefit of the seller. Good old “Buyer Beware”. With that, why should the consumer be “honest”.

Butcherer79 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

First line of my comment above:
“Though amusing to read”

Tim’s joking nature, not Mike’s, did not fall on deaf ears and I look forward to reading more, both serious and tongue in cheek posts.
It was just an observation, not an attack. I have posted here several times and I don’t think I skimmed so low as to be trolling, this was just my view, to be taken or not by others.

Butcherer79 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

At no point did I imply that I was, in fact I pointed out that the comparison between real and digital piracy is important. I was not damaged by reading this article, I did not feel down after reading this article, if I am interested in the articles here on TD I try to show it through a post or two.
This was an observation, not a complaint and certainly not an attack on the author.

Butcherer79 (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:

From above, applies here too:
“Butcherer79 (profile), Nov 10th, 2011 @ 7:50am

First line of my comment above:
“Though amusing to read”

Tim’s joking nature, not Mike’s, did not fall on deaf ears and I look forward to reading more, both serious and tongue in cheek posts.
It was just an observation, not an attack. I have posted here several times and I don’t think I skimmed so low as to be trolling, this was just my view, to be taken or not by others.”

FuzzyDuck says:

Re: Re: Re: Re:

but perhaps this could have been made whilst not bigging up a “dishonest day’s work”.

The thing is I found the phrase a “dishonest day’s work” particularly funny as I did Tim’s “bigging up” of this event.

But I’ll accept your explanation and retract my implied statement that you lack a sense of humor. I’ll have to reserve that for a more deserving commentator.

Capitalist Lion Tamer (profile) says:

Re: Re:

I can see your point, and I’m glad that you can see mine. I don’t think I was trying to “glorify” the violence as much as point out the absurdity of treating online criminal acts with the same severity as offline criminal acts.

But, as was ably pointed out by iamtheky: I am fond of the hyperbolic. 🙂

Wes says:

Even you, Tim

“While pirating in the physical realm allows you to wear kickass hoods and toss around tear gas, the pirated digital equivalent will contain none of the damning evidence (invalid serial numbers, tear gas residue) and all of the fun of the original.”

As you pointed out, the waters are muddied by the replacement of “copying” and “infringement” with terms implying theft. So much that even you, Tim, can’t help but describe an infringing, cracked copy as “pirated”.

Jay (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:2 Pirates?

*sigh*

Let’s try this again. Digital unauthorized downloading of files has always been a service issue. Not a legal one. While those in the movie and music industry continue to try to make it a legal issue, it has always been ineffective in trying to litigate piracy away, which has NEVER worked.

Cyberlockers such as Google Music or Rapidshare continue to fulfill niches that the MPAA and RIAA will not fulfill. While criminalizing linking is within their grasp, the cheaper outcome maintains that those within the industry build their own platforms of commerce instead of complaining to Congress.

The litigation route continues to work against those that use it, vilifying their approach and showing the ineffectiveness of illegal search and seizures, faulty evidence collection, and lawsuits based on circumstantial evidence.

But of course, making tapes was a crime too. Great way to enforce the law… Just think everyone is a criminal.

Anonymous Coward says:

“In this day and age of digital goods, where the waters are constantly muddied by the use of phrases like “stealing” or “content theft” in place of “copying” or “infringement,”..”

But the results are the same, obtaining something to which you are not entitled. Merriam Webster defines stealing as “to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully”. Perhaps the laws regarding theft should be changed to reflect this definition. Then maybe TechDirt would stop arguing over VOCABULARY and look at the real issue which is that a product or service is being used without compensation to the rights holder.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

You do know that legal definitions are not the same as the ones a layman would use, right?

Or that infringement is a civil matter, not criminal, right?

And that it is this way because that’s how the laws are written, right?

And that its really not a problem of vocabulary, but of your understanding of these facts, right?

Ron Rezendes (profile) says:

Re: Re:

And this is why I don’t think I’ll ever technically pirate anything:

“to take or appropriate without right or leave and with intent to keep or make use of wrongfully”

No matter how I obtain it – I’m ALWAYS willing to give it back when I’m done!

It’s really too bad that when I pay for it I can’t actually return the software if it doesn’t fulfill my needs, something doesn’t seem quite right about that. Almost anything else I buy allows a return for refund.

Steve R. (profile) says:

Re: The Definition of Stealing is Becoming More "Liberal"

Anonymous, content creators are involved in a massive land-grab that consistently aggrandizes their so-called property privilege. This land-grab needs to be stopped.

Not only that, but scarcity is used, in some situation, as a basis for asserting a property right. Well, if there is infinite scarcity, then the property right should diminish.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re:

“Merriam Webster defines stealing as…”

Nice cherry picking of one part of your preferred definition. Luckily for us, the law needs to be more specific.

Whether you like it or not, infringement and theft are 2 totally separate things with different definitions. Stop trying to muddy the waters and accept this.

Here’s a quick guide to which is which – stealing deprives the owner of the original product and thus incurs costs and/or other direct quantifiable harm. Infringement does not incur any other these costs, only *potentially* depriving of a possible sale. Simple.

“maybe TechDirt would stop arguing over VOCABULARY”

Stop pretending that words mean things other than what they’re intended to mean when it suits your argument, and maybe they will.

“the real issue which is that a product or service is being used without compensation to the rights holder.”

Same thing happens when I borrow a friend’s book. Should I be subject to legal sanctions when I do that?

Kevin L (profile) says:

Infringement is cheaper

Considering they made off not just with physical product and license keys, but caused damage and will cost the municipality money for investigation, I’d say good old digital infringement is far cheaper than actual crime. If DRM got to a point where it were unbreakable, you’d get more cases like this, where people really get hurt – maybe even killed.

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