London Police To Set Up Special Copyright Crime Police Force

from the hollywood-gets-its-local-police-force-in-london dept

It’s really amazing how various governments around the globe fall sway to the bogus Hollywood talking points about how much copyright infringement is “harming” their business. Rather than recognizing that the situation is one where Hollywood’s failure to adapt a modern business model is the biggest issue, or that (at best) this should be a civil issue, law enforcement groups have had no problem doing Hollywood’s work for them. The latest? The City of London police are setting up their own “intellectual property crime unit” to deal with copyright infringement — specifically looking to go after dowloaders. In other words, something straight out of Cory Doctorow’s Pirate Cinema book, which happens to be our book club book this month.

The effort is being led by business secretary Vince Cable, who has sounded more reasonable on the subject in the past. But now he’s setting up a private police force for Hollywood right inside the London police? And, even worse, he’s pretending that this somehow encourages more creativity?

“Our creativity, our openness to and talent for innovation, is a key pillar of our return to robust growth. So it is right we work to create the environment in which creative, innovative businesses of all shapes and sizes flourish,” Cable said in a speech at The Big Innovation Centre in London.

“A vital part of this is making sure the intellectual property landscape encourages and cements success and growth. The new vision for how we support businesses and consumers is central to achieving this.”

Openness to talent and innovation isn’t spurred along by giving one industry the ability to use the police to stop people from making mashups and being creative. It does the opposite. It creates fear among creative types and drives them further underground, rather than helping to add to creativity and culture. This seems like a big step backward for a group that had promised to take a more evidence-based approach to copyright reform.

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Comments on “London Police To Set Up Special Copyright Crime Police Force”

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92 Comments
Ninja (profile) says:

The effort is being led by business secretary Vince Cable, who has sounded more reasonable on the subject in the past.

Till a filthy huge sum of money was shoved up his arse to change his mind.

In any case I foresee they’ll be astonished at the rapid increase of jail population in London after they set up this shit. Either that or VPN usage will skyrocket.

bob (profile) says:

Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Can you name any kids in prison? Any at all? Everyone complains about the settlements from the RIAA that are priced in the thousands of dollars, but they’re fairly reasonable compares to other punishments. People in the US are in jail for life for shoplifting.

http://www.nytimes.com/2012/11/25/opinion/sunday/california-horror-stories-and-the-3-strikes-law.html

And the people with the horrible judgements all decided that they wanted to stand up against what are really clearly written laws that have been enforced for decades.

Josh in CharlotteNC (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Plagiarism is when you take someone else’s work and put your name on it.

Copyright infringement is simply making an illegal copy without the copyright holder’s consent.

If you’re going to throw out phrases such as ‘grade school rules’, you shouldn’t make such an elementary mistake.

JEDIDIAH says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Avoiding plagarism only requires citing your sources.

Citing your sources won’t help you avoid a derivative works suit. If anything, they will give the relevant robber baron a map and a flashlight.

Avoiding the academic definition of plagarism also won’t insulate you from being accused of creating a derivative work.

Your notion of copyright law is missing a few bits.

crade (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

What are you joking? That is just plain not the case. There are tons of successful lawsuits that have nothing to do with verbatim copying. Even the mickey mouse “character” is covered by copyright. No specific implementation, just the general character. That just being one small example. Copyright covers whatever the holders want it to.

Cory of PC (profile) says:

Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

bob, I already have the right to create… and none of it is intellectual property. And I don’t need protection. I am happy with people looking at my stuff without the fear of being watch by some nosy people

And if I were to call the cops, it’ll be to get rid of people like you. Thanks…

bob (profile) says:

Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

And no one is taking away your right to give away your work. Go ahead. I don’t see why you’re hurt in any way if I sell mine for $100. Heck, you’re better off because you look more generous in comparison.

But I have rent to pay and medical insurance to buy. There are projects that can only be accomplished when artists are paid well enough to be able to devote themselves full time. A good way to fund this is to split up the costs among the consumers, something that copyright does reasonably well.

If free is the only option, only the rich will be able to devote themselves to art. Are you one of those 1%?

Cory of PC (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

… Well I feel like I don’t need any help from the government in giving me a monopoly to the stuff I created. And $100? Dude, I’m giving my stuff away for free! That’s WAY better than what you’re offering (that is if you’re offering anything).

And HA! I got a ton of projects myself and I don’t need money to get those done? Why? Because frankly, why should I be paid to sell out my stuff when I can create my stuff when I want without anyone giving me a schedule to work with and how they want my product to be? I do like money, but I don’t necessary need it for my projects because they can be done for free. I can write for free and I can draw for free. You’re offering up your services for $100 and I haven’t seen a single thing outta you.

You’re funny. Really, you are. I haven’t made a single cent yet in my trade, and I consider myself devoted to the arts more than you are.

crade (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Why would free be the only option? People pay me to build stuff because they need stuff built, not because of some horible government rules. What are my clients going to suddenly stop needing stuff because of copyright? Only stuff that has already been built, and remaking that crap is a horrible waste of my time anyway.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Well if you want to put it that way, when people infringe on copyrights nobody is also taking away your work or your ability to profit from it.

I don’t see why you’re so hurt in any way, why can’t you work your fans? is that so hard?

Why try to stop copying?
To copy something people actually need to do all the work and come up with all the resources necessary to make it happen, why should you get paid?

What would you say to a person that knocks on your door with a blueprint and says he owns the blueprints and you have to pay him for having build his home?

I would politely say “f. off”

Now that people say that to you, you don’t understand? and claim ignorance? that is a bit disingenuous isn’t it BOB!

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

I hate to tell you, but most creators first works are created without any financial support from publishers or the general public. The exceptions tend to be the 1% when they propose writing their biography, when they can get massive advances. They usually manage to get government support for their favorite cultural activities, like play and operas, you know the ones they attend so that they can be seen to be highly cultured.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

According to the NZ prosecution in the Megaupload case when they were accused of theft for taking copies of the hard drives of data out of NZ and sending it to the US they argued that data was not property and so by taking a copy of the data out of the country it was not theft because the data was not property. Well in that case and arguement that data is not property then data is not property and by copying the data cannot be theft.

Rikuo (profile) says:

Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

The FBI weren’t accused of “theft”. They were accused of mishandling key evidence, of taking copies of hard drives belonging to Megaupload and Kim Dotcom and taking those copies out of the country. It’s not the theft of property/not property they were being charged with, it’s the mishandling of evidence.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re: Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

“The search warrants used by police to raid the New Zealand home of Megaupload founder Kim Dotcom have been ruled illegal. In addition, the data that was sent to the FBI was ruled to be unlawfully obtained.” http://torrentfreak.com/megaupload-search-warrants-ruled-illegal-by-high-court-120628/

In my book anything that is unlawfully obtained is theft.

Milton Freewater says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Here here! Artists are people too...

“In my book anything that is unlawfully obtained is theft.”

“So when I download a movie off of a torrent against the copyright holder’s permission, and against copyright law, it’s theft?”

No, because downloading a movie off of a torrent isn’t unlawfully obtaining something. It’s (usually) redistributing something without permission, which is sometimes unlawful and wrong but has nothing to do with theft.

And you’d better believe content creators want you to understand this. Don’t listen to the trolls here.

PaulT (profile) says:

Re: Re: Re:3 Here here! Artists are people too...

That definition needs just one small refinement – if you unlawfully obtain *the only instance of something* it’s theft. Stealing a car, blah, blah is theft because there’s only one instance of that car and it creates tangible problems and costs as a result. Torrenting a movie is infringement or illegal distribution, but it’s not theft since the owner still has the original copy and suffers no tangible losses or costs.

So, the seizing of the Megaupload servers represents theft because tangible objects were taken in violation of the law, causing tangible costs and losses, and some of the data on those servers represented the only copy in existence. You can’t steal something if the owner still has the original copy, but the data was stolen in cases where it was removed illegally without another copy left in the hands of its owners.

gorehound (profile) says:

Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

Screw You !
I am an Artist and I do not Support this or the MAFIAA in any way.
I am one of the oldest punks in Maine and have been playing in Bands since 1972 when I was 16.
Look up Big Meat Hammer or The Lynn Rebels which are two of the present day bands I do.
Anyone is welcome to my music for free.Pay me if you got money.
Fuck The MAFIAA !
Jordan Kratz………..BMH and Lynn Rebels both agree with this.

Milton Freewater says:

Re: Here here! Artists are people too...

” we need to allow them to get the same protection from the police as the other property owners.”

I agree, Bob, but much of the time they’re talking about creating radical new protections that other property owners DON’T have.

It is unclear from the Guardian article exactly who the police plan to “go after” and how. Downloading without permission is legal. We all did it just now. So “illegal downloading” can’t actually be the target.

out_of_the_blue says:

"talking points" more effective than I thought.

“It’s really amazing how various governments around the globe fall sway to the bogus Hollywood talking points about how much copyright infringement is “harming” their business.”

Here I thought it was money and influence.

BTW: yet another example of how “copyright” is evolving. Whatever your notions of what’s right, you need to recognize what’s happening: The Rich are buying “laws”, and now getting tax-payer funded special police. Overarching lesson to learn is that The Rich don’t play fair, complete myth.

Is anyone here really certain that Mike “Streisand Effect” Masnick…
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Streisand_effect
Doesn’t get a little thrill every time I post this link?

Cory of PC (profile) says:

Re: "talking points" more effective than I thought.

Uh Blue, words are influence. Ever heard of a silver tongue? If someone has this, then their words can affect them and then they can win people over on this side. Money is just an added bonus.

And no. Why should he care about that link? It’s more or less annoying than… whatever you’re thinking about.

Anonymous Coward says:

Our creativity, our openness to and talent for innovation, is a key pillar of our return to robust growth. So it is right we work to create the environment in which creative, innovative businesses of all shapes and sizes flourish,” Cable said in a speech at The Big Innovation Center in London.

To do this we will stamp on anyone who tries to build on existing works.

/s

Anonymous Coward says:

since when have the people been able to trust and believe what any political party says? you always know when they’re lying cause their lips are moving! Cable seems to be turning into as big a two-faced, entertainment industries arse licker as Mandelson. yet another example of how to commission a governmental report and then totally ignore it!! what a prick!!

Anonymous Coward says:

people in the UK are being subjected to massive cuts, including with the police force and the government spends a fortune creating another branch to crack down on file sharing! what the hell has the entertainment industries done to deserve this extra help and for free? what the hell hold has it got over the world’s governments?

jameshogg says:

Great.

Maybe if this momentum continues we can have folks within the U.S. government and MPAA/RIAA arrested for stealing the intellectual property of innocent MegaUpload users (wait, scrap that, just say property). And I don’t mean stealing in the sense of simply making a copy… I mean actually depriving the original owners of possibly the only copies they had.

Beta (profile) says:

it'll cement the landscape for growth all right

“A vital part of this is making sure the intellectual property landscape encourages and cements success and growth.”

Am I the only one who gets a mental image of a couple of big decrepit old trees surrounded my acres and acres of fresh concrete? Is it possible that Mr. Cable has the same thought, at least subconsciously?

Anonymous Coward says:

I went looking for an article a guy wrote up for a machine repair procedure. His website closed down for personal issues. Only one guy made a copy of the procedure but he wouldn’t share it because of the author’s copyright. So part of me is not upset that if content creators want to protect their works until they disappear from lack of exposure. But we lose works for no good reason than not understanding what fair use can provide the public.

Anonymous Coward says:

Re: Re:

No, we’re losing our cultural history because of these cultural extinctionists, because they’re so obsessed with the “horrific” idea that someone else might be able to monetise the work they helped fund, for the most part.

That’s the most insane part of all this: the vast majority of these entitled rat-bastards is that they’re trying to skim off of everyone, including the actual creators.

haiku says:

Minor correction

The City of London police are responsible for law enforcement within the square mile that is the City of London i.e. not the Metropolitan Police responsible for the balance of the UK:

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

In short, they’ll be the police force who will be tasked with arresting City bankers illegally downloading porn

Milton Freewater says:

None of this helps

I refuse to purchase access to any movie produced by Voltage Pictures because of their lawsuits against Bittorrent users in the US and Canada.

http://www.voltagepictures.com

Will I ever watch any off their movies? None of your business and I don’t know. But I will never pay for them. That is for sure, and that’s the golden snitch.

If the London police help me expand my list, well, that’s their business, I guess.

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