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            <title>Australian Drug Mafia to Sell Pirated DVDs?</title>
            <link>http://www.torrentlog.com/torrent/news/anti+piracy+gangs+opinion+afact+australia+mafia+piracy/australian-drug-mafia-to-sell-pirated-dvds-1987/</link>
            <description><![CDATA[<p>If you ask any Australian what the most annoying thing is about TV shows or movies, a common response is that it can take a long time for things popular in the US and UK to make it &#8216;down under&#8217;. Apparently, the Mafia has picked up on this, as they have started selling pirated movies and TV-shows on the streets, or have they?</p>
<p>When you get in any sort of reporting, you start to see the same sort of stories crop up. We&#8217;ve been writing for almost 3½ years, and even in that short time, and in as narrow a field as I keep an eye on, we see the same things crop up. In that way, it&#8217;s like fashion, except instead of cycles of 20-30 years, its often only 3-4. One such example comes courtesy of yesterday&#8217;s The Australian. Under a <a href="http://www.theaustralian.news.com.au/story/0,24897,23942324-7582,00.html" target="_blank">headline</a> of “Organized Crime gets into Video Piracy” is a number of claims.</p>
<blockquote><p>&#8220;DVD and other piracy can now be more profitable than drug trafficking,&#8221; AFACT&#8217;s director of operations Neil Gane told The Australian. &#8220;That&#8217;s why crime organizations are going into it.&#8221;</p></blockquote>
<p>It might not sound familiar to some of you, but a similar claim was made some four years and 9500 miles away, in the UK. Back then, during a campaign called “piracy is a crime” they made similar allegations (see the top of <a href="http://web.archive.org/web/20040727100557/http://www.piracyisacrime.com/" target="_blank">this page</a>, court. wayback machine), allegations that <a href="http://piracyisnotacrime.com/stats-society.php" target="_blank">didn&#8217;t stand up</a> to scrutiny back then, when we first encountered them.</p>
<p>Do these? Well, the article in question makes use of the infamous LEK study, and even the MPAA knows it&#8217;s <a href="http://mpaa.org/press_releases/lek%20college%20student%20data_f.pdf" target="_blank">inaccurate</a> (pdf). So, it&#8217;s not exactly off to the best of starts. Unfortunately, that&#8217;s also the only start. Despite a trawl of the websites and press releases put out by the two organizations (the other being Foxtel), there is I only one recent <a href="http://www.afact.org.au/pressreleases/AFACT_Media_Release_20080520.doc" target="_blank">link</a> (doc) between drugs and &#8216;piracy&#8217; and that is the prosecution of ONE MAN just over a month ago, for cultivating cannabis, and what is described as &#8216;multiple copyright offenses&#8217;.</p>
<p>So, we&#8217;ve gone from one guy, with 3,300 movies+TV shows and growing some cannabis (total punishment, 7 month suspended sentence, and a 2 year good behavior order) to Organized Crime. Despite the utter failure of the <a href="http://www.piracyisacrime.com" target="_blank">similar campaign</a> in the UK years earlier (where the only thing remaining of the campaign is the &#8216;You wouldn&#8217;t steal a&#8230;” advert) Australia seems determined to try and make it work.</p>
<p>However, there is a plus side, in that <a href="http://www.afact.org.au" target="_blank">AFACT</a> have established a market price it believes consumers feel to be the worth of a DVD. In all their estimations of yearly capacity, they give a &#8217;street value&#8217; of roughly $5AUS, which is about $4.77 US (3 Euros, or £2.40). In this they differ from the campaign in the UK, where the value given was some 20 times greater. In this, while telling lies, they are also more truthful.</p>
<p>In the end, no &#8216;criminal gang&#8217; will forego their drugs, weapons or other lucrative money-making operations for DVD piracy. The reasoning is as plain as it is simple. With drugs, or guns they have small, highly valuable goods that can&#8217;t be easily obtained elsewhere. As the world becomes <a href="http://www.websiteoptimization.com/bw/0704/" target="_blank">increasingly connected</a>, and peer-to-peer becomes simpler to use, more reliable, less time consuming AND more powerful, the potential returns on selling bootleg DVDs reduces, <a href="http://torrentfreak.com/p2p-file-sharing-ruins-physical-piracy-business/">ask Tony</a>. Ten years ago, people had dial-up, and hard drives were maybe big enough for 2-3 DVDs. Now you can buy terabyte hard drives, and even the TorrentFreak researcher, living in the middle of rural Georgia, 10 miles from the nearest shops, has an 8Mbit connection.</p>
<p>The reasons for comparisons become clear when you hear the comments of Foxtel&#8217;s head of Fraud, Mark Mulready (a &#8216;former police prosecutor and detective&#8217;), who told The Australian &#8220;Police should have all the same investigative tools to fight piracy they currently have for organised drug trafficking or money laundering,&#8221; so, as usual, it&#8217;s about not having to spend time and money on civil cases, but having the taxpayer foot the bill, and the ability to use law enforcement to patch their business model.</p>
<p>Rehashing failed campaigns is a sign that the industry has no new ideas, and is desperately trying to avoid dealing with the root of the problem – themselves and their greed. When even the police are so into &#8216;piracy&#8217;, that there are <a href="http://torrentfreak.com/aussie-police-pirate-080407/" target="_self">too many to prosecute</a>, it&#8217;s time to stop sticking your head in the sand, and deal with the causes.</p>
<p>This is an article from: <a href="http://torrentfreak.com">TorrentFreak</a></p>
<p><a href="http://torrentfreak.com/?p=2930">Australian Drug Mafia to Sell Pirated DVDs?</a></p>

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            <pubDate>Tue, 01 Jul 2008 21:33:07 +0100</pubDate>
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