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> Did anyone think Avengers cams were what Hollywood is truly concerned about with BitTorrent?

They use night vision goggles & special cameras to locate people recording movies, and charge people with serious federal crimes for the act (the kind where you can get 3 years in prison) via a law enacted in 2005 [1]. Those huge, ugly brown spots you see flash on the screen? They exist to track cam pirates. They can also use audio distortions to pinpoint the exact seat the person is in to help them further narrow down the suspects.

Hollywood has a very odd way of showing a lack of true concern about cams.

[1] FAMILY ENTERTAINMENT AND COPYRIGHT ACT OF 2005 - http://www.copyright.gov/legislation/pl109-9.html



I'm really curious about the technology behind the brown spots and the audio distortions. Can you cite your source for this stuff so I can read up on it?


TorrentFreak has articles on the tech itself, but they don't go into a lot of detail. I suspect the exact workings are secret.

EDIT: Link = https://torrentfreak.com/movie-spy-cameras-attack-the-dying-...


I can hold these two thoughts in my head at the same time: (a) that camcording movies for later release on the Internet is illegal and antagonizes theaters, and (b) that camcording movies is not a real threat the movie industry, but other (more popular) forms of file sharing clearly are.


The way you wrote it made it sound like the industry isn't really concerned about camming due to it not being a threat. My point was that the industry is highly concerned about it and goes to great lengths to fight it.

I can certainly agree with your A & B.


What I think is that if the whole of the file sharing problem was cam torrents, we wouldn't be seeing routine interventions like SOPA and mass lawsuits, because cam torrents aren't threatening. The film industry would certainly continue to do stupid things to react to stuff they don't understand, but it would happen at a slower pace and be easier to counter.

The problem, which this article conveniently ignores, is that the film industry is right about most file sharing: DVD rip torrents are a real threat.


The article ignores it because that is irrelevant to the discussion. Torrenting and DVDs and SOPA and all that are also irrelevant. You are pulling in random other issues related to copyright vs hollywood that the article is not about.

Hollywood says cams in movie theaters are a big problem. Article refutes this. The article isn't about anything else.


What should happen is that they adopt the Crunchyroll model and help their customers give them money. Sadly, it appears that they will be dragged into the future kicking & screaming.

Which sucks, because a lot of good artists are being held back by this.




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