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#1
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Would this thread be against the rules?
Would an IMHO or maybe CS or MPSIMS thread titled "what are the most recent 25 movies you downloaded", with the thread content being what you would expect given that title, be against the rules?
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#2
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Not necessarily, I would assume. Movie downloads are not necessarily illegal, are they? I mean, you can buy movies on-line to download them, n'est-ce pas? As long as people aren't posting compendiums of their illegal downloads (and, particularly, the methods and web sites involved), right? If the thread starts going that way, of course, it will get ixnayed with alacrity.
Your question actually seems to be: Does that proposed thread title imply a discussion of illegal downloads, and if so, how strongly, and is that forbidden. Mods? |
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#3
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You should send a PM to the mods.
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#4
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I would have (and in fact have done before on other ideas) but I'm kind of looking to make "case law" if you get my meaning as I think this is fairly similar to other threads others may want to create and having the answer out in the open will help others SDMB posters in the future.
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#5
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It's a valid question in the right forum. The answer can be useful to others, not just the OP. It also doesn't hurt to gauge the feelings of other posters on this issue.
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#6
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Just change the title of the thread to "What are the most recent 25 movies you legally downloaded."
Last edited by aldiboronti; 09-23-2012 at 11:49 PM. |
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#7
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Mod response
As a couple of people have pointed out, our issue is with copyright-breaking and other illegal activity, not with downloading per se.
Feel free to start a thread in CS, specifying in the OP that you are, of course, talking only about legal downloads. [nonmod]Also, think about making it the last 10 or even the last 5, rather than the last 25, because long lists are boring and not particularly edifying, IMHO.[/nonmod] twickster, Cafe Society moderator |
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#8
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And we have a wide selection of pipes, bubblers, hookahs, dugouts, vaporizers and other accessories for the discerning tobacco smoker!
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#9
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Quote:
I'm curious as to whether the OP would consider that such a stipulation would defeat the purpose of the OP's proposed thread. Last edited by Acsenray; 09-24-2012 at 09:05 AM. |
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#10
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Mod response
We don't make any effort to police people's activities in any area of their life except what they post on this message board, where we do not allow them to explain how to break the law, or, for the most part, to advocate that others break the law.
The OP asked how s/he could start a thread that complies with our rules. I explained what thread would do so. twickster, for the SDMB |
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#11
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If the OP is talking about illegal downloads, we would no more permit that than a thread asking "What are the last 25 items you shoplifted?"
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#12
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I'll admit I'm not sure about the legality of some of the things I download. It's presumably legal for me to watch a movie if it's up on YouTube. But is it legal for me to download that movie from YouTube?
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#13
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It's not presumably legal for you to watch that movie in that by watching it you might be making unauthorized copies that are not subject to any exception. But downloading it definitely is not legal, assuming that the copyright owner has not authorized the posting of the video on YouTube.
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#14
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Can you think of a good reason why a movie studio would decide to distribute a movie by dividing it into 30 sections and putting it on YouTube for free download?
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#15
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Of course. They want as many people to see it as possible.
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#16
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Silly me-all this time I thought they were in it for the money.
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#17
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Quote:
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#18
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Quote:
You may well be right, that viewing copyrighted content on Youtube is illegal, but just because it's legal to post it doesn't necessarily follow that it's illegal to view it. |
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#19
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Quote:
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#20
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You're right--I didn't read carefully. (So does anyone know whether there's any legal problem with watching, but not technically downloading, a copyrighted video illegally posted on Youtube?)
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#21
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Good question. Is it legal to view, but not download, child porn?
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#22
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Surely you're not suggesting that the situations are relevantly similar, are you?
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#23
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I am suggesting that both have been uploaded illegally. Have there ever been any successful convictions for the viewing alone of something that was posted illegally on the net?
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#24
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But your post didn't really answer my question.
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#25
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Quote:
Quote:
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#26
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I speculate that it is just as illegal to download an illegally uploaded movie as it is to download an illegally uploaded song.
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#27
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Of course of course. And by breaking their epic movie into 30 pieces on U-toob, each viewer has to watch 30 little movies instead -- thereby the studio can claim that the movie has been watched 30 times more! It's all in the marketing. And the OP can post his 25 last-downloaded flicks and still not even cover one entire movie.
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#28
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And just think of the reviews.
"Just wait until you get to part 23. You will laugh and cry and poop your pants. I never pooped 'em harder." - Jim Doorknob from the Gobblers Knob Gazette Last edited by Drunky Smurf; 09-24-2012 at 03:16 PM. |
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#29
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Quote:
Perhaps you aren't going to move the contents from your temp files into a different location. Perhaps you'll use a file format that is streamed in real time so no temp file exists. But you've still downloaded it. (I don't know the answer to the question I think you're trying to ask..) -D/a Last edited by Digital is the new Analog; 09-24-2012 at 05:47 PM. |
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#30
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Quote:
YouTube has a policy of removing anything that receives copyright violation claims. This obviously works in regards to current movies like the ones I just listed. Why wouldn't it also work in regards to older movies? So when I see a movie available for viewing on YouTube, my assumption is that it was posted there legally. I don't know why somebody chose to post it, but that's true for most of the videos on YouTube. Which brings us back to my question. Assuming, for the sake of argument, that it's legal for me to watch a video on YouTube, is it also legal for me to download that video? I know the equivalent is legal in regards to television - I can legally record a show when it's being broadcast to watch at a later time. Does this same principle apply to online broadcasts? |
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#31
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Like Digital is the new Analog said, you can't see it unless you download it. Render unto Cesario, and all that.
I'm not aware of any law that makes it illegal to download protected content. The problem is that the most common means of doing so, bittorrent, also requires you to upload at the same time. Last edited by Kyrie Eleison; 09-24-2012 at 06:43 PM. Reason: Recomposition mistake that made me look like a moron. |
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#32
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Quote:
.Still, though, I wonder if download has multiple meanings, one of which distinguishes between saving a file locally, and streaming a file? |
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#33
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It's illegal to download videos from YouTube, ANY videos, unless it's explicitly stated. YouTube's TOS 5B:
Content is provided to you AS IS. You may access Content for your information and personal use solely as intended through the provided functionality of the Service and as permitted under these Terms of Service. You shall not download any Content unless you see a “download” or similar link displayed by YouTube on the Service for that Content. You shall not copy, reproduce, distribute, transmit, broadcast, display, sell, license, or otherwise exploit any Content for any other purposes without the prior written consent of YouTube or the respective licensors of the Content. YouTube and its licensors reserve all rights not expressly granted in and to the Service and the Content. I know because video download apps in iOS app store won't download videos from YouTube. |
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#34
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Quote:
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#35
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But that's not going to protect you from any legal ramifications. They are detailing their terms of use, not the legality of pirated movies.
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#36
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I'm only yammering on about the pedants who say I use the word "download" incorrectly.
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#37
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The actual point is that infringement is not defined by whether you have downloaded something but by whether you have engaged in unauthorized copying, distribution, performance, etc., of a work.
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#38
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It's a violation of YouTube's terms of service agreement but does that make it actually illegal?
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#39
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Quote:
Some videos on youtube are licensed creative commons so it certainly wouldn't be copyright law you were breaking with them. |
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#40
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Quote:
Streaming a video seems more akin to me to eating at a restaurant with a copyright-violating mural: you enjoy someone else's copyright violation, but you don't take it home. Downloading it seems more akin to taking photographs of that mural to take home. The former act probably violates no law, whereas the latter might*. And given the fact that when you stream video, the default is that you don't keep a copy of what you stream, this seems to me to be an important technical distinction as well. * Edit: is it ridiculous to suggest that photographing a copyright-violating mural would be illegal? I agree. But I think the analogy holds. Last edited by Left Hand of Dorkness; 09-25-2012 at 12:09 PM. |
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#41
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Quote:
However, whether it's one or the other, it is undisputed that public performance and duplication and distribution are all exclusive rights of the copyright holder and that unless Youtube is the copyright holder in this case, then Youtube can't grant its user any of those rights. Quote:
Quote:
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#42
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Technically, downloading is any form of receiving the data to your system. However, many people seem to differentiate streaming from saving a copy. To them, they use downloading for saving a copy, and think of streaming as if it were viewing on the host system.
I don't know how any of that relates to copyright law. |
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