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Kids To Get 3 Strikes and Copyright Education In Paris

The government agency that administers France’s controversial 3 strikes anti-piracy scheme is mulling taking its message to the youngest minds in the country. According to a letter it sent today to rightsholders, Hadopi is proposing a stand at the Kidexpo exhibition in Paris later this year where it will spread its message directly to 150,000 children.

During the past year Hadopi, the government body charged with operating France’s 3 strike anti-filesharing program, has communicated directly with the public on its affairs.

It has periodically released stats on who is getting warned and the results of those efforts, and has reported on issues including the effects and aftermath of the Megaupload shutdown. Of course, getting the message out about what the agency does (and how to avoid being targeted by it) is all part of Hadopi’s effort to reduce online piracy in France.

For those who have engaged in file-sharing for many years, circumvention of Hadopi’s efforts may well be the number one priority. However, rightsholders will be hoping that the attitudes of the next generation of potential file-sharers will be different.

According to an email obtained by French news outlet Numerama, Hadopi intends to play a part in shaping those future perceptions of copyright infringement at the earliest available opportunity.

The proposed location for this initiative is the Kidexpo exhibition in Paris. The event, which attracts kids aged between 4 to 14, is set to take place during October this year and Hadopi have today invited rightsholders to join them in participating.

Kidexpo

“Hadopi plans to propose a stand dedicated to raising awareness of copyright in the creative arts and cultural content platforms on the internet, in partnership with professionals,” it said in the letter seen by Numerama.

Hadopi is predicting that around 150,000 children will attend and is inviting rightsholders to “build common tools tailored to that audience and to promote legal offers.”

It will be interesting to see how Hadopi intends to educate children on the complexities of copyright law, or whether it will even try. Since “3 strikes” is now embedded in French law there is a clear need for children to be aware of the mechanism, but whether that exercise should be carried out with the assistance of corporations with a vested interest is up for debate.

In any event, Hadopi and the rightsholders will be hoping that little ‘Pierre’ pictured above wearing earphones will be listening to music purchased through official channels, unlike his father who is more accustomed to obtaining it by more ‘creative’ means.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Don-Dilly/1624894683 Don Dilly

    The move sounds more like an acknowledgement that IP address evidence is flawed and so trying to reduce the chance of in being challenged in a french court by avoiding any more head on conflicts with users

    • luke skyrunner

      Nah…. it is what it is. Brainwashing kids.

      It is sure to backfire.
      you tell me … ///// “I am a criminal anyway, so why not do………?????”

      Criminalizing a generation.

      That won’t end up a self fulfilling prophecy.

      • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

        Hit the nail on the head. That is exactly what I though about this, except I phrased it as “Holy fuck, now they are trying to brainwash children to believe this bullcrap!”

        I wouldn’t let my children anywhere near this place.

        • Anyone

          they have been trying such brainwashing for decades now
          luckily it doesn’t stick with most people

          I hope they get laughed out of the expo

        • Gae

           It is not only brainwashing to get the kids to believe sharing files is wrong, but at the same time brainwashing them into buying from specific companies or websites.
          I am pretty sure there is an ‘approved list’ of websites that the kids will all be told they have to visit.

        • http://lazycash1.com/ Work At Home=> Make 60$/HR

          my roomate‘s sister makes $82/hour on the laptop. She has been out of work for six months but last month her check was $19771 just working on the laptop for a few hours. Read more on this site

          ?????? (Click On My Name For Link)

        • Asdf

           maybe you should let your children anywhere near this place and then explain to them why what they’re listening is a load of bullshit? you know, enlighten them instead of keeping them ignorant

        • Linda Taylor

           It’s better than mindlessly suing at least. http://DemoforFrank.blogspot.com

        • http://1tl.gr/Io Blanche Kendrick

          they’re finally trying the most basic steps they should have used years ago. It’s better than mindlessly suing at least...DemoforFrank.blogspot.com

      • Lethn

        Every government and organisation is guilty of doing this, public schools in particular have a way of trying to force you to answer a question their way rather than let you form your own opinions.

        I seriously hope that intelligent people keep coming up with smart ways around these tactics because I don’t want us to run out of options and patience.

        • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

          I didn’t see that when I was in public school in Maryland, USA. In fact, most teachers in places where there wasn’t only one ‘right way to do it’ specifically told us to think on our own when writing reports and essays.

          As long as we could support our conclusions with some sort of evidence or made it clear that X thing was our opinion, they allowed us to disagree with them.

          I remember one discussion I had with a teacher about ‘community service’ that they were thinking of making us do. I outlined why it was an extremely bad idea, mainly revolving around the fact that surly teenagers and pre-teens being forced to ‘help’ people when they do not wish to is a recipe for trouble.

      • No1_2_u

        You hit the nail right on the head; it is “brainwashing”, or more precisely corporate funded brainwashing.

        Kids learn most of their behaviour from their parents & their friends; my nephew learned about torrents from me, & then from his friends, now he downloads everything.

      • Guest

        I remember that they tried something similar years ago in the US and they got laughed out of the class room! The students are still laughing  right now.

      • Baronluigi

        This is not something new. They already did something similar in Spain some years ago

        http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G5lbkfm-fgA 

        A play where the main character (captain cloned) is shown as a pirate captain who steals everything from everybody. The play was 45 m length and it finished with all the kids singing in chorus something like “buy originals and do not use copies”

      • pepe

         I hope somebody will just make a funny video /or something/ out of their “message” and it will fire-spread over the internet, making it a complete joke out of their effort, because what you say is much more threatening /and I agree with/.
        For the sake of humanity :).

      • http://lazycash1.com/ Anonymous

        my roomate‘s sister makes $82/hour on the laptop. She has been out of work for six months but last month her check was $19771 just working on the laptop for a few hours. Read more on this site

        ?????? (Click On My Name For Link)

    • VPN FTW

       So which VPN company is going to have the booth next to the Hadopi one?

      They could sign up shed loads of kids….

    • thedude321

      Whatever happened to the French system that promises to never indoctrinate?

      Oh wait…that died years ago.

    • teenygozer

      Looking at that little ad there, it makes me wonder if someone at the ad agency wasn’t trying to subvert the message, as it is obvious no cool kid would have anything to do with that expo.  It kinda reminds me of the so-called “anti-cigarette” PDAs aimed at kids that tobacco companies create.

    • Laika

       Where do we set up or how to educate all about vpn then as this tells the gov fu?

    • Decimus

      The only thing that it really acknowledges is that France is the only place that has enough idiots to make their first attempt a success.

  • Guest

    Sounds like they’ve switched their efforts to making a norm-changing campaign. Makes sense. People don’t listen to their rules about piracy because the social norm doesn’t say piracy is bad. Their only way to address this is to try to change the social norm, which is easier to do in kids.

    Probably too late to be effective, but it’s nice to see that they’re finally trying the most basic steps they should have used years ago. It’s better than mindlessly suing at least.

    • Ishigidydigidy

      Indoctranating the next generation to bow down to the RIAA, MPAA and Hollywood overlords is BETTER?  Are you freaking kidding me?

      • Guest

         Taken objectively, it’s better for both us and them. For their purposes, it’s more likely to succeed than mindlessly suing everyone around them. For our purposes, it still won’t work, and it’s a step that doesn’t involve treading upon civil rights or suing innocent individuals into the pit of hell.

        You assume falsely that the next generation will be “indoctrinated”, but basic social psychology tells us that a norm-changing campaign can only be effective if backed up by multiple sources. A big exposition will establish a lasting pattern of anti-pirate thought in very, very few children.

        So, with all that considered, yes, it’s far better.

        • Ishigidydigidy

          Think about the “reefer madness” era, where marijuana was demonized.  All it took was the government telling children it would make you rape/murder people.  Now they’ll tell children it funds terrorism, organized crime and kills American jobs.

          Maybe I’m just thinking too far to an extreme here, but the government has never been one to do things subtly.

        • Guest

           That is true, and we need to keep an eye on this, but there are two factors that make me not worry about this so much.

          1. During the time of reefer madness propaganda, dissenting views were uncommon, and had little impact on the social mind. In the piracy debates, the pro-piracy views not only make up the majority view on the internet, but they also have legitimate political representation. That will be a huge blow. Straight propaganda relies on stopping dissenting views from being heard. The anti-pirates already lost that battle.

          2. Even during the time of reefer madness, marijuana use did not significantly decrease, and continued to rise or hold (depends on the area observed) after a short time. This eventually resulted in the current press for legalization that currently exists. To make a long story short, I think battles they win now will become irrelevant in the long-term… But as previously stated, I don’t think they’re even winning battles in the short term.

          If we do see the extreme propaganda like you suggest we might, we need to be ready to step in and provide factual information. Thankfully, due to the internet, we can reach all who are interested.

        • Ishigidydigidy

          I’m less worried about the fact that it’s illegal and more worried about the SWAT style raids that are going on.  Even in states like California where it’s legal, they are taking everything and jailing the owners of legal medicinal marijuana shops.  That’s what’s going to happen with P2P file sharing.

        • Decimus

          I can see how you’d think that it’s better than suing everyone that they can, and I can agree with that.  But I don’t believe that this tactic will replace the lawsuits.  I think that once it becomes apparent that this tactic isn’t working, more lawsuits will arise as a means to pay for all this ridiculousness.

          Even if kids go to these things, they’ll very likely be escorted by their parents.  Even though most kids accept a lot of what they’re told, I just can’t see a huge group of kids coming out of an expo saying, “While piracy allows for the duplication of copyrighted data, it is wrong because it punishes the owners of the copyright, who provide us with a nearly-unlimited source of entertainment.”

          If this is, somehow, a hit, then the lawsuits will be supplemented by a pedobear convention that attempts to lie to kids.

    • Thenell87

      Realistically, though, if they’re trying to push “legal alternatives”, and since kids rarely have much disposable income, they’re essentially saying “hey kids, pester your parents to buy you stuff”

      • Guest

         Well, true, but that’s what companies have always done, and it seems to work out for the toys and games that rely on the children. If that’s all they do, then that’s just fine. No indoctrination, only establishment of a purchasing habit that can easily be broken when the good caring pirates offer a better deal for their money (can’t beat free… well, not easily).

        • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

          Actually, you can beat free very easily when it comes to stuff on the internet by making the legitimate stuff in question reasonably priced and giving people the ‘peace of mind’ that the thing that they buy isn’t going to be fake/virus-infested.

        • Guest

          Peace of mind is a self-devaluing product; as people have more of it, increases in it become worth less. What I mean by this is that people’s perception of what constitutes peace of mind can easily change. As piracy becomes more prevalent, there will inevitably come sites that offer add-supported services that, while still free, come with an implied promise of legitimate business, and with that safety and peace of mind. This is already beginning to happen, and to assume that people will not be able to find full peace of mind unless they pay underestimates the psychological manipulations of advertising. In short, site owners will advertise their particular site as safe, and people will get peace of mind from that. All this needs to happen is a certain proliferation of piracy in the population to make it acceptable and profitable to advertise this way. That isn’t even mentioning the possibility of creating technology in the future that will be able to make torrenting definitively safer.

          Competing with free is easy to do currently. As the technology gets better, competing with free will only get harder. The primary advantages paying offers now are A. better service and B. peace of mind. The former will be easy to match as general download speeds increase to the point where both provided and free services can easily produce speeds sufficient for the needs of most of the populace, and the latter is not a true good or service, but a psychological state that will be very easy for owners of websites to manipulate and change.

          The only reason people will have to pay in the future (that I can see) is supporting their artists of choice. I am skeptical of how much this will be worth to people, but in the end, it doesn’t really matter.

      • Guest

        That’s an excellent point. Even if they succeed at brainwashing a kid, what happens when that kid asks their pirate parents if they can sign up for iTunes or something?

        The parents are going to explain to their kid that HADOPI is full of shit and it’s okay to download all the free music they want.

        • Anon

           Nah, they’ll use the free phone number HADOPI gives the kids at this event to report their parents, you know like the Hitler youth did.

      • Shitgun

         I think it’s great that they’re promoting legal alternatives…

        Legal alternatives such as freely distributed free music (hopefully they’ll pass on some links from the Promo Bay) or free podcasts, or free web series…

        Oh, no… wait… they mean THEIR legal alternatives…

  • Anonymous

    what these arse holes should be doing is closing themselves down, getting a proper job and leaving everyone, kids and the elderly in particular, THE HELL ALONE!! how many times have they got to be told, to have courts tell them, that an IP address IS NOT PROOF OF INFRINGER, ONLY ACCOUNT HOLDER AND THAT SECURING A WIRELESS CONNECTION IS NOT LAW!!

    • Guest

      Not in all countries, in some countries if you open wlan no security someone downloads pirate stuff with that they get proof that this used to download that stuff.. timestamp and usually this is done automatically by some robot that connects to swarm then gets those ip:s of uploaders, downloeders.. After that send sue letters or if you unlucky to live in french and soon in usa(7 strikes coming soon) you get 1 strike warning and after third internet(7 in usa) will be cutted off. if you don’t pirate stuff then do not have unsecured wlans… its stubit anyway why would anyone wanna give neightborns free internet access. First it eats your bandwith your downloads, tv streams, iptv, games etc. will suffer. Secondly you mighty get sued for thinks that you did not. you can homever limit that bandwith offcourse to 1kb/s but what is point of having open wlan then? 1kb/s open wlan its frigging slow but nobody would be downloading anything with that.

      Is cutting off internet right?No. why see below answer to second questions

      Is it going stop pirace even if they cut internet off`? No because you can buy prepaid 3g mobile internet (atleast in finland they selling those. they dont ask any id:s or check databases). So they will just continue

      If right holders want to reduce pirace they cant stop it entirely they need implented new distribution technologies spotify is good (well used have now you can listen only listen same song only 5 times, but it still has better catalogue of music than pirate sites…)

      Now what we need is more services like spotify but with better sound quality, and they also give us more like tv shows, musics videos..

      Even if they make all these new thinks. is it going to stop ALL pirace? no. since there are always those ppl that just want pirate everything dont accept legal way even if its 100% free

      • Herbert

        it is not law to have a wireless connection secured. you may well be sued, but they cannot prove you did the downloading, plus any other connection done via your router would be logged. i think you know not what you talking about

        • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

          Better read the law in some countries. I believe it was Holland that had a law that said if you have an unencrypted wireless network, you can be held responsible for anything done on it from piracy to CP trading.

        • anon

          What Chris said, I believe Canada has something similar where you can be held liable for anything that happens over your connection if you do not have encryption… but I could be wrong (heard about it word of mouth.)

        • YARIGHT

          @1e90bc26f22d393f8f1b69bb3a6ea26d:disqus i live in Canada there is no such law 
          if you get hacked how can you be held responsible
          no really
          tell me that isn’t like a robber breaking into your home and dropping his dope while making a get away and trashing your home….

          tell me a citation of said law 
          you can’t cause it don’t exist
          WE do however have a law that if a store got bad milk and didn’t realize it right away and sold it and people got sick , old laws said you sue the store and then the store sues the milk provider.

          so i could say that should a law like this come we all just start filing suits against the operating system people for making it easy for hackers to break in….i cant be held responsible for the bad milk they are providing.

        • Dupe

           i am of the opinion that it is not law to have a secured wireless connection but it is against the law to use a secured or unsecured wireless connection without permission. big difference. think how wifi hotspots, internet cafes could easily get caught up in something

  • Ishigidydigidy

    1984 – Children are taught in school that their wonderful government is perfect and anyone who’s against them is a criminal. They’ll report their own family and have them killed.

    It’s not that much of an extreme, but these guys are demonizing file sharing and will likely equate it with much more sever crimes to make children think it’s something terrible.  They’ll lie directly to the face of over 100,000 children so they can line their already full pockets.  Pathetic.

  • FuzzyDuck

    When’s President Hollande going to rescind this stupid HADOPI law? Or is he going to pull an Obama on us and be nothing more than his predecessor with a human face?

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      There are some differences on issues between Obama and Bush, but yeah….. Obama is pretty much ‘lite Bush’.

      • Guest

        Are there?

        Obama’s rhetoric might differ from Bush’s rhetoric, but their actions appear to be identical.

  • Decimus

    It’s really difficult to take anything seriously that happens in France.

    I don’t mind that rightsholders are now going to the public to speak to anyone, that’s actually not a bad thing… except in most countries the rightsholders have already pissed on anyone that they could.

    The French were recently bragging about how no French films were being pirated, if that’s the case then they’re just extremely confident in their system.

    • Guest

      It isn’t the case. French movies were and still are getting pirated left and right. The idiot who said they aren’t simply fails at the Internet, amazingly hard. Go search any given torrent site for a French movie if you don’t believe me.

      • Decimus

        I didn’t say that French films weren’t being pirated, I said that they made the claim that French films weren’t being pirated.  It’s statically impossible to make such a claim, it just makes the French look like they’re completely clueless.

        Maybe they just are.

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  • http://www.facebook.com/ken.bingham Ken Bingham

    What they will find is they will only be making more kids aware that they can get stuff for free on the Internet. These “education” efforts have been shown to create more file sharing not less.

    Besides our kids do not need to be fed propaganda from the music and movie industries.

    • Anonymous

      Kids would just use google when they leave school and research what they have learnt. When they quickly realise that it’s all propaganda, they will just go to utorrent.com and start filesharing. 

      • McCheezits

        I wish I could edit your comment, but I can’t. I’ll correct you though:

        There are actually no torrents or magnet links at the uTorrent site, but there are ones that come bundled with the software.

        A great place to get stuff is The Pirate Bay, but please use 7 proxies to get there.

    • NoNameAnyMore

      I’m sure they would do their best to teach them that copying files without exclusive right is wrong.. Without mentioning how to do it. Maybe by giving examples like. Jim wanted to lend his friend a dvd but… or
      Jane wanted to copy a cd for a friend but… blah blah blah

      They can just pretend the internet doesn’t exist while still getting there point across. And tell them who to buy from at the same time. The rights holders are some manipulative scum, that fact that they are targeting kids here kinda shows it (easy target) and bet they got a child psychologist helping them with their planned propaganda… make it more effective

  • France Sucks

    France: teaching kids “copyright infringement = theft” from an early age. Like that would do anything. You might as well teach kids, it’s ok to bribe politicians and steal from the poor too! but that doesn’t mean it’s any more right or justified.

  • Guest

    “It’s not free, you should pay”

    Kid: “I’m 9″

    “Suffer”

    This is going to be an ULTIMATE SUCCESS.

    • Ishigidydigidy

      Oh god, I laughed.  Jesus Christ, I needed that this early in the morning.

    • McCheezits

      This has to be the funniest thing I’ve seen today, and it’s only 8 in the morning.

  • http://www.facebook.com/people/Zack-Nelson/1287355169 Zack Nelson

    I don’t want to drag mainstream politics into this discussion, but arguments against privatized education can be made here. A private entity is providing education, where the welfare of the students isn’t the primary concern, but rather it’s running a business.

    If you want a real eduction in copyright law, go to law school.
    If you want a real education on file sharing, go to the internet, and talk to a bunch of artists that have utilized this awesome means of communication to distribute their works to the rest of the world.

  • Herbert

    all propaganda is bad. it only benefits those it’s meant too and demonizes those it adversely targets. exactly what the Nazis were doing and a world war was fought to stop, killing millions of people in the process. aren’t the entertainment industries doing the same thing, without, hopefully, the physical war part?

    • http://profiles.google.com/zerianis10 Christopher Kidwell

      Well, the problem with that is that one person’s propaganda is another person’s ‘truth’. That is the problem, propaganda is viewpoint-based 99.99% of the time.

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  • http://twitter.com/PensionForLife PensionForLife

    LOL , This is hilarious!!! that’s suuuuuuuuuuurely going to stop them… 

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  • Nick

    lol, at first strike : I would have learn him how to use a VPN to not disturb dad with this bullshit!

  • dantorang

    lol, OK now thats jsut like way too funny dude.
    Anon-Anon.tk 

  • Joker

    Point of translation/ “propose a stand”… that will be a direct translation of “proposer un stand” which actually means they will “set up a booth” (in US English), since “stand” is UK English for “booth”.

  • Krosis

    Indoctrination of the youth, is this some bad hollywood flick I’m in?

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  • Guest

    “Hadopi plans to propose a stand dedicated to raising awareness of copyright in the creative arts and cultural content platforms on the internet, in partnership with professionals”

    Hmm. Let me fix that.

    “Hadopi plans to lie to children.”

    There we go.

    • McCheezits

      >copyright
      >culture
      >professionals

      Lies. All of it.

      @ac772b48d6728242138b1df18c9716e5:disqus Thanks for fixing it :)

  • Violated0

    This is so funny I could crap myself laughing.

    So they expect school kids to have jobs now along with a bank cards to purchase official music from iTunes, Amazon etc? It seems more likely to me that the kids will share their favourite music and transfer song via bluetooth and USB.

    Maybe the local Pirate Party needs to attend as well to teach a different mantra like sharing is caring.

    • anon

       Credit card debt is an important part of growing up, I’ll have you know!

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  • anon

    What’s funny is that at an event like that, the likelihood of the Hadopi booth being right next to one teaching kids about how sharing and fairness will make the world a better place is extremely high.

    *facepalm*

  • Anon

    Propoganda!

  • RIAAtarded

    Nice, so in school you can’t mentions god anymore for fear of offending someone. We have to leave out 3/4 of potential lunch items in case some other kid has an allergy to them despite them not eating it in the first place. But capitalist rhetoric is ok in our schools? Screw these guys, I was taught at a young age to share I don’t think that should be replaced by you can share but only if it doesn’t violate copyright or licencing agreements. Sad when sharing becomes viewed a criminal enterprise and something to be wiped out.

  • Truth

    Can any industry set up a booth to brainwash young kids in France ?

    Maybe power companies, showing how the use of fossil and nuclear fuels are great for everyone even blinky (http://simpsons.wikia.com/wiki/Blinky). And bankers and politicians could push the agenda that “we always tell the truth, especially when our lips are moving”.

  • http://trucklicense.net/Get-CDL MikeJones

    Hit
    the nail on the head. That is exactly what I though about this, except I
    phrased it as “Holy fuck, now they are trying to brainwash children to
    believe this bullcrap!”

    I wouldn’t let my children anywhere near this place.

  • McCheezits

    This story reminds me of the time two teachers at my school (who do not know the internet as much as I do) had an anti-filesharing propoganda assembly and compared downloading warez and MP3s to stealing physical goods. I facepalmed so hard it left a red mark on my face.

    We cannot continue and let this type of stuff slide. We must take some action, like opposing their argument with logical points.

  • http://www.veearcdrives.com/ siemens repair service

    However, rightsholders will be hoping that the attitudes of the next generation of potential file-sharers will be different.

  • Waseihou

    The next generation of potential file sharers was mostly damaged by the advent of cyberlockers and youtube. Today kids are too lazy to even install torrent client and download with that, it’s too difficult for them, so they either download it or even watch in a shit quality. It’s becase that for some time there was not a scarcity of software, music, series so nothing forced them to learn how to get stuff. If they are bored and can’t get what they want, they do something different instead of spending half an hour to obtain the content

    In this way cyberlockers somewhat hurt filesharing community, because at first sight it helped filesharing but they became single point of failure, and many potential users of different means of obtaining content thus accustomed to just download from them, and now they will not educate themselves.

    Maybe what we really need is decentralized cyberlocker, something that cannot be simply taken down but is easy for a common dude to use. The more I look into topic, the more I understand that the common user is not capable of much more than install->next->next->…->finish, run application from desktop icon and then use it if there is simple enough interface. It is not that there are stupid users everywhere, it’s that there are much more users who are this stupid and any distributed solution needs a big user base to keep running.

    • Guest

      Install->next->next->finish and they wonder why they have all the unwanted singing and dancing useless toolbars and other spyware…

  • Lolkin

    sounds like brainwash attempts have began.

  • GUEST

    So by teaching kids piracy is bad they look to reduce it? Kids will soon realise what money means and how much 10 EUR is for some VA CD that they can listen to 3x and get bored of. They will also soon realise saving 10 EUR to buy 6 beers instead is probably more worth than a VA CD. 

  • PRIVACY is priceless to me

    As with alcohol, tobacco drugs and sex, all that this will do is the exact oppposite.
    I just wish people would stop spending one dime on music, movies and books instead of financing the worst terrorist organisations in the whole history of humanity!

  • Waseihou

    Now it’s time for someone who speaks French to make a viral video which would make fun of this ;) We really need more antipropaganda…

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  • http://profile.yahoo.com/DE7JE7D2LQNGOPOW2BL7B7DZAA Everett

    like Clarence said I’m blown away that a student able to make $9639 in 1 month on the internet. did you see this page (Click on menu Home more information)  http://goo.gl/xwdEz    

  • Christophe Thomas

    OMG – ze brainwashing machine 

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  • Neotoasty

    It’ll be like the war on drugs. If it’s heavily illegal, then the temptations to resist attempting what’s wrong will be increased. “It’s bad for you!” “Why?” “Because it’ll kill you!” “Why?” “Get you in jail!” and so on. That will just make some kids want to do it, for the thrill.

    • Neotoasty

       Decreased, I meant.

  • DERPderp

    There is no Piracy as Data is not physical so this Piracy as they call it is really non-existant everywhere.

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  • BTGuard - BitTorrent Anonymously

NewsBits

Even more news...

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  • Pirate Bay Founder Gottfrid Svartholm on Freedom of Speech

    Freedom of speech is a highly valued commodity, but should people be allowed to say whatever...

  • Blu-ray Anti-Piracy Tech Stops Discs and Promotes Purchases

    An anti-piracy system present in all official Blu-ray players since 2012 has received a fresh update...

  • Foxtel Breeds Pirates by Locking Up Game of Thrones

    One of the main reasons why people turn to piracy is the lack of legal alternatives....

  • UK Student Admits Breaching Sony Copyrights With Leak of PS3 SDK

    Last year an Internet user known as El Nomeo leaked version 3.70 of Sony’s Playstation3 SDK...

MostDiscussed

Below are TorrentFreak's most discussed articles of the past month. Join the discussion if you like.

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“The Pirate Bay has been one of the most important movements in Sweden for freedom of speech, working against corruption and censorship.

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PopularArticles

A selection of some TorrentFreak's classics dug up from our archives.