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BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Ronald Grover |
Tinseltown's Aim: To Catch a Thief Hollywood is in full crackdown mode for crooks who pilfer films by recording them at premieres and press screenings. |
The Motley Fool January 5, 2004 W.D. Crotty |
Not-So-Scary Movie Does piracy threaten the movie studios? Not just yet. |
InternetNews May 4, 2006 David Miller |
RIAA Targets Piracy 'Hot-Spot' Cities The recording-industry group identifies 12 U.S. cities where counterfeiters are thriving. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 17, 2011 Kim Girard |
Protecting against the Pirates of Bollywood Despite a thriving movie industry in India, Hollywood studios have experienced difficulty making much money there. Researchers discovered a complicated mix of piracy and plagiarism. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Grover & Green |
Hollywood Heist Will tinseltown let techies steal the show? The ripping and burning of movies to DVDs is growing into a global underground industry that last year cost film studios an estimated $3 billion in lost DVD sales. It's prodding the guys in Guccis into action. |
BusinessWeek May 15, 2006 Roger O. Crockett |
Hauling In The Hollywood Hackers How undercover FBI agents nab the bootleggers who threaten the movie biz. |
The Motley Fool February 5, 2011 Kurt Bakke |
Microsoft: Software Piracy Supports Violence, Kidnapping The company says software knockoffs help fund foreign crime. |
Wired October 2005 Joshua Davis |
The Decline & Fall of Randolph Hobson Guthrie III Born to wealth and privilege. Busted as the kingpin of an international DVD piracy ring. How a rich geek went from the penthouse to the pen. |
Wired March 2002 Jack Boulware |
Pirates Of Kiev You want Top 40? How about nine albums on one disc - three bucks. Microsoft Office XP? Two dollars and change. Welcome to Ukraine, where rip, mix, and burn is a point of national pride... |
PC World April 23, 2002 Tom Spring |
DVD Copy Controls Head to Court Small software firm challenges digital copyright law, tries to assert the right to backups... |
BusinessWeek October 9, 2006 Roberts & Grover |
Take That, You Pirates Warner Bros. has come up with a novel strategy to fight back against pirated movie copies throughout Asia. |
The Motley Fool September 19, 2005 Alyce Lomax |
Movie Studios vs. Jolly Rogers Major movie studios are banding together against piracy. While the goals are perfectly understandable, investors should hope that the studios keep a careful eye on controlling piracy while encouraging new means of digital distribution for their content. |
BusinessWeek April 9, 2007 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Now Playing: Digital Disarray Hollywood's piracy fears are stifling online video expansion. |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Ronald Grover |
What's Driving The Box Office Batty Hollywood is pushing movies to DVD and video faster -- and theaters are feeling squeezed. And with the price of cinema tickets skyrocketing, this gives movie fans new clout. Clearly, some big script changes are in store. |
Entrepreneur June 2006 Jane Easter Bahls |
Hitting Hard Piracy laws just got tougher. |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
And The Awards For The Most Illegally Downloaded Oscar Movies Go To... Piracy remains a challenge for the film industry, whose wares make up a significant portion of illegal downloads overall. |
InternetNews October 1, 2010 |
EFF Claims Victory in Delay of Senate IP Bill The Electronic Frontier Foundation warned that the legislation designed to combat piracy will inevitably take down lawful content. |
InternetNews June 29, 2006 Roy Mark |
Curtains For NYC 'Cammer' Movie Pirates Three-year investigation accuses 22 of camcording films and distributing the bootlegs over the Web. |
PC World December 3, 2002 Tom Spring |
New Tool Makes DVD Copying Easy 321 Studios challenges Hollywood, DMCA again with release of DVD X Copy. |
BusinessWeek May 5, 2011 Michael White |
This Summer, Hollywood Could Use a Hero Hollywood will roll out big-budget movies almost weekly this summer in an effort to erase a $500 million box-office deficit so far in 2011. |
InternetNews August 4, 2005 Roy Mark |
Camcording Warez Dealer Bagged by Feds The Department of Justice announces its first arrests under a new law prohibiting recording movies in a theater. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Tom Lowry |
"People Are Willing to Pay" Viacom CFO Richard Bressler talks about developing new business models for media in the Digital Age while protecting content. |
The Motley Fool April 3, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
Want Movie Downloads? Pay Up! Digital movie downloads? Good. Paying $30 a pop? Not so good. Given the fees and the limitations involved, it seems that this development mostly pays lip service to the nascent digital downloading industry. |
PC Magazine December 28, 2004 Sebastian Rupley |
Making Movies, Taking Movies Lawsuits are coming for people trading films online. |
BusinessWeek July 8, 2010 Grover & Shields |
Why Hollywood Loves the White House Again In contrast to the last Bush White House, the Obama Administration has been responsive to Hollywood's policy agenda. |
Fast Company December 2005 Alan Deutschman |
Building a Better Movie Business It's the iconic American industry. But audiences are vanishing, piracy is soaring, and new technology is treacherous. Can Tinseltown innovate its way out of trouble? |
Popular Mechanics August 2008 Joel Johnson |
How to Unlock DVD Regions on Your Mac and PC: Tech Clinic There are plenty of programs, for both Macs and PCs, that circumvent disc regions entirely, or that allow you to rip DVD movies onto your hard drive. |
BusinessWeek July 22, 2010 Dina Bass |
Microsoft Crosses Swords with Pirates Microsoft employs digital forensics and other technologies to help law-enforcement authorities bust counterfeiter syndicates. |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2006 Steven Mallas |
DVD: Devalued Disc? Even though many of the free movies British newspapers are giving away might be antiquated, there's no question that such a marketing move does corrupt the image of the disc as a premium commodity. Why do studios allow this to go on? |
InternetNews December 31, 2008 Andy Patrizio |
China Jails Multibillion-Dollar Piracy Ring And Microsoft understandably couldn't be happier. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2006 von Lohmann & Seltzer |
Death by DMCA A flood of legislation released by the passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act threatens to drown whole classes of consumer electronics. |
Fast Company December 2005 Jena McGregor |
A Foreign Affair Global markets used to be an afterthought in Hollywood, but not anymore. |
InternetNews July 19, 2006 Clint Boulton |
CinemaNow: Download, Burn, Watch Online movie service provider CinemaNow became the first company to allow movies piped over the Internet to be securely burned onto a DVD. |
PC World December 13, 2001 Todd R. Weiss |
Feds Crack Software Piracy Rings Two-year probe targeted international groups illegally distributing software, games, and movies online... |
InternetNews April 23, 2004 Roy Mark |
DOJ Strikes at Global Online Piracy Coordinated international raids seek to dismantle syndicates distributing pirated material. |
InternetNews April 6, 2006 Roy Mark |
China, Russia Top International Piracy List China and Russia's "lack of political will" put the two countries at the top of a congressional group's 2006 International Piracy Watch List. |
PC World February 2003 Tom Spring |
Tool Copies DVD Movies 321 Studios challenges Hollywood, DMCA with release of DVD X copy. |
InternetNews May 26, 2005 |
Feds Strike Back at 'Sith' Bootleggers Nationwide raids roust distributors of bootleg "Star Wars" film. |
PC World August 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Consumer Alert: Copy Controls Crackdown Multimedia lovers find themselves caught in a digital vise these days, as Hollywood tightens its copyright controls on movies, games, and music on DVDs and CDs -- most recently squeezing customers accused of copyright infringement in court. Technology is starting to offer some relief, though. |
Wired December 2005 Xeni Jardin |
Thinking Outside the Box Office Director Steven Soderbergh talks about the copyright cops, the remixing underground, and why he'll debut his new movie on DVD, cable, and in theaters all at once. |
PC Magazine November 2, 2005 John C. Dvorak |
HD DVD, Now What? The final arbiter in the high-definition DVD conflict might be Blockbuster Video or Costco. |
The Motley Fool November 10, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Netflix Can't Be This Dumb When movies should come out on different platforms is becoming more convoluted and confusing, and Netflix appears open to bribes to play along. |
Fast Company December 2005 Scott Kirsner |
Maverick Mogul Broadcast.com founder Mark Cuban is questioning everything about the film business - and naturally ticking a lot of people off. |
Reason July 2009 Jacob Sullum |
Drug Control Begets Gun Control The violence in Mexico is caused by prohibition, not firearms. |
CRM December 2011 Eric Barkin |
The Monday Morning Numbers on Movie Marketing How international growth, social media, and a decline in DVD sales are changing the film industry's marketing strategies. |
PC Magazine December 8, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Deja Sue The movie industry seems levelheaded and smart. Now it's setting itself up to follow the failed strategy of the RIAA. And it's doing so for no apparent reason other than the fear created by the RIAA. |
BusinessWeek October 17, 2005 Edwards & Burrows |
Daggers Drawn Over DVDs How Sony gained an edge in its fierce battle with Microsoft over video formats. |
Wired January 2004 Chris Anderson |
MEMO: To: The next head of the Motion Picture Association of America How Hollywood can avoid the fate of the music industry |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Heather Green |
Hollywood's Most Wanted St. Louis-based 321's software allows people to protect their $19.95 investment in prerecorded DVDs by making copies before they're lost or damaged. To Hollywood, the software is no less than a tool for piracy. That has sparked controversy over just what's permissible under the law. |
PC World February 2005 Tom Spring |
The (Movie) Empire Strikes Back Spooked by powerful PCs and broadband pipes that make it ever easier to copy and share films, the movie industry is expanding its legal and legislative offensive against perceived threats. |