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Torrentz morality
 

[Closed] Torrentz morality

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[#4280126]

If the BBC (who I graciously support with my TV Licence fee 😉 ) have produced a series and aired it in the past, but offer no ability to play it again on iPlayer, or buy a DVD (They havent made it and since the various series were aired in 1990, 1994, 1996, 1998, 2009 and 2011 they're not likely too), is it still terribly bad form to make use of that there torrentz business to get a copy?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:31 am
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Nope. You've paid for it once. Crack on.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:35 am
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i've just reported you to the FBI, nice knowing you. u woz n inspearashun


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:36 am
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The question you have to ask yourself is what the real moral difference is between videoing it when it was on originally (and keeping the tape - you do know that there are limitations with what you're supposed to do with a video recording) and downloading it. That and whether you're worried about them tracking you down for using torrentz.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:37 am
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As bad form as it is to pirate anything else really. Are you worried about going to hell? If not suit yourself. If its not out on DVD then it means there are other commercial channels they can still pursue, either airing it on the BBC channels or selling it commercially through the channels they have a commercial stake in, like Dave or one of the other form UKTV channels that I forget the names of. So although the programme was 'funded by the licence payer' it still has work to do 'refunding the licence payer' - putting resources back in the pot for new programme making.

Although BBC output is funded by the beeb, not everything they present us produced in-house, the programme may belong to someone else. My girlfriend has made films for channel 4, and although they've been aired several times they are still her property, not C4s.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:38 am
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...has anybody got any idea what the series is yet? I'm totally in the dark.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:40 am
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Ive dabbled with torrents in the past (about 5 years ago) more as a curiousity than as any hard nosed pirate activity, arrrr jim me lad, etc.

BT obviously disapproved and throttled my broadband until I reset the router to lease a new IP.

Given torrents slow creep into the [url= http://www.theregister.co.uk/2012/08/08/internet_archive_bittorrent/ ]legitimate world,[/url] do BT still play silly buggers if you torrent?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:41 am
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I believe that we, as licence payers, should have full access to the full BBC archive on demand. We have already payed for it once already. We should also be allowed to sack Chris Moyles as well for crimes against humanity, but thats another more personal argument.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:43 am
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macc - if I were to profit from the activity then Id agree, but since there's no legitimate outlet to re-watch this stuff (for my own benefit only) then surely it's more akin to aracer's "like videoing it when first aired" scenario.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:43 am
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do BT still play silly buggers if you torrent?

[url= http://wiki.vuze.com/w/Bad_ISPs#United_Kingdom ]UK Traffic Shaping[/url]
Short answer, Yes


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:44 am
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is there not a torrent client that can mask torrent traffic scuzz?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:45 am
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what about buying knock off oakleys?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:45 am
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Stick it to the man

Just download it I dont think the BBC will care


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:46 am
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if someone were to recreate the series Im after in, say lego, then sell me the series then yes, just like buying knock off oakleys 😉


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:46 am
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I have the full HD package from Sky, Anytime etc etc I also pay my TV licence, buy DVDs/Blu rays and subscribe to Lovefilm (I even find time to ride a bike and go to work).

If Anytime and Lovefilm had everything I wanted (right now) I wouldn't need to use torrents. They will have it at some point though and I'll have paid for it.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:47 am
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Given torrents slow creep into the legitimate world

Or indeed http://www.raspberrypi.org/downloads


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:48 am
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I have had no issues with BT, when they finally turned my internet on I think I DLed about 200GB of stuff in the first month and they sent me a letter saying I had gone over my 10GB limit, as it was the first time they wouldnt charge me, and would I like to pay an extra 7 pounds for unlimited. They also stalled on blocking the pirate bay when all other ISPs blocked it straight away.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:48 am
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since Ive managed to offload any guilt I might have on to you lot now, I might see if I can set something up.

Now, next Qu, which torrent client is the shizzle ATM?

PS aracer, you got your pi to do anything interesting yet?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:50 am
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utorrent


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:50 am
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rings a bell steve.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:50 am
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Given torrents slow creep into the legitimate world

Been there for years 🙂 most linux dist's have used them


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:50 am
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is there not a torrent client that can mask torrent traffic scuzz?

Azureus allows for some level of encryption which allegedly prevents it (there's a page on the site I linked you for avoiding traffic shaping) but I'm unsure how effective it is.
uTorrent can do similar, but the newest version is allegedly bloated... Do a quick google of the best version and grab that version from filehippo.com.
Personally, I use kTorrent or whatever the default client is on KDE linux (world: I have permission from all copyright owners)


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:51 am
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linux dist's

not legitimate IMO 😉


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:51 am
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Vuze is pretty slick.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:52 am
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Bit torrent ftw 😉


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:53 am
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>linux dist's

not legitimate IMO


LINUX IS FOR COMMIES.
😉


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:53 am
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[url= http://wiki.vuze.com/w/Avoid_traffic_shaping ]cheers scuzz[/url]


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:53 am
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is there not a torrent client that can mask torrent traffic scuzz?

I don't think so. Because it inherently uses a certain port range, and in order to work with other people (it's kind of pointless if you don't) you're constrained to that even if you could customise it. ISPs will block based on the port used - which is easily visible in your traffic - rather than anything more sophisticated in terms of traffic content.

Edit: though I could be wrong!


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:54 am
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Torrenting overnight might produce better speeds and depending on your package might not contribute toward your net usage either.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:54 am
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macc - if I were to profit from the activity then Id agree, but since there's no legitimate outlet to re-watch this stuff (for my own benefit only) then surely it's more akin to aracer's "like videoing it when first aired" scenario.

If you really want to do it then go ahead, I doubt the beeb would send men round with sticks. But if its not available its not available for a reason, rather than by accident. You're not profiting from it, but if the programme is being widely torrented then someone legitimate income (or the license fund) is being dented.

Repeat fees are part of my GF's income that allow her to continue making films so if her work was being torrented to the extent that a channel saw no commercial reason to screen them anymore then that income would vanish. (she would send someone round with sticks incidentally)

Its not really like videoing it when first aired, its like someone else videoing it when it first aired then distributing thousands of copies.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:57 am
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BTW I use Free Download Manager for torrentz - no idea how good it is compared to anything else, but it seems to work fine for the limited use I've made of that functionality (I already had it as it's very helpful for large conventional downloads when the internet is being flaky).


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 9:59 am
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Repeat fees are part of my GF's income that allow her to continue making films so if her work was being torrented to the extent that a channel saw no commercial reason to screen them anymore then that income would vanish.

If no channel wants to repeat it, then surely it has no further value to the rights holder anyway? If it did they would have either a) repeated it or b) released a DVD


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:00 am
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I'll judge your moral character on what it is you want to watch not how you go about watching it.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:01 am
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I'll judge your moral character on what it is you want to watch not how you go about watching it.

Indeed - are we going to get any clues about this series you're so coy about naming?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:02 am
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If no channel wants to repeat it, then surely it has no further value to the rights holder anyway?
Well yes if you torrent a programme you can create that situation - you can extinguish a film / programmes value. The program you are talking about has been repeated often and regularly so it must still retain some value to the copyright holder. You can ruin that if you like, and look forward to not seeing similar programmes in future.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:03 am
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Repeat fees are part of my GF's income that allow her to continue making films so if her work was being torrented to the extent that a channel saw no commercial reason to screen them anymore then that income would vanish. (she would send someone round with sticks incidentally)

Or..... lots of people who would never otherwise have been exposed to it see it, and demand builds for it to be shown again, released on DVD, or even for a new series to be made.......


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:05 am
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The program you are talking about has been repeated often and regularly

ah, no, you've mis-interpreted my vague OP.

There are 4 or 5 different series I want to watch (featuring the same presenter), but none of them have been repeated (save for the last two series when BBC have a habit of flood broadcasting the same programme three nights in a row)


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:06 am
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If lots of people who would never otherwise have been exposed to it see it, and demand builds for it to be shown again, released on DVD, or even for a new series to be made.......

ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha ha


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:06 am
 grum
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Great argument, well made. 🙄

A friend sent me a link to a YouTube video of author Neil Gaiman giving his opinion of online piracy.  He says that in the early days of the web he was staunchly against it, but with time he’s come around to believing that far from being a bad practice, piracy actually increases his book sales.

He cites an experiment he and his publisher did with his hugely popular book, American Gods. For a month they put it on the publisher’s website, allowing anyone to read or download the full text absolutely free. One might think this would at least dent sales of the book, but quite the opposite happened.  In Russia, where he says his books were being pirated the most, sales of American Gods increased 300% during the month following the free experiment.

http://www.forbes.com/sites/daviddisalvo/2012/03/15/is-pirating-the-new-advertising/


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:08 am
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Abroad in Britain with Jonathan Meades (1990) BBC Two
Further Abroad with Jonathan Meades (1994) BBC Two
Even Further Abroad with Jonathan Meades (1996) BBC Two
Travels with Pevsner (1998) BBC Two
Pevsner Revisited (2001) BBC Four
Abroad Again in Britain (2005) BBC Four
Jonathan Meades: Off Kilter (2009) BBC Four

Some fo the "Abroad" series were collated into [url= http://www.lovefilm.com/film/The-Jonathan-Meades-Abroad-Collection/102112/ ]The Jonathan Meades Collection[/url] but

A 9-DVD box set collecting his various Abroad... series was due for release in April 2008 but was then reduced to a 3-Disc "Best of..." due to licensing problems/expense of the music used in the programmes
which is an arse.

Some of these "missing" episodes are available in torrents. Much of Off Kilter is available in 15 minute segments on You Tube. Im particularly interested in finding the Pevsner ones too (although Meades only did a few of them)


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:10 am
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oh - not that exciting really 🙁

...to answer your question, no, not really done anything with the RPi yet. I'm very behind the times with consumer technology at aracer towers - don't have a single device with either an HDMI or DVI input, so struggling with poor quality display via phono (and a DVI/VGA adapter which doesn't seem to work with my kit, despite other RPi users having got it to work).


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:18 am
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Repeat fees are part of my GF's income that allow her to continue making films so if her work was being torrented to the extent that a channel saw no commercial reason to screen them anymore then that income would vanish. (she would send someone round with sticks incidentally)

I always thought it worked the other way around - if your material is being heavily pirated it's because it is already a commercial success. If 100,000 people are torrenting it then millions have legitimately bought it.

If 100,000 people are torrenting it and there is no way of commercially purchasing the material, then that's just bad business practice. If 100,000 people are willing to make the effort of pirating the material there will be millions of people willing to pay for it.

I don't condone piracy, but times are tough and people are looking to save money where they can; if downloading the latest action flick costs nothing on TPB then many people will do that rather than pay £15 for a DVD. I don't think many people care if Tom Cruise can't buy another $50 million yacht.

If "the industry" were to offer high quality digital copies of movies etc that people could actually own, for a reasonable price, then piracy would diminish considerably.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:18 am
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I always thought it worked the other way around - if your material is being heavily pirated it's because it is already a commercial success. If 100,000 people are torrenting it then millions have legitimately bought it.

If you want to think so. A feature film I worked (of which I'm due several thousand pounds in deferred fees from if it makes a profit) gets its release later this month. Its been on thousands of torrent sites for several months now so the free-torrents: paid purchases ratio isn't very favourable at the moment.

In fact, now I think about it I've got deferred deals on 4 feature films, including one thats have seen a substantial haul of prizes and plaudits. When I say "now I think about it" I mean until this conversation I'd forgotten as I've never seen or expect to see any of that money. They were modest budgets films so given they've had international distribution it wouldn't take a butt load of sales to return a profit, but they haven't. There is some sharp practice from the distributors there, but the fact remains the films have been seen and enjoyed by far more people than have paid to do so.

At blockbuster level then its quite possible that paid tickets/downloads outweigh piracy. Bu like with music, its the smaller scale, more interesting stuff that is harmed by piracy. People who would make a wage rather than a fortune from their work.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:41 am
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your own examples still dont cover the case of my OP where there is no legitimate method to re-watch what Ive already seen.


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:44 am
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If you want to think so. A feature film I worked (of which I'm due several thousand pounds in deferred fees from if it makes a profit) gets its release later this month. Its been on thousands of torrent sites for several months now so the free-torrents: paid purchases ratio isn't very favourable at the moment.

Maybe it's not very good, or it wasn't very well marketed? How did the film get onto these torrent sites - someone working on the production presumably?

I'm guessing you CBA watching the video I linked to - but maybe rather than whining people ought to be coming up with better ways to make thing available on legitimate paid services, so it becomes easier than piracy. If the film was ready, why not make it available - oh because you wanted to keep control over the release schedule and adhere to a traditional model of cinema release-DVD-TV. Outmoded - people want to be able to see stuff right now, easily and cheaply. If you can't provide that don't be surprised when someone else does.

BTW I know quite a few DJ/Producers who now get gigs all over the world thanks to YouTube and torrents meaning they have a following in places where almost no-one ever buys CDs. They are far from big time.

At blockbuster level then its quite possible that paid tickets/downloads outweigh piracy. Bu like with music, its the smaller scale, more interesting stuff that is harmed by piracy. People who would make a wage rather than a fortune from their work.

Where is your evidence for that statement? There just isn't that big a market for small, independent films (with small marketing budgets), regardless of what prizes they win. Are you using the frankly ridiculous argument that every download is a lost sale?


 
Posted : 21/08/2012 10:50 am
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