The Motion Picture Association of America is doing their best to follow
in the footsteps of their brethren at the RIAA and make business harder
for its members. They, Im guessing at the direction of some lawyers of
their member companies, want to try to make cable and satellite
companies shut off the "analog hole" when showing movies that are being released to TV prior to their DVD release. In the MPAA's own words "Distribution
over insecure outputs would facilitate the illegal copying and
redistribution of this high value content, causing untold damage to the
DVD and other 'downstream' markets."
The MPAA is
staring right in the face of a paradox and they must make a choice.
They can continue to invest in the war on Digital Piracy (as opposed to
physical DVD piracy, which can be monitored and slowed by confiscating
actual DVDs and duplication equipment), or they can invest in promoting
the fun of going to the movies.
Invest in a positive message
that can get people more excited about their member products and the
unique experience offered in theaters, or send a message that your
customers are crooks and pirates. Invest in a message that could
generate more revenues for your members, or invest in the cost of
trying to close the "analog hole" which costs taxpayers money as you
waste legislative time, consumers money, as you waste the time and
money of cable, satellites and telcos who will fight this effort or
spend millions having to adopt it, and of course drive up the cost of
the movie going experience because of all the above.
I have more
than 1 billion dollars invested in the entertainment industry. I get to
see our content distributed illegally online. I get a daily report of
all the torrents and other files available online. You know what I
think about that ? So what. Thats what i think. Its collateral damage.
Unlike music, it takes time to upload and download movies. People with
more time than money will steal content. THey werent going to pay for
it otherwise. People with a conscious will pay for the content.
Fortunately that is most people.
For all the money the RIAA
wasted on trying to stop digital piracy, about all they acccomplished
was explaining to everyone exactly where and how to steal music. Please
do not make the same mistake. Right now its a hassle to unitlize the
analog hole to copy movies. Most people have no idea how to do it,
particularly for HD delivered movies. Please do not go through
a big process of teaching people exactly what the analog hole is in
hopes of getting companies to prevent its use. All you are going to do
is turn on the lightbulb for many who would otherwise not have a clue.
The theatrical exhibition industry just experienced a phenomenal
several weeks with The Dark Knight setting record after record. People
by the 10s of millions went to the theater, many multiple time to enjoy
the unique experience of going to a movie. Could you please,
please, please use the money you are going to spend fighting the
unfightable and instead spend it on promoting the fun of going to the
movies ? More people going to the movies is more people getting excited
about movies. More people getting excited about movies means more
people watching movies on TV, which is good for revenues, and more
people buying DVDs or legal downloads of the movies. Again, good for
revenues.
Mark Cuban
This piece was originally published on Mark's blog Blog Maverick and is posted on DMW with the author's permission. Mark's bio can be viewed here. The views expressed in this post are the author’s own, and do not represent the views of Digital Media Wire.
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