Anti-downloading law not needed: InternetNZ

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Other approaches can be effective, web body says
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InternetNZ says special legislation to tackle illicit music and movie downloading may not be needed.
But if it is, it can be simpler and less punitive than the Bill currently before a select committee in parliament.
These points are made in a submission to the Commerce Select Committee on the Copyright (Infringing File Sharing) Amendment Bill. The document substantially reflects the priorities and issues raised at a series of public meetings organised by InternetNZ last month.
InternetNZ questions the need for the legislation on the basis of the continuing growth of earnings in the music and movie industries, whose lobbies often contend that the businesses are being destroyed by illicit file-sharing and downloading.
The submission cites a comment from the government’s own Regulatory Impact Statement on the bill: “We are unable to accurately estimate the costs to the [entertainment] industry from illegal P2P [peer-to-peer] file-sharing since attempts to scale the problem have been fragmented or based on limited data sets.” This, the submission says, echoes the view of the US General Accountability Office.
InternetNZ quotes several figures quantifying the growth of the local music and movie industries and suggests this demonstrates that the problem is not as great as surveys commissioned by “vested interests” claim. Any effect is chiefly, the organisation suggests, a matter of an industry that has failed to come up with new business models to cope with the impact of new avenues of distribution.
InternetNZ points to the Australasian Performing Rights Society/Mechanical Copyright Owners Society recording a 67 percent increase in revenue from paid downloads in 2007/8 after iTunes was launched. This is evidence that the problem may be righting itself, the organisation says.
Before any precipitate new law is enacted, its submission says wider debate is needed on the principle of copyright and the balance it creates between the rights of an original creator and “the interests of the wider community in propagation of ideas”, the submission says. “We have not had that debate,” InternetNZ says.
Assuming some measure is needed, it prefers a procedure that puts the emphasis on education rather than punishment. “It has been recognised by all involved that no system will stop infringement altogether. Steps which increase respect for the creativity of others are key,” the organisation states.
The submission quotes figures from a survey conducted for the NZ Federation Against Copyright Theft last year, which found 70 percent of New Zealanders would stop infringement if they were sent an educational notice, whereas only 61 percent would respond in the same way if threatened with disconnection of their internet access.
InternetNZ expresses again its preference for a “notice-and-notice” regime, where the internet service provider is an information conduit and does not become actively involved in enforcement. “ISPs would receive notices from copyright owners, would match the details in those notices to their customers and would send educationally-focussed notices to them.”
Such a regime is already provided in the Bill, the organisation says, as the first stage in the suggested “graduated response” system. This goes on to involve the Copyright Tribunal and courts in penal measures. The legislation should be changed to stop at the first stage, InternetNZ says.
If the committee decides a graduated response regime is needed, it should not include termination of a repeat offender’s internet account, it says. Apart from that, the procedure as currently suggested — if there must be one — is “acceptable”. Some attention is, however, needed to the definitions of ISP and file-sharing, to avoid punishing innocent parties and their activities.
The submission appends a detailed analysis of the bill by law firm Lowndes Jordan, which was presented at InternetNZ's public meetings last month.
Comments
The model is changing for sure. Just look at the number of groups touring NZ and the world. I suspect the numbers on the road is ramping up higher than ever, Bands realise that is where the model for money is, and of course you do not need a record label for a live concert to happen, so maybe I wonder, is the changing music distribution model changing at the expense of the gate keepers of the old distribution model. Bands realise they now only need iTunes, Youtube, good reputation, buzz and decent songs people want to watch or listen...oh and a paypal account.

By the way here is a group with huge potential carving their own success story right here in NZ without a record label - Tre-belle 3 gorgeous girls with the looks and talent check em out at their tre-belle co nz website
Posted by Kevin Andreassend at 1:53:06 on June 22, 2010

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poor poor music industry I used to down load music via p2p, but since we have access to itunes I have used that, and I'll bet my bottom dollar thousands will have done the same. I also believe the "majority of people want to do the right thing the majority of the time. Price the goods appropriately (less than the physical medium), make them easy to obtain (iTunes Store), easy to use (remove copy-protection), provide basic education about the difference between file-sharing and legit downloads, and most people will buy them" as posted by Tom Robinson.
Posted by Wellzy6 at 20:48:16 on June 21, 2010

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Get with the times I have little sympathy for the music industry who were dragged into the digital download age, ditto the movie companies who are fighting against online distribution, and the nascent e-book industry which is following in their footsteps.

These organisations are determined to treat their customers like crooks, making it almost impossible to listen/watch/read media as the consumer desires. To watch a DVD I've purchased I have to sit through unstoppable threats on the evil of piracy every time I watch it. I have to jump through hoops to watch a DVD on another device. I can't copy purchased e-books between the devices of different vendors. Ironically all these issues go away if you pirate the work.

I strongly believe the majority of people want to do the right thing the majority of the time. Price the goods appropriately (less than the physical medium), make them easy to obtain (iTunes Store), easy to use (remove copy-protection), provide basic education about the difference between file-sharing and legit downloads, and most people will buy them.

Pricing electronic works the same as physical ones and binding them in copy-control does almost nothing to stop piracy and annoys legit consumers.

Get with the times. Stop fighting progress and start embracing all the 21st century has to offer.
Posted by Tom Robinson at 14:55:49 on June 21, 2010

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Get with the times I could not agree with you more.

I have 910 iTunes tracks that I own and purchased whilst in the UK. At 79 pence per track, you do the math. Now that I am in NZ and no longer have a UK iTunes account, waddaya know, I can't play these DRM riddled tracks anumore. To say i am angry is an understatement, es[pecially when iTunes suopport could not give a flying.

Do the right thing... get a life. I now pirate my music or buy from anywhere without DRM and wuill continue to do so untill they stick DRM where it belongs
Posted by Anonymous at 8:24:38 on June 22, 2010

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Is there a government incharge I feel that his government is too junior in many respects, and they are inexperienced in too many matters. Thanks InternetNZ for this article, and I just hope that relevant and educated Ministers read and understand it. The government should be encouraging 'distribution entities' to adapt, rather than legislation. Where a global entity will not adapt, then encourage Kiwi creativity to try and find alternatives, not censorship.
Posted by Ice warrior at 13:09:27 on June 21, 2010

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Why would they? They have operated under the premise here and in the US that they can just buy the legislation they want eventually? After many failed attempts they have now succeeded in getting a secret, global 'coalition of the willing' to act on their behalf in the worst interests of a great many of their own members.
It is now only a matter of time before they, as they do with radio, pretty much own everything worth owning.

Not sure why they would do things any other way considering this?

This whole thing is not about what is right or in the best interests of the public. Only the most naive would ever think so.

It is about who is paying whom and how much - at all levels.
Posted by Mr Magoo at 12:57:25 on June 21, 2010

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Spade = spade Congratulations to InternetNZ for telling it like it is. The so-called "piracy" problem is more of an opportunity than a problem... the problem is the current distribution entities (I won't call them "creatives" because they're clearly not) who claim "property rights". They have systematically failed to recognise or even attempt to adapt to the relentlessly changing world around them. They are as relevant as a buggy whip or a manual typewriter in today's media marketplace. Adapt or make room for your successors.
Posted by Dave Lane at 9:29:24 on June 21, 2010

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