Is Facebook finally finding piracy offensive?

Is Facebook finally finding piracy offensive?

facebookpirate-adsFacebook is removing ads from offensive and illegal pages. Why not remove the illegal pages too?

Facebook gave in to pressure from advocacy groups and advertisers and announced it will no longer allow ads on sites that include controversial content.  Although they’ve not said anything publicly, I’ve also noticed this change in policy also seems to be impacting Facebook pages promoting movie piracy.  More on below, but first, from Facebook’s official statement released on June 28th:

Facebook is a place for people to connect and share. It’s also a place where businesses can connect and share content with the people who love their brands. Our goal is to both preserve the freedoms of sharing on Facebook but also protect people and brands from certain types of content.

We know that marketers work hard to promote their brands, and we take their objectives seriously. While we already have rigorous review and removal policies for content against our terms, we recognize we need to do more to prevent situations where ads are displayed alongside controversial Pages and Groups. So we are taking action…

…For example, we will now seek to restrict ads from appearing next to Pages and Groups that contain any violent, graphic or sexual content (content that does not violate our community standards).

Facebook was forced to take this action after women’s groups like WAM (Women, Action & the Media) protested the “representation of rape and domestic violence” on Facebook.  Their campaign to publicize the issue included highlighting advertisers whose ads could be found on the controversial pages and group sites.  From their campaign:

To this end, we are calling on Facebook users to contact advertisers whose ads on Facebook appear next to content that targets women for violence, to ask these companies to withdraw from advertising on Facebook until you take the above actions to ban gender-based hate speech on your site. (We will be raising awareness and contacting advertisers on Twitter using the hashtag #FBrape.)

Facebook’s decision to change its policies is clearly a step in the right direction, but as I alluded to earlier, it doesn’t seem to be the only ad-related move the social media giant  has made.   As I pointed out in blog posts earlier this spring “Facebook-A Link in the Piracy Food Chain” and  A ‘Fast and Furious’ Example of Online Piracy at Work”  there are numerous Facebook pages, linking to pirated movies, that are deserving of scrutiny.  While certainly not as disturbing as pages promoting violence against women, these pirate pages on Facebook openly engage in illegal behavior nonetheless.

After my blog posts, and possibly in conjunction with the negative publicity surrounding ads on misogynistic pages, it appears that Facebook has quietly removed advertising from the  illegal movie pages I documented.

facebook-pirated-adsgone

This page boasts more than 231k “likes.”  When I wrote about last May the page featured ads, now there are none to be found.

facebook before-after.011

It’s an excellent first step, but why not go a step further?  Claiming these  pages should be protected  because they represent “free speech” is a tired false equivalency.   Pirating movies isn’t about “free speech” it’s theft and is illegal.  How can Facebook defend pirate pages that are in the business of profiting from theft?  They can’t.

So, if  Facebook screeners are set to review pages for suitability for advertising, why not review pages that are engaged in illegal activities like online piracy?  If above pages promoted illegal prescription drugs instead of illegal movies it’s unlikely they’d  be allowed to remain on Facebook.

Facebook needs to stop taking the disingenuous position that protecting free speech includes protecting criminal behavior.  Now that Facebook has apparently seen fit to get rid of the ads on these pages, isn’t it time to get rid of the pages too?

 

 

 

 

Piracy as a proxy of consumer demand?

Piracy as a proxy of consumer demand?

popup-pirates-David Kaplan, head of Warner Brother’s anti-piracy unit made news this week in Los Angeles at the 4th Anti-Piracy and Content Protection Summit.  According to a Q & A with Kaplan posted on the event’s website, he characterized the studio’s approach to IP enforcement this way:

Generally speaking, we view piracy as a proxy of consumer demand.  Accordingly, enforcement related efforts are balanced with looking at ways to adjust or develop business models to take advantage of that demand by offering fans what they are looking for when they are looking for it.

Of course this makes sense.  Piracy apologists often attempt to rationalize the dubious notion that consumers are entitled to have everything available–anytime, anywhere– by charging that obsolete distribution models are a sign that distributors are ignoring audience demand.

However, it’s not as simple as it may seem.  The reality is that it takes time to build new business methods–and meanwhile, in the thriving universe of digital theft–as is true with most black markets–the pirate’s model has never been constrained by such “trivial” issues as contracts, licensing, budgets, or the law.

In an ideal world filmmakers would be able to release their  films to worldwide audience simultaneously.   With models like day and date release  finding success, it’s likely such an approach will someday become the norm.

But…even when that day does arrive, the other elephant in the room remains-Will consumers be willing to pay  instead of going to pirate sites that offer fast and free options with the click of a mouse?  Finding efficient ways to meet audience immediate demand only solves one piece of the piracy puzzle.  The other is how to thwart the black market entrepreneurs who compete directly with legit distributors?  Remember–profit comes easy when a business has little, to no overhead costs associated with the content it offers.

Kaplan sees this issue as a “top priority.”

I think our top priority would be to remove the financial incentives from
those who would profit by building businesses based on the unauthorized exploitation
of our intellectual property. A close second would be educating consumer about the
importance of IP protection and the availability of legitimate alternatives to piracy.

I’ve said it before –if  the financial incentives to run pirate websites disappear, and popular content made readily available through legit channels, piracy’s impact will diminish. The problem remains–how do we get there?  At a time where content creators are adapting to online distribution, ad providers, search engines, web hosts, and payment processors continue to drag their feet when it comes to making real inroads against infrastructure and incentives that underpin digital piracy.

n the White House’s just released  “2013 Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement” the word “voluntary” appears 36 times including this statement:

The U.S. Government is pursuing an innovative and multi-pronged strategy to combat infringing foreign based and foreign-controlled websites by encouraging cooperation by law enforcement, development
of voluntary best practices, and international leadership…

The White House document also offers this carefully worded prescription as one path forward combatting IP theft online:

22. Facilitate Voluntary Initiatives to Reduce Online Intellectual Property Infringement and Illegal Internet Pharmacies

As an Administration, we have adopted the approach of encouraging the private sector to develop and implement cooperative voluntary initiatives to reduce infringement that are practical and effective. It is critical that such efforts be undertaken in a manner that is consistent with all applicable laws and with the Administration’s broader Internet policy principles emphasizing privacy, free speech, competition, and due process. Together with law enforcement efforts, private sector voluntary actions can dramatically reduce online infringement and change the enforcement paradigm. We encourage all participants to continue to work with all interested stakeholders, including consumer advocacy groups, to ensure that voluntary initiatives are as effective and transparent as possible.

It’s great to think that we can all reach a consensus to combat the scourge of piracy through “cooperation.” However, the fact is there’s still a very long way to go.  Until ad providers, advertisers and companies like Facebook and  Google, whose tentacles reach far and wide throughout piracy’s infrastructure, get serious about cleaning up the act all this talk about “voluntary” initiatives is just talk.

The fact is, when it comes to profiting from online piracy, money speaks louder than words.  It may just take a bit more “law enforcement” to make those responsible pay attention and take meaningful action to clean up their acts.

 

Can We Afford Online Piracy?

Can We Afford Online Piracy?

Game-of-thrones-piracyBy now it’s old news that HBO’s hit series “Game of Thrones” is currently the most pirated show on TV (followed by the CBS comedy “The Big Bang Theory”).  In today’s LA Times, Alexandra Le Tellier published a piece “If you want to watch ‘Game of Thrones,’ pay for it.”  explaining how online piracy is not something to be celebrated, but rather an activity that ultimately undermines our art and those who toil to make it (not just the well-paid executives).

She calls out director David Petrarca, who’s directed 2 episodes of Game of Thrones, for his ill-conceived comments that the rampant piracy of the HBO series did “more good than harm”  because it helped generate “buzz.”   It’s a sentiment that has been echoed by others attached to the show.  As I wrote in an earlier  post,  HBO’s programming president Michael Lombardo made similar tone-deaf comments recently in Entertainment Weekly:

I probably shouldn’t be saying this, but it is a compliment of sorts…The demand is there. And it certainly didn’t negatively impact the DVD sales. [Piracy is] something that comes along with having a wildly successful show on a subscription network.

Ms. Le Tellier argues that studios have marketing departments whose job it is to create such buzz and zeros in on the heart of the issue when she writes:

It should be up to the creators and stakeholders to decide how to distribute their programs for consumption and nurture “cultural buzz.”

Exactly!  From my earlier post on Michael Lombardo’s comments regarding Game of Thrones piracy:

…a man with the stature and success of Mr. Lombardo should know better than to blabber on in such a thoughtless way about an issue, that for many filmmakers, cannot afford to be taken so lightly.  Sure, it would be great if everyone had the reach and resources of HBO, but the fact is we don’t, and for us–no matter how you spin it–piracy is not a positive.  The arrogance Lombardo showed in blithely dismissing piracy’s impact on HBO’s bottom line did a huge disservice to the many content creators for whom piracy negatively impacts both their bottom line and their livelihoods.

Ms. Le Tellier asks the question that so many of us do.  If piracy is allowed to flourish unchecked, and even be celebrated by some, “What happens to art when artists can no longer afford to make it?”  Her piece is spot on and I urge you to read it in its entirety here.

 

 

Hollywood and Silicon Valley talk distribution, DMCA, and more during panel on piracy

Hollywood and Silicon Valley talk distribution, DMCA, and more during panel on piracy

Hollywood and Silicon Valley talk piracy, DRM, DMCA and distribution

Content Creators MIA from discussions on Entertainment in the Internet Age

Heavyweights from Hollywood and Silicon Valley gathered at Stanford this week for a 2-day event called  Entertainment Technology in the Internet Age (ETIA).  Co-sponsored by SMPTE (Society of Motion Picture and Television Engineers) and Stanford’s SCIEN (Stanford Center for Image Engineering) the was billed as an opportunity to “…explore the tech, creative, and biz requirements for delivering a compelling, high quality, monetizable entertainment experience over the web.”   From the event schedule comes this summary:

Entertainment technology development and content deployment has historically been the purview of Hollywood and traditional broadcast media. However, rapid convergence of technology improvements in connectivity, bandwidth, and media-processing coupled with consumer interest has caused a surge in media distribution over the web.

Day one program sessions included Making Content for the Internet, Distributing Content via the Internet, and an evening event “Legal and Illegal Distribution over the Internet: Can We Find Common Solution(s)?   Panelists for this event included:

Mitch Singer/CTO, Sony Pictures Entertainment
Steve Weinstein/CTO, Deluxe Entertainment Service Group
Chris Odgers/VP Technology, Warner Bros.
Stephen Balogh/Technology Policy Specialist, Intel
Fred von Lohmann/Legal Director, Copyright, Google
Eric Klinker/CEO, BitTorrent

David Cardinal covered the event for extremetech.com and summarized the event this way:

Instead of threats from both sides, opening statements from Sony and Warner Brothers sounded a conciliatory note, agreeing in principal with the message from fellow panelists representing Google and BitTorrent that market-based solutions were the best way to solve the piracy problem. As the evening wore on, though, gloves started to come off, with the studios falling back on pleas for greater legal tools and the tech companies urging more of a free market approach for content distribution.

Day 2 of the event feature more on panels including the  Distributing Content via the Internet (continued), Paying for Content via the Web, and Enjoying the Content (Users Experience).  If you review the panelists they include, not surprisingly  a who’s who of software engineers, executives from the tech and entertainment industries, and attorneys.

Given the event’s sponsors this isn’t particularly surprising.  However, if we are to make any substantive progress on finding a path forward in this debate, wouldn’t it make sense to include at least some of those who actually create the content?  Just a thought…

For Cardinal’s full account of the evening’s piracy discussions it’s worth reading his full story here.

 

White House releases its “2013 Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement”

White House releases its “2013 Joint Strategic Plan on Intellectual Property Enforcement”

US-CopyrightOffice-SealThe White House has released its 2013 strategic plan for intellectual property enforcement.  The document is 35 pages long and outlines progress that’s been made since 2010 and goals moving forward.  Included in the report is a letter to the President and Congress from Victoria A. Espinel, U.S. Intellectual Property Enforcement Coordinator, who summaries the findings and outlines progress made since the last report in 2010 which includes:

• U.S. law enforcement has significantly increased its enforcement against infringement that threatens the vitality of the U.S. economy and the health and safety of the American people.  Since FY 2009

  • − U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement (ICE)-Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) new cases are up 71 percent, arrests are up 159 percent, convictions are up 103 percent, and indictments are up 264 percent.
  • − Pending Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) health and safety-focused investigations are up 308 percent, FBI health and safety arrests are up 286 percent, and new trade secret theft cases are up 39 percent.
  • − Customs and Border Protection (CBP) and ICE seizures of infringing imports have increased
  • by 53 percent.

• Private sector companies have voluntarily agreed to adopt best practices aimed at curbing the
sale of counterfeit goods and reducing online piracy. For example:

  • − American Express, Discover, eNom, Facebook, Go Daddy, Google, MasterCard, Microsoft, Neustar, PayPal, Visa, and Yahoo! established the Center for Safe Internet Pharmacies—a new non-profit to combat fake online “pharmacies” selling dangerous illegal drugs over the Internet.
  • − AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner Cable, Verizon, and major and independent music labels and movie studios entered into a voluntary agreement to reduce online piracy. Under the agreement, Internet Service Providers (ISPs) will notify subscribers, through a series of alerts,when their Internet service accounts appear to be misused for infringement on peer-to-peer networks.− American Express, Discover, MasterCard, PayPal, and Visa agreed to a set of best practices to withdraw payment services for online sales of counterfeit and pirated goods.
  • − The Association of National Advertisers and the American Association of Advertising Agencies issued a leadership pledge to not support online piracy and counterfeiting with advertising revenue.

I’m  particularly  interested in reviewing what said about the efficacy of the private sector’s “voluntary…best practices” approach to see what progress has been made, and whether it jibes with what’s really happening online with regard to piracy, counterfeiting, etc.   I’ll more on my thoughts once I’ve had the opportunity to review the entire report.

Under the microscope for links to unsavory and illegal online enterprises, Google suddenly seeks to explain what a great job it’s doing

Under the microscope for links to unsavory and illegal online enterprises, Google suddenly seeks to explain what a great job it’s doing

google-devil voxindie.org  google It’s no coincidence that Google’s attempting to grab the tech news headlines with blog posts this week trumpeting the company’s ongoing efforts to fight the scourge of online child porn and illegal pharmacies. Google’s links to illegal and unsavory activities is long established, but with increased public scrutiny thanks to the NSA snooping stories and declarations like that of Mississippi Attorney General Tom Hood asserting Google’s search aids online criminals, it seems that Googleiath’s powers that be  felt the time had come for some much-needed reputation burnishing.

And so, this week we have not one, but two new Google blog posts that are designed to grab the news cycle and  put the Silicon Valley giant in a more favorable light.  Never mind that most of it’s really just old news repackaged to fit their latest PR campaign.  The first PR blast came  Saturday via this post, trumpeting Google’s role in the battle against child pornography online.

Google has been working on fighting child exploitation since as early as 2006 when we joined the Technology Coalition, teaming up with other tech industry companies to develop technical solutions. Since then, we’ve been providing software and hardware to helping organizations all around the world to fight child abuse images on the web and help locate missing children.

There is much more that can be done, and Google is taking our commitment another step further through a $5 million effort to eradicate child abuse imagery online. Part of this commitment will go to global child protection partners like the National Center for Missing & Exploited Children and the Internet Watch Foundation. We’re providing additional support to similar heroic organizations in the U.S., Canada, Europe, Australia and Latin America.

Since 2008, we’ve used “hashing” technology to tag known child sexual abuse images, allowing us to identify duplicate images which may exist elsewhere. Each offending image in effect gets a unique ID that our computers can recognize without humans having to view them again. Recently, we’ve started working to incorporate encrypted “fingerprints” of child sexual abuse images into a cross-industry database. This will enable companies, law enforcement and charities to better collaborate on detecting and removing these images, and to take action against the criminals. Today we’ve also announced a $2 million Child Protection Technology Fund to encourage the development of ever more effective tools.

While it goes without saying that any effort to battle child pornography is laudable, and it’s great that the company is “making news” by donating 2 million more to the cause, but in my (cynical) view this donation appears to not to be driven by altruism, but is more likely born from a not-so-subtle desire to rub elbows with “heroic” organizations and in order to generate positive media buzz for a company facing increasing criticism over its handling of privacy and piracy/counterfeiting issues.  Google’s assertion that it employs “hashtag” technology to identify and block offending imagery also raises the question as to why they can’t do more to prevent pirated content from appearing in their search results?  Oh, but I digress….

Then today, the Google PR machine was back in action with this post outlining supposedly ongoing efforts to battle illegal (rogue) online pharmacies also appears to be part of their efforts to burnish their increasingly tattered reputation:

For the last several years, Google has worked closely with a number of organizations, government agencies, and businesses to combat rogue online pharmacies from all angles.

Collectively, we are making it increasingly difficult for these operators to effectively promote their rogue pharmacies online. A variety of websites and web services are refusing ads from suspected rogue pharmacies. Domain name registrars are removing suspect rogue pharmacies from their networks.  Payment processors are blocking payments to these operators, and social networking sites are removing them from their systems too.

Again, there’s nothing “new” here, really just the same old, same old.  It’s also particularly ironic to see Google patting itself on the back for behavior that has not been voluntary.  Wasn’t Google the company that in 2011 paid the feds a half a billion dollar settlement to close a Justice Department investigation into its role in serving and profiting from illegal pharmacy ads.  How does that jibe with them combatting “rogue online pharmacies” for the “past several years?”
Oh, and just a week ago the company was called out by Mississippi’s attorney general Jim Hood who asserted:

 

Google’s search engine gave us easy access to illegal goods including websites which offer dangerous drugs without a prescription, counterfeit goods of every description, and infringing copies of movies, music, software and games.

If Google is doing such a great job, why hasn’t anything really changed?  When will enough be enough?  How long can the company keep tap dancing around land mines before it’s forced to reckon with the fact it enables and profits from a plethora of illegal, online enterprises?  If technology can be used to battle child pornography, why not employ it to battle other illegal online activities?

There are plenty of examples of Google enabling and profiting from online crime.  I outlined some in a blog post earlier this year,  “Chronic, Ill-Gotten Gains–Google’s Web of Piracy Profit”  and have also written others:

  1. How Are Google’s Anti-Piracy Search Policies Working?
  2. Why Doesn’t YouTube Address the Real Content ID Fail?
  3. Blogspot.com-A Bridge to Piracy?
  4. Google Search #FAIL Means More $$$ for Them
  5. Google Complains that it’s Hard Work to Remove Reported Pirate Links
  6. YouTube Allows Pirate “Partners” to Profit From Illegal Movie Uploads
  7. Content Leeches-The Dark Underbelly of YouTube’s Content Monetization
  8. YouTube (and Netflix) monetize online piracy
  9. 3 Strikes on YouTube and You’re OUT?  Maybe…
  10. Netflix Ads + Google Blogspot + Stolen Movies = Piracy Profits
  11. Google Joins a Debate on Ad-sponsored Piracy

How well is Google really doing?  Well, despite this week’s efforts of PR spin (and CNET’s ongoing coverage of it) the devil’s in the details and there, the real story hasn’t changed.  Google rates a #FAIL in my book.

 

 

(graphic includes stock image from istockphoto)