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posted by martyb on Sunday May 03 2020, @08:48AM   Printer-friendly
from the what-will-they-call-them-now? dept.

Pirated 'DVD Screeners' Will be History After Next Year's Oscars

The Academy announced this week that DVD and Blu-Ray screeners will be banned after the next Oscars ceremony. This marks the end of a long-standing tradition. Not just in the movie business, but also on pirate sites where the DVDscr tag is closely watched. Although Oscar DVD Screeners may soon be history, this doesn't mean that screener leaks will be thing[s] of the past.

[...] This year, plenty of discs will be shipped too but, after the upcoming Oscars ceremony, that will be a thing of the past. The Academy of Motion Picture Arts and Sciences announced this week that physical screeners will no longer be allowed in 2021.

"[T]he 93rd Awards season will be the final year DVD screeners will be allowed to be distributed; these mailings will be discontinued starting in 2021 for the 94th Academy Awards," the Academy writes.

The Oscars follow the same path as the Emmys, which already made the switch this year. According to the Academy, the transition is part of its sustainability efforts. This also includes a ban on physical music CDs, hard copies of screenplays, paper invites, and other things that possibly hurt the environment.

[...] Whether piracy was considered as a factor at all remains a guess. Some insiders believe that digital screeners are easier to protect and therefore more secure, but that is up for debate.

There may be fewer leak opportunities in the distribution process, but it's common knowledge that streaming platforms can be easily compromised. In fact, we have already seen several screeners being leaked from online sources. This was corroborated by pirate release group EVO last year.

"We had access to digital screeners and they are indeed easy to leak. The DRM on it is a joke. We had an account last year with three screeners on it and they were pretty much MP4 ready to encode," the EVO team informed us at the time.

Screener (promotional).

Related: First Leaked Screener of the Season: Unreleased Louis C.K. Film "I Love You, Daddy"


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  • (Score: 2) by looorg on Sunday May 03 2020, @02:50PM (1 child)

    by looorg (578) on Sunday May 03 2020, @02:50PM (#989813)

    I really dont see how this will change much of anything, they can't be so stupid as to believe that their won't be leaks -- they even done half the job already pretty much since you will no longer have to get hold of the discs and rip content -- they will just be files online that might have to be decoded/crypted. The quality as far as image/audio will probably improve.

    I guess the only thing they could probably do would have to have required monitored screenings, no cams allowed -- but then there will always be other intercept points such as the post-production companies etc.

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  • (Score: 2) by takyon on Sunday May 03 2020, @03:13PM

    by takyon (881) <takyonNO@SPAMsoylentnews.org> on Sunday May 03 2020, @03:13PM (#989818) Journal

    The quality as far as image/audio will probably improve.

    Depends on how all parties handle the streaming. It could end up looking like compressed crap compared to good quality Blu-ray encodes.

    But having a bad webrip is still better than having only a CAM copy available.

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