BBC reports that computer programmer Philip Danks for has been jailed for 33 months after recording Fast And Furious 6 from the back of a cinema after a judge in Wolverhampton ruled that the defendant uploaded the movie, which was downloaded 700,000 times. As well as putting the film on the internet, Danks offered to sell copies of the film using his Facebook profile.
The judge who sentenced Danks said his behavour was "bold, arrogant and cocksure". Police said that Danks had continued to illegally distribute movies after his arrest in May last year. Fraud investigators quickly traced him after they noticed his online ‘Thecod3r’ tag attached to the video was identical to his profile on dating site Plenty of Fish. Danks was arrested by police after a special ‘webwatch’ team was set up by LA-based Universal Pictures, who raided his home in Bloxwich, Walsall on May 23 – less than a week after the video surfaced online.
The court heard that despite making some money from sales of the film on Facebook and by personal delivery his real motive was ‘street cred’. "The first person with a pirated version attracts much kudos," said Ari Alibhai, prosecuting on behalf of the Federation Against Copyright Theft. "He wanted recognition from the community."
(Score: 2) by SlimmPickens on Sunday August 24 2014, @10:31PM
LOL, one of those posts is "better" than the other!
How about this:
1 - Works are copyright by default for a period of one year.
2 - At any time copyright can be converted to copyleft, which decays over ten years but is refreshed every time a new version is released. There is no limit to the number of refreshes.
3 - Copyright works can have their one year period refreshed by a fee that is set by the CPI. As soon as it's no longer profitable and the fee is not paid it becomes part of the commons. The number of "refreshes" has a maximum limit equal the decay period of copyleft.