User User name Password  
   
Monday 9.11.2009 / 04:19 AM
Search AfterDawn.com:        In English   Suomeksi   På svenska
afterdawn.com > news > esa releases european piracy report
Show topics
News
News

ESA releases European piracy report

17 February 2009 23:19 by Andre "DVDBack23" Yoskowitz | 6 comments

ESA releases European piracy report The ESA has released a new report on piracy, this time specifically pointing out the "rife" piracy of products in Western European nations.

The Special 301 Report reviews piracy issues in 48 countries and suggests that 40 of those should be placed on a "USTR Watch List."

During December 2008, reveals the report, thirteen selected movies were downloaded illegally 6.4 million times, with the two most popular titles accounting for over 75 percent of the traffic.

Italy had the "heaviest illegal download activity" at 17 percent, followed closely by Spain at 15.1 percent. Spain, Germany and Poland accounted for another 21 percent combined.

Telecom Italia was used the most for piracy by its users, followed by Spain's Telefonica de Espana and France Telecom, added the report.

"Piracy is the single greatest threat to the innovation, artistic commitment and technological advancements enjoyed by millions of consumers worldwide,"
added Michael D. Gallagher, CEO of the ESA, in a statement that sounds like every other ESA statement of the last 5 years.

"Piracy is a job killer that the world economy cannot afford in these difficult economic times. Countries that skirt obligations to combat piracy need to understand the unacceptable damage they are facilitating —and those countries that invest in protecting intellectual property rights and ensure that piracy is not tolerated at any level should be lauded."


Permalink to this article

Get AfterDawn's news to your favourite feed reader! Share this story with your friends!
 

 
Related articles:

  • Palm Pre headed to Spain next week (7 October 2009)
  • Nintendo puts more pressure on DS pirates (29 August 2009)
  • ESA of Canada wants stronger piracy laws (23 April 2009)
  • 'Resident Evil 5' leaked ten days early to P2P (4 March 2009)
  • Nintendo wants help in crackdown on piracy (26 February 2009)
  • ESA praises anti-piracy operation in Mexico (12 November 2008)
  • International video game piracy is rampant, says ESA (12 February 2008)
  • Louisiana forced to pay attorneys fees to ESA (16 April 2007)
  • Oklahoma sued by ESA and EMA (26 June 2006)
  •  

    « Previous news article
    Liberty Media rescues Sirius from bankruptcy
    Next news article »
    SoundExchange misses deadline for webcaster royalty deal
     Post your comment
    Discuss this article! 
    SuckRaven (Junior Member) 17 February 2009 23:46 Send private message to this user   
    Quote:
    Piracy is a job killer that the world economy cannot afford in these difficult economic times...
    Bullsh*t. Expensive-ass CDs and DVDs, and now even more expensive-ass Blu-ray titles are what created theis whole mess in the first place. They created their own worst enemy essentially.

    If they thought piracy was bad up till now, and given his statement about the current state of the economy, is this guy a moron to think that piracy will diminish before it gets more commonplace?

    The funny thing is, this idiot tries to make the chicken and the egg paradox sound like it began with pirates. Well, first there had to be music/movies to pirate, and then there had to be the assinine record labels (douchebag middlemen) that drove up the price to the point of making downloading something illegally very tempting to lots of people.

    So it started with them, and they priced themselves into people finding alternate means to obtain what they wanted. If prices were reasonable and corporate greed was not as prevalent, this could be alleviated to a large extent, though of course, you will never get rid of piracy alltogether.

    This message has been edited since posting. Last time this message was edited on 21 February 2009 11:28

    Pop_Smith (Senior Member) 18 February 2009 0:26 Send private message to this user   
    Piracy is a job killer? Is he really being serious?

    How many people have lost their legal jobs due to piracy? I bet the answer is none.

    I wonder how many people predicted that the finger would be pointed at piracy for the economy crash, despite the crash being mainly caused by a combination of a credit squeeze, crazy inflation and an out-of-control housing market (at least in the U.S.).

    Quote:
    During December 2008, reveals the report, thirteen selected movies were downloaded illegally 6.4 million times, with the two most popular titles accounting for over 75 percent of the traffic.
    I wonder which titles they picked, probably two very popular ones (i.e. Iron Man and The Dark Knight) and the other 11 were crappy ones.

    However, if they wanted to make their claim totally insane why did they pick 13 movies?

    6.4 million divided by 13 is: 492,308. However, assuming everything was downloaded equally, that means the "top two" were downloaded 4.8 million times or 2.4 million times each.

    The reason I point this out is this:

    Obviously people would buy movies if they are great. Iron Man smashed both DVD and Blu-Ray sales numbers only to be way out done by The Dark Knight.

    Taking that into account this means that, if pirated downloads followed the DVD/Blu-Ray sales trend, Iron Man and The Dark Knight took up a combination of 75% of the mentioned numbers. Just looking at this causes the ESA's anti-piracy effect to look shady and limited, just as it is.

    Recession or not, people will go to theaters and buy movies if they are quality and not the crap that is usually put out.

    Peace
    ZippyDSM (AfterDawn Addict) 18 February 2009 3:16 Send private message to this user   
    “Media industry sues guy for his neighbor recoding what the guy is playing on his own radio. Film at 11 with redacted sound and images!“
    eiamhere (Junior Member) 18 February 2009 3:57 Send private message to this user   
    What is the population of Western Europe? They've clumped together 13 movies to increase statistics. The example shown in the previous post puts this into perspective (/13 = roughly half a million per movie), what percentage is that of the population, bearing in mind that we are talking about the 2 most popular movies.

    Now lets see the sales figures for the two most popular movies last year..... oh, that's right, Dark night was the highest grosing movie of last year and apparantly in a very long time....but, but, piracy.

    Typical "media style" bull.
    Agent_007 (Staff Member) 18 February 2009 5:48 Send private message to this user   
    Quote:
    The Entertainment Software Association (ESA) is the U.S. association exclusively dedicated to serving the business and public affairs needs of companies that publish computer and video games for video game consoles, personal computers, and the Internet.

    Games, not movies.
    eiamhere (Junior Member) 19 February 2009 3:57 Send private message to this user   
    Wrong thread maybe? Either way all of these corporations operate in the same manner
     Post your comment
     

    Subscribe to our newsfeed

    Get the latest headlines delivered directly to your favourite RSS reader or content aggregation service by using the links below.

    AfterDawn.com: News - RSS feed
    Add to Google
    Add to My Yahoo!
    Add to MyMSN

    Search for headlines

    Search through our news archive.

    Last week's most popular software downloads

    Digital video: AfterDawn.com | AfterDawn Forums
    Music: MP3Lizard.com
    Gaming: Blasteroids.com | Blasteroids Forums | Compare game prices
    Software: Software downloads
    Blogs: User profile pages
    RSS feeds: AfterDawn.com News | Software updates | AfterDawn Forums
    International: AfterDawn in Finnish | AfterDawn in Swedish | download.fi
    Navigate: Search | Site map
    About us: About AfterDawn Ltd | Advertise on our sites | Rules, Restrictions, Legal disclaimer & Privacy policy
    Contact us: Send feedback | Contact our media sales team
     
      © 1999-2009 by AfterDawn Ltd.