http://www.latimes.com/news/opinion/opinion-la/la-ol-online-piracy-notic
es-start-soon-20130225,0,7274229.story

This week the entertainment industry finally is getting a version of
something it has been craving since the original Napster transformed
online piracy into a mass-market phenomenon: a new Copyright Alert
System that turns Internet service providers into anti-piracy enforcers.
It's not as powerful as the major record companies and Hollywood studios
have proposed, and it ignores many sources of bootlegged music and movie
files online. But it's a start. And if the industry's assumptions are
correct, it could make a dent in the problem.

The system is the work of the Center for Copyright Information, a joint
effort by five large ISPs -- AT&T, Cablevision, Comcast, Time Warner
Cable and Verizon -- and four trade associations representing major and
independent film and music companies. It calls for ISPs to notify
customers of alleged infringements that the trade associations' members
have detected on their broadband accounts, and to inform them of
authorized sources of music and movies online. If more infringements
occur after the initial "educational" notice, the ISPs will ratchet up
the pressure on a customer through a graduated series of warnings and
limitations on that person's Internet connection.

The most severe "mitigation" steps, which would come after the fifth and
sixth detected infringement, could reduce the customer's bandwidth or
redirect that person's browsing automatically to an anti-piracy
information page. Notably, the ISPs haven't been willing to go as far as
the major studios and labels have sought, which would be to cut off
someone's Internet access after multiple alleged offenses.

It's worth noting here that the monitoring will be done by copyright
owners (typically through anti-piracy specialists, such as MarkMonitor),
not the ISPs. Still, the Internet providers will be responsible for
taking the IP addresses provided by the copyright owners and matching
them -- accurately -- to the customers who had those addresses at the
time the alleged infringements occurred.

Jill Lesser, executive director of the center, said the five ISPs would
send notices only about illegal file-sharing, even though much of the
piracy online has shifted to unauthorized streaming sites and locker
services. "It is certainly not the most innovative form of piracy,"
Lesser said of file-sharing, "but it's still among the biggest." For the
first iteration of the system, she added, the center members wanted "to
bite off what they could chew." Once they've shown they can make the
system work, she said, "we can find ways to expand it."

Similarly, the only copyright holders that will be using the system are
the movie studios and music companies that belong to the four
participating trade associations. But that could change after it's up
and running effectively. "We really hope that this will be the model for
the way to move forward," Lesser said.

As limited and circumventable as it seems, the new system can still
accomplish something important for copyright holders. The experience of
France, which requires ISPs to suspend customers' Internet access after
three infringements, suggests that a single notice is enough to deter
further incidents of piracy in most cases. That's consistent with the
entertainment industry's argument that consumers don't really understand
what's legal and illegal online, and that many don't use legal music and
movie services online because they don't know about them.

The notices also prod people with wireless connections to stop making
their bandwidth freely available to their neighbors, and parents to pay
more attention to what their kids are doing online.

Opponents of such alert systems warn that they lay the groundwork for
more invasive monitoring by ISPs, and that they threaten to hold people
responsible for fair uses of copyrighted works (for example, sharing a
home video that has a snippet of a copyrighted song playing in the
background) or infringements done by others (for example, by neighbors
who surreptitiously use their bandwidth). The center has tried to
address the latter concern by retaining an independent arbitrator to
hear appeals from people who received notices they believe are
unjustified. Nevertheless, the burden is on the ISP's customer to
establish that the notice was improper, as opposed to the other way
around. And the arbitrator's decision cannot be appealed.

That's troubling. Nevertheless, the point of the effort is the right
one: to focus responsibility for infringements on the individuals who
commit them rather than on the multi-purpose technologies that can be
used to infringe.

Even if the system works, people who are determined to obtain movies and
music for free online will find ways to get them. And if that group is
large enough, don't be surprised if the entertainment industry pushes
Congress to require ISPs to take more aggressive steps. But one of the
assumptions driving this effort is that simply telling people to stop
will be enough to transform much of the public into paying customers, or
at least willing to use one of the free services that pays for the music
and movies it streams. That's an assumption worth testing.


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