By ANDREW WELSH-HUGGINS

COLUMBUS, Ohio (AP) - At a recent showing of "Big Fish," several moviegoers
at a local theater held up camera-equipped cell phones and took snapshots of
the screen. Doing the same with a video camera will soon be a crime.

Along with other several states including California, Ohio has at
Hollywood's urging passed a law that lets police arrest people for
videotaping movies in theaters.

The new statutes augment a film industry anti-piracy arsenal that includes
bag searches for people entering movie houses - a multifaceted response to
technological strides that make digital video distribution a snap.

Some analysts say that with such tactics Hollywood is shooting a political
blunderbuss that could backfire. The movie industry, they say, should be
more concerned about the illegally copying of films by its own.

A recent AT&T Labs study found that three of every four movies leaked on the
Internet came from industry insiders - a trend that motivated the Motion
Picture Academy of America to temporarily stop sending "screener" 
tapes and DVDs to Oscar voters.

That kind of digital piracy "is much more of a threat than someone sneaking
in with a video camera," said David Joyce, media analyst with Guzman & Co. 
"You're going to have really poor quality - it's not going to duplicate as
quickly as an actual digital file."

Ohio's bill, signed in December by Gov. Bob Taft and taking effect in March,
gives movie theaters the right to detain people suspected of videotaping
movies, just as a department store can hold a suspected shoplifter.

A similar law took effect Jan. 1 in California. Michigan lawmakers
introduced legislation in December, and Wisconsin and Pennsylvania passed
equivalent bills in 1999.

The Motion Picture Association of America says it plans to lobby at least a
dozen more states this year for similar legislation. The industry estimates
pirated movies cost it $3.5 billion annually.

"It's the same way an honest consumer is hurt by shoplifting," said John
Fithian, president of North American Theater Owners.

California already has felony-level laws that could be used to prosecute
suspected movie pirates. Its new law creates a less serious charge that
would be easier for district attorneys to use, said James Provenza,
legislative counsel for the Los Angeles District Attorney's Office. 
Although the new California charge is a misdemeanor, it still carries
serious consequences - up to one year in jail and a $2,500 fine.

Under Ohio law, by contrast, a first offense would be punishable by six
months in jail and up to $1,000 fine. Michigan's bill would set penalties up
to five years in prison and a $250,000 fine.

The state laws make it easier to prosecute individuals caught in theaters
because the charges focus simply on the operation of a camera - avoiding the
more prickly details of federal copyright law.

"Enforcement is always a last resort, but we hope this will be a deterrent,"
said Vans Stevenson, senior vice president for the Motion Picture
Association of America.

The Electronic Frontier Foundation, a San Francisco-based advocacy group, is
concerned that the state laws often are written too broadly and ignore
traditional "fair use" copying of small portions of a movie for personal or
educational use.

"I'm in a theater watching a movie that really (stinks), I take a
five-second picture clip and send it to friends and say, 'This movie
(stinks),'" said Jason Schultz, foundation staff attorney. "Have I now
violated the law and committed a felony?"

Increasingly, studios are also beefing up security around movies. At the
Arena Grand Theatre in downtown Columbus, security guards hired by the
studios regularly check patrons' bags, especially during sneak previews of
new films.

It's not unusual for a guard to watch projectionists as they assemble the
film and then sit in the booth during the movie, said Seth Distelzweig, an
Arena Grand assistant manager.

For a recent preview of "Texas Chainsaw Massacre," two security officers
accompanied the movie from Los Angeles. At a preview for "Honey," guards
walked through the darkened theater wearing night vision goggles to check
for cameras.

Moviegoer Margaret Nivins is so accustomed to the searches that she now
leaves her purse in the car.

"It's just easier for me to work without it, and then it's easier for them
too," said Nivins, 42, waiting in line to see a "Big Fish" preview at the
theater.

Yet the October study by AT&T Labs questioned the impact of camera-toting
movie pirates. Researchers created a list of the 312 most popular movies
released between January 2002 and June 2003.

After locating 285 of those movies on the Internet, researchers used
software to look for evidence of their origin, such as visible boom mikes in
scenes, a sign that the copies were unedited versions. They also looked for
watermarks on film or text on the movie itself, such as phrases "For
screening purposes only."

Their conclusion: 77 percent of the films came from insider sources, either
motion picture companies or theater employees taping from the projection
booth.

"Our initial thoughts were how easy it is to get these copies from the
movies," said Patrick McDaniel, one of the AT&T researchers. "The data set
we did didn't actually show that to be true."

Stevenson of the MPAA says the researchers used flawed data. The movie
industry says its internal analysis last year found that 92 percent of
recently released movies found on the Internet came from camcorders.

Fithian, of the movie theaters association, takes a softer view.

"There's no doubt that piracy comes from multiple sources," he said. "My
reaction is to attack piracy at every source ..."




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