Piracy Videos - The Documentary Network Explore the world beyond headlines with amazing videos. Wed, 12 Apr 2017 13:52:40 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.3.5 https://documentary.net/wp-content/themes/documentary/img/documentary-logo.png Documentary Network - Watch free documentaries and films 337 17 Explore the world beyond headlines with amazing videos. Peru’s DVD Pirates Have Exquisite Taste https://documentary.net/video/perus-dvd-pirates-exquisite-taste/ https://documentary.net/video/perus-dvd-pirates-exquisite-taste/#respond Thu, 27 Mar 2014 15:14:28 +0000 http://documentary.net/?p=11166

In Pasaje 18 of Lima's Polvos Azules shopping mall, you'll find racks of DVD burners humming away while flourescent lights cast their glare across the glitter of thousands of bootleg movies in their telltale cellophane wrappers. If you want it to be, it's a scene right out of cyberpunk. But for many Peruvians, whose access to things like Netflix is hampered by some of the slowest internet speeds on the globe, bootleg DVDs remain a primary source for accessing current movie releases. ´Mariano Carranza recently paid a visit to Lima to check out how DVD bootleggers operate, and they said Johnny Law has cooled on the piracy crackdown in recent years. It hasn't always been that way; in 2006, the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA) estimated that some 98 percent of music distributed in Peru between 2004-2005 was pirated. As a shop owner named El Chino told us, "I had problems with the law about 11 years ago. They'd stop by and confiscate my films. But they don't do that anymore, mainly because this has grown too much." Peru's high piracy rates show that there's a market for music and movies with huge potential for monetization. As the EFF has argued, restrictive copyright powers aren't the answer, as eliminating piracy completely is impossible. But if stemming rampant privacy is the goal, continually improving delivery of copyrighted content to consumers is key. "I'm your your dealer. I deliver your pirated films," bootlegger Santos Demonios said. "Your visual drug."]]>

In Pasaje 18 of Lima's Polvos Azules shopping mall, you'll find racks of DVD burners humming away while flourescent lights cast their glare across the glitter of thousands of bootleg movies in their telltale cellophane wrappers. If you want it to be, it's a scene right out of cyberpunk. But for many Peruvians, whose access to things like Netflix is hampered by some of the slowest internet speeds on the globe, bootleg DVDs remain a primary source for accessing current movie releases. ´Mariano Carranza recently paid a visit to Lima to check out how DVD bootleggers operate, and they said Johnny Law has cooled on the piracy crackdown in recent years. It hasn't always been that way; in 2006, the International Intellectual Property Alliance (IIPA) estimated that some 98 percent of music distributed in Peru between 2004-2005 was pirated. As a shop owner named El Chino told us, "I had problems with the law about 11 years ago. They'd stop by and confiscate my films. But they don't do that anymore, mainly because this has grown too much." Peru's high piracy rates show that there's a market for music and movies with huge potential for monetization. As the EFF has argued, restrictive copyright powers aren't the answer, as eliminating piracy completely is impossible. But if stemming rampant privacy is the goal, continually improving delivery of copyrighted content to consumers is key. "I'm your your dealer. I deliver your pirated films," bootlegger Santos Demonios said. "Your visual drug."]]>
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China: Inventing Innovation? https://documentary.net/video/china-inventing-innovation/ https://documentary.net/video/china-inventing-innovation/#respond Fri, 08 Jun 2012 18:58:15 +0000 http://documentary.net/?p=6783

China, one of Asia's major economic powerhouses, is showing signs of slowing growth. This has prompted its leadership to consider spawning a new wave of home-grown innovations. One Chinese city has announced a programme to cultivate hundreds of visionaries in the image of Steve Jobs, the late Apple CEO, in just five years. With this in mind, the central government has called on authors and artists to create great works and make China a cultural superpower. For years, China has been promoting a policy of "indigenous innovation" - favouring domestic firms who develop their own technologies. But it has also put China on a collision course with major trading partners, some of whom accuse it of unfair trade practices and theft of intellectual property.]]>

China, one of Asia's major economic powerhouses, is showing signs of slowing growth. This has prompted its leadership to consider spawning a new wave of home-grown innovations. One Chinese city has announced a programme to cultivate hundreds of visionaries in the image of Steve Jobs, the late Apple CEO, in just five years. With this in mind, the central government has called on authors and artists to create great works and make China a cultural superpower. For years, China has been promoting a policy of "indigenous innovation" - favouring domestic firms who develop their own technologies. But it has also put China on a collision course with major trading partners, some of whom accuse it of unfair trade practices and theft of intellectual property.]]>
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