Fast and Furious 6 Gets UK Movie Pirate 33 Month Jail Term

Karloff

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Oct 19, 2009
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Fast and Furious 6 Gets UK Movie Pirate 33 Month Jail Term



Anti-piracy group FACT played a major role in Philip Danks' arrest.

A 25 year old man, Philip Danks, has been sentenced to 33 months in prison on movie piracy charges after distributing Federation Against Copyright Theft (FACT) [http://www.escapistmagazine.com/videos/view/escape-to-the-movies/7365-Furious-6], in an official statement, hailed this as "an important case and an important sentence."

Danks filmed the movie on the first day of its release in cinema with a camcorder, and had to go back for a second attempt when the battery on his first camcorder died. He then offered physical copies for sale on Facebook at £1.50 each, as well as a torrent feed. His torrent was downloaded more than 700,000 times, FACT alleges [http://www.fact-uk.org.uk/cammer-sentenced-to-33-months-imprisionment/], and Danks continued to copy and sell movies even after his arrest.

According to the judge, it was the physical copy sale, as well as the fact that Danks recorded it himself on the very first day of theatrical release, that earned him the 33 month prison term. "Seven billion people and I was the first. F*** you Universal Pictures," Danks is supposed to have posted on Facebook.

All told, Danks is alleged to have made about £1,000 from his activity. According to FACT, Danks' piracy cost Universal "millions of pounds of loss," though the actual amount is unknown and probably unquantifiable.

Danks was tracked down because he used the same handle for his torrent, TorrentFreak [https://www.google.com/search?q=TheCod3r&ie=utf-8&oe=utf-8&aq=t&rls=org.mozilla:en-US:eek:fficial&client=firefox-a&channel=fflb], Danks alleged that FACT played a central role in his arrest.

"I was detained for 3 hours 12 minutes, out of that I was questioned for approximately 40 minutes," said Danks [http://torrentfreak.com/fast-furious-6-pirate-sentenced-33-months-prison-140821/] on the occasion of his first detention in May. The police would later return and arrest him and Bell in September. "One police officer and two FACT officers conducted the interview. The police officer sat back and let FACT do all the questioning, so FACT were running the show."

Source: Ars Technica [http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2014/08/british-man-sentenced-to-nearly-three-years-in-prison-for-movie-piracy/]


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PuckFuppet

Entroducing.
Jan 10, 2009
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The important bit to note in this case is that he then sold his poorly made cam recording for money, this is undoubtedly why the sentence was as harsh as it was. There is a massive legal gulf between "I took a copy of this" and "I sold a copy of this".
 

Gizmo1990

Insert funny title here
Oct 19, 2010
1,900
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Good. I like to see stupidity like this bite people in the arse. What was his thought process like?

'I just did something illegal. I know what would be good I will now publicise on social media that can be easily traked back to me that I did something illegal and I will also try to sell the movie to other people making it even more illegal'
 

Angelous Wang

Lord of I Don't Care
Oct 18, 2011
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This is the correct way piracy should be handled. It's like drugs, go after the distributors.

Once you remove the distributors the downloaders automatically stop being a problem. And it's waist of resources to catch the millions of them.
 

erbkaiser

Romanorum Imperator
Jun 20, 2009
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33 months for 1000lbs in stolen goods is perhaps a bit much but that he was caught and tried, I have no problems with.

You can't claim this guy was innocent. He SOLD cam copies of films that were in theatres at the time.
 

vdrandom

fsck
Dec 18, 2013
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According to FACT, Danks' piracy cost Universal "millions of pounds of loss,"
How on earth do they get those numbers?

Liek... How do they know that this amount of people would instead go to the cinema to watch it? Most of them would probably ignore it if there was no pirated version anyway since they have no intention of paying for it to begin with.
 

KaZuYa

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Mar 23, 2013
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You get more jail time pirating a movie than you would mowing down a family while drink driving because costing rich people the chance of making more money is something you just don't do.
 

Cartographer

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Jun 1, 2009
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vdrandom said:
According to FACT, Danks' piracy cost Universal "millions of pounds of loss,"
How on earth do they get those numbers?

Liek... How do they know that this amount of people would instead go to the cinema to watch it? Most of them would probably ignore it if there was no pirated version anyway since they have no intention of paying for it to begin with.
It's fairly easy, they take the 700,000 downloads and multiply by the ticket price of ~£10 to get ~£7,000,000.
The simple fact that people did download it is enough to establish a desire for the product so they can feel quite safe in those numbers. It probably doesn't matter that they wouldn't have watched it in the cinema anyway; that argument falls completely flat as it is essentially saying that the "victim" is no worse off in either case.
Case one, you don't see their movie, you don't pay any money
Case two, you illegally download their movie, you don't pay any money.

That argument equates those two situations, which is demonstrably nonsense. You have benefited (lol, in this particular case) from someone else's work without paying them ergo you have stolen from them. Hence their statement.
 

ron1n

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Jan 28, 2013
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Angelous Wang said:
This is the correct way piracy should be handled. It's like drugs, go after the distributors.

Once you remove the distributors the downloaders automatically stop being a problem. And it's waist of resources to catch the millions of them.
No. Like drugs, the way to actually combat it is to ask 'why are people doing this in the first place?'

Piracy exists because the entertainment industry refuses to change its dinosaur business model. That and they have a habit of putting out a ton of shit products. Giving some idiot (and lets be frank, this guy was a total moron) 33 months jail-time will do absolutely nothing to stop piracy.
 

Karloff

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What fascinates me about this is, if Danks is to be believed, FACT sat in on his official interrogation and basically told the police how to investigate the case. I can't think of any other pressure group with that kind of authority.
 

Hairless Mammoth

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Jan 23, 2013
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On one side, he is an idiot that got what was coming to him for not only copying but selling a movie. Anyone should know better than to try and record a film in shaky cam, where someone can notice and get the cops there before you know your cover's been blown, or get your ID. It's even more humiliating to get caught a second time for the same film since you are too foolish to charge your battery before then. Also, selling a pirate copy online is like painting a big red target on your backside and saying, "here's a high bore rifle, come get me." But, there are two things that irk me.

One is they sentenced him to 33 months of prison while his accomplice got off with community service. Honestly, he should have gotten a lesser jail sentence but some community service time as well (unless he does end up it a chain gang, like here in the US with non-violent convicts, then it's all good). Taking tax money out to keep people like this locked up is stupid.

The other is this FACT group. It sounds like the typical lobbyist/corporate coalition group that was founded by movie distributors to "enhance" the truth, like that lovely "millions of pounds of loss." (Yeah, right. A movie who's main draw is seeing cars racing on a huge screen was copied hundreds of thousands of times from this one guys twitchy, poor sounding home video.) What really strikes me as awkward is they were at the interrogation. Unless the are a government agency they shouldn't be there. They should have just provide all the info the could to authorities. WE sure wouldn't be allowed to question the guy who stole our TVs or something just because we're the victims in the crimes. Then again, We don't represent a multi-billion dollar industry, so we don't deserve a special privileges big companies do, even in trivial cases like this one.
 

Doom-Slayer

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Jul 18, 2009
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ron1n said:
Angelous Wang said:
This is the correct way piracy should be handled. It's like drugs, go after the distributors.

Once you remove the distributors the downloaders automatically stop being a problem. And it's waist of resources to catch the millions of them.
No. Like drugs, the way to actually combat it is to ask 'why are people doing this in the first place?'

Piracy exists because the entertainment industry refuses to change its dinosaur business model. That and they have a habit of putting out a ton of shit products. Giving some idiot (and lets be frank, this guy was a total moron) 33 months jail-time will do absolutely nothing to stop piracy.
Thats a very optimistic way to look at it. Assuming that everybody is downloading purely because of a lack of digital access really isnt true. The simple answer is people are lazy and greedy, a torrent is easy to get, and its free. There are still tons of shows out there that are being pirated that are on Netflix and on other services.. people still torrent them because its free. Yes the Entertainment industry being stupid and not updated their business model is certainly not helping, but it isnt the main reason.

They could offer it in Ultra Super HD with all the special features on their online servie with no load times..and you know what will happen? People will rip it and put it on pirate bay so other people can get it for free.
 

chocolate pickles

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Apr 14, 2011
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Ah, don't worry folks. He'll be out by next week: Our (yes, I'm from the UK) court system and overcrowded prisons will see to that. Until then, though, he'll get a nice comfy cell to call home - most likely with an console and tv of some sort.
 

ron1n

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Jan 28, 2013
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Doom-Slayer said:
Thats a very optimistic way to look at it. Assuming that everybody is downloading purely because of a lack of digital access really isnt true. The simple answer is people are lazy and greedy, a torrent is easy to get, and its free. There are still tons of shows out there that are being pirated that are on Netflix and on other services.. people still torrent them because its free. Yes the Entertainment industry being stupid and not updated their business model is certainly not helping, but it isnt the main reason.

They could offer it in Ultra Super HD with all the special features on their online servie with no load times..and you know what will happen? People will rip it and put it on pirate bay so other people can get it for free.
Yes there will always be people that will want still steal it. That's impossible to completely eradicate. But I think you'd find there would be a large percentage of people who would happily pay for a better service/for more choice. Not only could they potentially convert a number of the people pirating but you also have to take into account the people who have simply stopped watching movies because it's too expensive and they don't want to pirate.

Yes hd rips could go up, but at the very least, it would allow the film industry to control WHEN the rip goes up. After all, do you think people will actually bother downloading a piece of shit cam rip when they know a good quality copy is going to drop in a week or two?

Anyway the point is, even if they can't stamp out piracy all together, they could be making a lot more money and missing out on a lot less if they took some proactive steps toward changing the way they offer their product/service.
 

vdrandom

fsck
Dec 18, 2013
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Cartographer said:
That argument equates those two situations, which is demonstrably nonsense. You have benefited (lol, in this particular case) from someone else's work without paying them ergo you have stolen from them. Hence their statement.
It is not.

Sadly, law around the world makes owning rights to a piece of content equal to owning an item. Yes, pirating is a crime, but for some reason copying and providing a copy will make one do more time than actual burglary in many cases.

First, stealing means not only benefiting from stolen items but also removing them from the legal owner. Like, if a woodworker gets some of the chairs he made for the shop stolen, it's a proper theft ? chairs are gone and he cannot sell them anymore. Not the case with Universal here: they still can and will sell as many copies as they can, therefore it is not stealing, not by definition. (Not arguing that it is not a crime here, just to be clear.)

Second, if I get an item that fails to fulfil the use I want it for, I will return it to the store or resell it to someone who finds it useful. Although... If I watch a bad film that was hyped in media and trailers? Can I, like, complain to the cinema or a company who shot it and get my money back? Wait, are you going to say that it's a service and I pay for the experience? But why on earth have you been telling me that it CAN BE STOLEN?
 

Roofstone

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May 13, 2010
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I like to imagine it was a proper Jack Bauer interrogation with a large amount of shouting "WHERE ARE THE TAPES?!" and hollywood torture.
 

CpT_x_Killsteal

Elite Member
Jun 21, 2012
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First off Universal is full of shit if they think they even one million pounds in profit thanks to this one guy.

Secondly, good on FACT for doing what they did. Uploading it to a torrent site is one thing, but making money off of piracy is a whole 'nother issue. And flaunting it on Facebook of all places is downright stupid.

The jail term is harsh, but fair.