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Earlier
Postings:
Google's Video Voodoo
Like everything else it does, Google only advances technology solutions
that also advance its own cause ... willful blindness, extraordinary
profits, inflated egos, exponential market share growth, and/or
unilateral control of all of the world's data and images.
What is needed here is an industry-wide set of standards and procedures
to combat widespread piracy.
Not just for video, but for digital music, movies, illustrated artwork,
recipes, poems, photographs, short stories, news articles, and all
other copyrighted works as well. Each industry segment needs to
endorse its own workable and reasonable set of standards. Believe
it or not, this is far easier than you might think.
Some of these standards have already been set. My small graphic
arts content development company here in Virginia has developed
a workable solution for new electronic clipart illustrations, design
templates, cartoons, logos/symbols, and animations. Even photography.
We have tried to share these standards with the Google's and Microsoft's
of this world, but they make far more profits from continuing to
display and distribute infringing works, and sell online advertising
beside them, than they would if they were to demand compliance or
change their own internal operating procedures, even those that
require little work on their part. They have, for the most part,
ignored our offers to help curb piracy in our graphic arts content
markets.
If you remember nothing else from this article, please remember
this one thing. "Piracy" is the most lucrative business
model there is for these giant search and advertising driven companies,
like Google, Ask.com, AOL, and Microsoft. They make the same gross
revenues, and other "eyeball" benefits, with absolutely
no cost of goods sold. They are not going to stop promoting piracy
until we all force them to comply with the laws of this land. The
solution requires the perfect balance of preventative industry standards
upfront and strong enforcement (civil and criminal) against those
who break the rules once they are caught. Willful pirates and willful
distributors of stolen works.
Industry accepted standards force two groups and two groups only
to the back on the line ... pirates ... and those middlemen like
Google who profit from the distribution of stolen property! Those
who steal your work, or who steal the work of others that ultimately
forces what you pay for things to go much higher. And those who
cover up such unlawful distribution and create "red herrings".
This country has always called these people "crooks".
Why are the Googlites having such a hard time adapting to a world
that respects copyrights? Think about it. How many Google billionaires
did you see on the recent Forbes list of the top 400 billionaires
in this country?
Companies simply don't trust Google the way Google apparently still
thinks they do ... especially companies who own copyrighted material.
Don't individual company solutions often create monopolistic business
practices that in turn lead to greed, corruption, hypocrisy, and
other illegal and/or unethical activities? Neither Google nor Microsoft
deserve this kind of trust, or market power, from my experience.
They have simply not earned it.
This new Google
video "solution", a legal red herring if I've ever seen
one, forces companies to send all of their work through Google in
advance. And when an infringement occurs, the companies have to
expend yet additional resources to monitor the infringements and
choose between three options as to how to proceed to protect their
property. Google gathers valuable data throughout the entire process.
Google continues to sell AdWords and AdSense along the way. Who
needs a Westlaw or an Appeals Court under this scary scenario?
And doesn't this approach of endorsing "after the fact"
licensing further encourage pirates to continue their evil ways?
Copyright defense lawyers will have a ball with this one. Just you
wait and see. Think about it. If the penalty for stealing $200 worth
of merchandise from 7-11 was your picture on a poster and a fine
of 100 bucks, how many people would turn to this way of life?
Google continues to make a fortune at each stage of their recommended
"process". What a joke. Voodoo. Let Google donate their
technological solution to an independent third party monitoring
service if they are serious.
I thought we had laws in this country that cover this critical subject
matter. Or is this yet another new "law of Goooglism".
Only two things will fix this serious piracy problem. VERY strict
enforcement of our existing laws (civil and criminal) and industry
standard ways of using technology to discourage or prevent piracy.
No self-serving efforts are needed on this one, Google. Thanks anyway.
The stakes are simply way too high!
Here's the net. It is high time we held Google accountable for their
role in spreading Internet piracy beyond a controllable issue in
all parts of the world ... and intentionally I might add. And I
base my view on facts I've gathered, not just speculation. They
have contributed to making copyright infringement an epidemic of
enormous economical and social importance. A white collar crime
epidemic, the likes of which we have not witnessed in this country
in a long, long time. They should not be applauded for this new
technology. They should be condemned for their efforts in creating
a world that requires technological safeguards to correct economic
imbalances and engineering defections in its moral and ethical compass.
If you can't see this handwriting on the wall, then you are either
very naive or have some sort of vested interest right along with
Google (or perhaps even Microsoft) in fabricating these smokescreens.
Please reconsider your position. We need as many people in this
copyright protection boat as we can possible muster.
George P. Riddick, III
Chairman/CEO
Imageline, Inc.
griddick@imageline2.com
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