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Thread: Pirated Sean Cody and Corbin Fisher Content

  1. #16
    marcjacob
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    Maybe you should sue one of the smaller webmasters, let it be well known that you have. That might scare a few of the others into pulling the illegal content down if they think you will target even small time sites.

    This sucks big time. It should really be a criminal offence as its theft.


  2. #17
    Madame0120
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    It's really so stupid .. smart enough to build a site, but too stupid to see the potential in doing it the honest way, and sign up as an affiliate.

    :cash:


  3. #18
    desslock
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    It's occured to me.... are many of these sites run by teenagers?

    In the 1980s a great many of the hackers were just teens who had plenty of time on thier hands and lived in their own rooms in very comfy suburbs.... like Plano TX, the Woodlands TX, Highland Park, IL. Ma Bell and other companies had to change their calculus of confrontation when their tacks led to kids.

    Steve


  4. #19
    Xstr8guy
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    Quote Originally Posted by marcjacob View Post
    Maybe you should sue one of the smaller webmasters, let it be well known that you have. That might scare a few of the others into pulling the illegal content down if they think you will target even small time sites.

    This sucks big time. It should really be a criminal offence as its theft.
    So many of these guys aren't even earning a dime from ripping videos. They just put them on torrents because they get-off on file sharing. And as desslock says, I bet a lot of them are young and don't have any money. And since they aren't members of any webmaster community how are they going to find out they they may be subject to legal action? I guess they may have file-sharing communities, I don't know.


  5. #20
    CorbinFisher.com CorbinFisher_BD's Avatar
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    There are some people who genuinely are fans, and they are just very enthusiastic about the videos they share. It just doesn't occur to them there is a huge conflict between being a fan and appreciating the quality of the video, and ripping it off and hurting the company that created it.

    When you email that blogger and politely tell them what they are doing to your ability to continue making more movies, they respond well. They take them down. They choose to stop posting them and any other videos and change the nature of their blog. I've dealt with a number of individuals like that.

    However, most just don't care either way. They like the "celeb status" of having a high-traffic blog with lots of comments and requests pouring in from their visitors. They do it because of that, primarily. They like the attention. Which is why the put the effort and energy (minimal as it is) in to posting links to videos up. Some also do make some revshare money, but a great many I've seen don't even do that. They just want a ton of people coming to their website so they can feel cool.

    CorbinFisher's Amateur College Men


  6. #21
    wnc
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    Blogs is an issue that is controlable. Torrents are not.

    Should one assume that paysite owners now have to hire a new person to watch and read and ask for images to be removed or be correctly linked?

    Maybe that refers to Lee's past comments when the cost of business is not worth having affiliates and the headaches.


  7. #22
    CorbinFisher.com CorbinFisher_BD's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by wnc View Post
    Should one assume that paysite owners now have to hire a new person to watch and read and ask for images to be removed or be correctly linked?
    I think one should very well assume that. It is at the point where that is as much a part of the cost of doing business as paying for hosting, if you ask me. That much of a given, and that much of a necessity.

    The costs involved when talking about piracy go beyond just lost revenues (which can be substantial and even immeasurable. How many initial signups and rebills do you lose on account of piracy?) but also involve the time and money spent fighting it. Staffers get stuck having to track down piracy, distracted from other important tasks. Instead of being involved in revenue generating activity such as marketing, recruiting, filming, and the like.

    On our end, we had everyone at the company spend some time sending out DMCA notices and emails and the like when and if things came to our attention but that became such a task that it got to the point we really did need someone doing nothing but that, fulltime. There's a whole salary, payroll taxes, benefits and what not all going to that.

    CorbinFisher's Amateur College Men


  8. #23
    desslock
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    Guys, I completely understand that it is a problem. But I just have to point out something:

    You guys aren't the first company ever to deal with theft and loss prevention. Any company of any size receives it.

    It's a part of business.

    Should the street produce vendor stop displaying outside since several apples and pears will assuredly "walk away?" Why not compare the losses of a Internet adult website vs. a brick and mortar retail store.

    Yes, when guys steal your website videos and distribute them for free, that is a loss. But as I mentioned earlier, it's a normal cost of doing business.

    Once way back in my Radio Shack days, we constantly battled people writing hot checks for things. I once sold a $800 laptop to a guy to had gone on a weekend binge cleaning out the town of camcorders, radar detectors, other pawnables. (My words to Tandy Loss Prevention - hey I followed company proceedure ;-) )

    And that's not counting people who grab an electronic items which I've chased out the store.... or answered alarm calls at 4am because someone stole a truck, drove it through the store's front glass, and grabbed all the vcr's and camcorders.

    How would your loss prevention woes compare to that of Macy's or Circuit City? I'm not asserting one enjoys more or less, but it's an interesting question.

    One advantage to the internet is the easy, inexpensive means of distribution.
    I guess not everything is a free ride. Easy, inexpensive distribution can also mean easy illegal distribution as well.

    There will always be loss. It just needs to be kept minimal.

    Steve

    [ I just remembered a funny motto from Loss Prevention they told all employees --- Always cover your ASSets ]


  9. #24
    CorbinFisher.com CorbinFisher_BD's Avatar
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    Once difference though, Steve, is the attitude people have towards online content theft.

    Online content is ethereal. Intangible. These people stealing video files, in many cases, have absolutely no concept of it being theft or even inappropriate in any way.

    You bounce a check at Radio Shack and it's pretty much universally agreed that's a bad thing. Shoplift or steal from a brick and mortar business and everyone knows it's a crime and wrong.

    Online, however, you can have entirely, fully, completely law abiding people - their only transgression being theft of music and video files. Because people don't view that as theft. The lack of a physical product has them thinking they're not really stealing anything from anybody at all.

    So you're battling way more than just theft and piracy itself. You're battling a culture and belief system in which the theft and piracy is perfectly acceptable behavior. You're not just trying to fight the measurable monetary losses. You're fighting this mindset in which there is nothing wrong with the thieving.

    Online, you can throw up a blog with blatantly stolen videos and distribute them openly, freely, and without hassle whatsoever. Your peers encourage it. Sites like Blogspot and flash video sites make it extremely easy to do so. There is no consequence, and that feeds in to the belief there's nothing wrong with it.

    That guy passing bad checks at your Radio Shack couldn't park a van in the townsquare and sell all those hot items out the back of it without raising suspicion or getting in trouble. Bloggers distributing pirated content can.

    Yes, fighting theft is a given. Anyone who has worked in retail has heard that speech many a time. But it goes way beyond just product theft in the case of online, creative materials. It's a belief system we're fighting against.

    CorbinFisher's Amateur College Men


  10. #25
    desslock
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    Quote Originally Posted by CorbinFisher_BD View Post
    Once difference though, Steve, is the attitude people have towards online content theft.

    Online content is ethereal. Intangible.

    That guy passing bad checks at your Radio Shack couldn't park a van in the townsquare and sell all those hot items out the back of it without raising suspicion or getting in trouble. Bloggers distributing pirated content can.
    Point taken. It is an attitude. Although isn't it fair to say that compared to six or seven years ago, more people than ever turn to legal distribution methods for movies and music? I have friends who buy off iTunes all day long. In 1998, they probably would have been doing the same thing via file sharing. That attitude will continue to fade when producers make ther products available in ways so that a black market no longer needs to exist.... or just marginally exist. Either its no longer profitable, or whatever.

    I find the line between customer service and protecting intellectual property interesting, and one that will continue looking for resolution for some time.

    In regards to, say. the RIAA - I don't think an industry can stay in business by sueing its own customers. Sure Viacom wants royalties if its stuff plays on YouTube, but that also essentially was upturning a middle finger at the army of fans for the Daily Show and the Colbert Report.... to the same people who the same day make the ratings for their own shows.

    PS - if you happen to ever steal some radar detectors or cameras, you don't need to open your van in the town square. Do what everyone else does and go to the pawn shop and take the cash. It's easy. Or... wait.... this is the 21st century.... take advantage of the new methods of distribution --- sell it on eBay!

    Steve


  11. #26
    padabum
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    I know youīre probably going to tar and feather me for this, but i have to write it anyway:

    We buy lots of content copyrights since about 12 years (videos and pictures) I used to fight all that stuff with copyright infringement too. It cost me a hell of a lot of money to do this (attorneys, court and so on) and the outcome was very bad. Once you get a site down it opens up somewhere else. and you got blogs, torrents, file sharing edonkey, tubesites... where do you want to start?

    I had to realise, that you really canīt fight this at all. It would be like fighting globalisation or even fighting the internet. Would you go at google if they have links to filesharing sites? You wouldnt even think about it.

    We all go through pains and pains of trying to make our content known (AND lots of money to produce it or buy the copyrights). But once i realised that i cant fight it, my life got much better. We use the fact that people have traded and WILL in future trade files to get our sites known. You waste hours and hours on TGPīs putting your content up. Hell these guys spread the stuff FOR YOU and it doesnt cost you a single cent.

    Put a freaking watermark on all of your content including the url and at least you get free advertisement to your sites. It wont cost you any traffic to promote your sites. If you keep adding new stuff on your sites at a reasonable monthly price your paying customers will stick with you.

    And since the day we stopped fighting these bad webmasters we have increased our revenues, we cut costs immensly since (we invest THAT MONEY into new stuff for our paying customers) and we have much more time to put our human resources into making money instead of trying to get other peoples sites down.

    Now you can stone me for this totally "bad" view of things.....


  12. #27
    padabum
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    sorry! i forgot to add one thing:
    we still go at guys who add our content to their paysites and take money for viewing it. we get them directly a their balls.... just to make that point clear. :shades:


  13. #28
    CorbinFisher.com CorbinFisher_BD's Avatar
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    In a perfect world, pirated content with watermark would be free promotion, enticing a certain percentage of viewers you'd never have otherwise have been brought to the attention of to sign up.

    But I'm not convinced that's the case. What I think is happening, instead, is that people are being further conditioned to seek out stuff for free and avoid paying at all costs, thanks to the amazing ease with which they can acquire everything for free.

    Your site doesn't become a destination on their web browser. Instead, the site featuring your pirated videos becomes the destination on their web browser and the only place they will ever go to get your videos.

    When it's so easy to get everything for free, they have zero incentive to buy - regardless of how great you make your site, how great you make your videos, or anything else.

    Once they're conditioned to get it all for free, they're lost.

    So that's why I feel it's important to hassle these sites. Get them shut down. Get videos removed from the networks. Make it difficult to get them. Have individuals distributing pirated content, as well as individuals seeking out pirated content, to get conditioned to the fact that it's an unreliable means of acquiring it, it can be difficult and inconvenient, they can't expect good quality or resolution, they have to go through hoops and up ladders to get it, and constantly have to seek out new ways to find it.

    There will always be piracy, but it's key that it can't become so easy to the mainstream masses that there's no longer an incentive to pay.

    And, quite frankly, I'm not content to let huge numbers of people get all the stuff for free in the hopes a small but decent enough percentage will come out of those masses willing to buy.

    CorbinFisher's Amateur College Men


  14. #29
    padabum
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    sorry to be nagging corbin but here are the results for corbin fisher and rapidshare on google... 25.000 links.... are you going to try and get them all down?
    http://www.google.com/search?q=corbi...n&start=0&sa=N

    dont get me wrong. i dont approve piracy, but as long as there arent any real global ways of fighting it, itīs in my opinion no use to try. but as i said: its just my personal point of view


  15. #30
    Hot guys & hard cocks Squirt's Avatar
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    Quote Originally Posted by CorbinFisher_BD View Post
    In a perfect world, pirated content with watermark would be free promotion, enticing a certain percentage of viewers you'd never have otherwise have been brought to the attention of to sign up.

    But I'm not convinced that's the case. What I think is happening, instead, is that people are being further conditioned to seek out stuff for free and avoid paying at all costs, thanks to the amazing ease with which they can acquire everything for free.

    Your site doesn't become a destination on their web browser. Instead, the site featuring your pirated videos becomes the destination on their web browser and the only place they will ever go to get your videos.

    When it's so easy to get everything for free, they have zero incentive to buy - regardless of how great you make your site, how great you make your videos, or anything else.

    Once they're conditioned to get it all for free, they're lost.
    I totally agree, and well put.

    A couple months ago two of my sites were uploaded to upthebum.org part of Gaytorrentnews.org.

    And I don't mean a few videos from my sites.. I mean ALL OF THE CONTENT from two of my sites.

    I've sent the S&D to no avail, as others will.

    The fucked up thing is they have an upload/download system where if you download more then you upload to their site you're "account" is suspended. WTF? So in order to be an active member you are encouraged to keep stealing from other sites, so you can keep downloading stolen content that others take.

    It's mind numbing to watch all the "thank yous" and "great videos" posts that users submit after dowloading your whole sites for free. Totally wrong and fucked up.
    Naked Straight Men on Squirtit & StraightBro

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