Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
Interesting

Australians To Pay For Illegally Downloading Hollywood Movie

Darpan News Desk IANS, 08 Apr, 2015 02:01 PM
    Some 5,000 Australians are expected to receive a letter from a Hollywood production company demanding payment for illegal downloads of its film “Dallas Buyers Club”, it was reported on Wednesday.
     
    A landmark Federal Court ruling ordered several Australian internet service providers, including iiNet, to hand over the identities of thousands of account holders whose internet connections were allegedly used to share the Hollywood film, Fairfax Media reported.
     
    Dallas Buyers Club LLC and Voltage Pictures LLC targeted six Australian telcos -- iiNet, Internode, Dodo, Amnet, Adam Internet and Wideband Networks -- in seeking personal details associated with more than 4,700 IP addresses that were used to share the movie using BitTorrent.
     
    Michael Bradley, the lawyer representing "Dallas Buyers Club", starring Matthew McConaughey, in the precedent-setting piracy case, said the company would seek compensation.
     
    "Ultimately for the owner of the film that's what's it's about because they've lost a lot of money," Xinhua news agency quoted him as telling the Australian Broadcasting Corporation on Wednesday.
     
    The US companies sent letters to illegal downloaders claiming they were liable for damages of up to $150,000 unless settlement fees of up to $7,000 were paid.
     
    The chief executive of industry body, Intellectual Property Awareness Foundation, Lori Flekser, was pleased with the landmark piracy judgment.
     
    She hoped it will be a deterrent to piracy which affects the livelihood of Australia's independent filmmakers.
     
    "Most recently, two small Australian films, 'Wyrmwood' and 'The Little Death', were seriously pirated," she said.
     
    "Not when they were in the cinemas but when they were available on DVD. So it's not always about availability and access, it's simply about people wanting something for nothing."
     
    Flekser said that with every film that is pirated, potential future investors are scared away, draining the industry's lifeblood. 

    MORE Interesting ARTICLES

    Why are magazines in your doctor's waiting room outdated?

    Why are magazines in your doctor's waiting room outdated?
    According to an interesting study, new and cheaper gossip magazines disappear faster than the costly ones like The Economist or Time...

    Why are magazines in your doctor's waiting room outdated?

    Save files on computer and boost memory

    Save files on computer and boost memory
    The simple act of saving file on a computer may improve our memory for the information we encounter next, says a new research....

    Save files on computer and boost memory

    Are you good at maths? Read on

    Are you good at maths? Read on
    "Some people really do not know how good they are when faced with a traditional maths test," said study co-author Ellen Peters, professor of psychology....

    Are you good at maths? Read on

    Distraction does not hamper learning

    Distraction does not hamper learning
    Researchers at Brown University in the US have found that as long as our attention is as divided when we have to recall a motor skill....

    Distraction does not hamper learning

    Online students biased against women instructors

    Online students biased against women instructors
    A new study demonstrates that college students in online courses give better evaluations to instructors they think are men, even when the instructor is actually a woman....

    Online students biased against women instructors

    This paperless office runs on wind energy, apps

    This paperless office runs on wind energy, apps
    In a move to ensure environmental sustainability, a futuristic office is here where the energy is supplied by wind farms, bosses drive electric vehicles and...

    This paperless office runs on wind energy, apps