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May 16, 2006

Welcome to Hollywood's Napster moment. If movie studios hope to dodge the fate of the music industry, whose growth was cut short in part by illegal downloading, they need to come up with a solution to illegal copying. Part of that is to develop a model for legal movie downloads over the Net. Hollywood has taken baby steps in that direction. Studios have two Web sites, Movielink.com and CinemaNow.com, that offer movies via the Net. But downloads are slow, and the movies, which cost a few dollars to rent and $20 to own, can't be burned to a DVD. So studios also are prodding the feds to put some fear into pirates. The goal: stem the $6.1 billion that the industry estimates was lost to illegal copying in 2005. (Worldwide box-office sales were $23.5 billion.) Half of pirated material is in DVDs sold on street corners, but $3 billion comes from pirates stealing digital movies and posting them online. And stolen movies are also sent via the Net to facilities where the illicit DVDs are made. So, "the Internet is very much involved in all forms of piracy even if you're talking about street piracy," says Dan Glickman, CEO of the Motion Picture Association of America (MPAA).
Originally posted by iMakeContent from del.icio.us/imakecontent, remediated by yatta on May 16, 2006 at 09:49 PM


Comments

One company that provides a great solution for movie downloads, but doesn't seem to get attention, is EZTakes. They allow consumers to easily download movies that they can burn to DVDs that can be played in almost any player.

Posted by: Movie Downloads at May 18, 2006 07:12 AM

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