|
A 21-year-old man from the western Sydney suburb of Prairiewood faces up to
five years' imprisonment after he was charged with uploading a pirated copy
of The Simpsons Movie on the internet.
Police alleged the man illegally filmed the movie via a mobile phone on July
26, the first day of release, and within hours had uploaded the footage onto the
internet.
Adrianne Pecotic, executive director of the Australian Federation Against
Copyright Theft, said it was the first illegal copy of the hit movie to be
intercepted anywhere in the world.
The file quickly spread to BitTorrent sites and other file sharing networks
and within 72 hours had been downloaded by another 110,000 people.
Over 90 per cent of newly released movies that illegally appeared on the
internet originated from a camcorder and pirates were increasingly
ditching handycams for smaller mobile phones.
A single illegal recording could spread around the world within hours because
organised piracy groups were constantly scouring the web for the first versions
of films to become available after which they re-format it to facilitate file
sharing and copying to CD or DVD.
On a totally unrelated note, as a long time Simpsons fan, I thought the movie was just okay. I will probably not buy the DVD or watch it again in theatres.
|