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The Briar Patch of Illegal File Sharing

Brian Doherty | 3.17.2005 3:51 PM

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Wired.com airs speculations that the recent appearance of the forthcoming new Dr. Who TV show revival on the file-sharing network BitTorrent may have been an intentional attempt on the BBC's part to reap the word-of-mouth benefits that can arise from the heinous crime of illegal media file sharing.

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Brian Doherty is a senior editor at Reason and author of Ron Paul's Revolution: The Man and the Movement He Inspired (Broadside Books).

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  1. Jeff   20 years ago

    I've watched this, and it certainly looks like a finished version to me. It has polished audio cues and all the cuts are slick.
    Also, whether BBC approved this, the widespread sharing of Dr Who has been a boon. It generates the kind of buzz that use to happen when directors showed their movies or shows at SF conventions.
    Now if they'd make the new Capt Scarlet show avaialable legally I'd be a happy man.

  2. CodeMonkeySteve   20 years ago

    News Flash!!
    ? The sky is blue!
    ? Politicians lie!
    ? The Net can be used to distribute content!

    What I find more interesting is the trend of bands (mine included) to release not only the songs (or whole albums) for free on the net, but also the individual instrument tracks. Don't like the drum part? Record your own ...

  3. GUYK   20 years ago

    So what's the big deal? Who got hurt by the release? And BBC is a bigger source of misinformation than CBS

  4. Jeff   20 years ago

    A similar story about the unreleased Fiona Apple disc currently burning up cyberspace.

    http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/gate/archive/2005/03/16/notes031605.DTL

  5. Jesse Walker   20 years ago

    BBC is a bigger source of misinformation than CBS

    That's true. Studies have shown that 80% of the information in any given episode of Doctor Who is inaccurate, as opposed to just 65% of Everybody Loves Raymond.

  6. Jeff   20 years ago

    Jesse, that's the funniest one-liner I've read all week.
    It should be noted that the bootleg Who buzz is also getting US networks to notice. At last check not even BBC America was planning to air it, sending geeks (including me) across this great land into a tizzy.

  7. kevrob   20 years ago

    How can a UK subject be said to have "stolen content" from Auntie Beeb when he has to pay a @#$%^&! tax to them just for the privilege of owning a TV receiver?

    Kevin

  8. Ignorant Law Student   20 years ago

    I agree with those who say it's a no-lose proposition for the BBC as they make their money from the TV taxes anyway.

  9. Douglas Fletcher   20 years ago

    Dr. Who?

    Oh, wait, I meant Fiona Who?

    I'd say you have to be buzzed to get a buzz from Dr. Who but unfortunately I know for some people that isn't true.

  10. Evan Williams   20 years ago

    Yes, this is certainly a stop-the-presses revelation.

    This transcends the internerd, though. Those no-talent fucking hypocritical hacks, Metallicrap, became popular due in large part to bootleg tape trading & copying. Then, of course, in the ultimate hypocrisy-defining moment of all time, the asshats turn around and get their panties in a bunch over file sharing---now, of course, that they've already made their millions.

    All of this is old news, and I'm sure it's been rehashed many a time, but...this tactic didn't just pop up with the advent of the internerd. The real question is, if it's true that the BBC purposefully released these clips, will they, in the future, turn around and pull a Metallicrap and start suing file sharers. Time will tell...

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