Movie, Music Industries Develop Anti-Sharing Curriculum for Schools
One-sided intellectual property education for children
Listen up children: Cheating on your homework or cribbing notes from another student is bad, but not as bad as sharing a music track with a friend, or otherwise depriving the content-industry of its well-earned profits.
That's one of the messages in a new-school curriculum being developed with the Motion Picture Association of America, the Recording Industry Association of America and the nation's top ISPs, in a pilot project to be tested in California elementary schools later this year.
A near-final draft of the curriculum shows that it comes in different flavors for every grade from kindergarten through sixth, to keep pace with your developing child's ability to understand that copying is theft, period.
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"When the artist sells directly to you and not through a rent-seeking 'industry organization' you should buy. When the 'industry organization' tries to extort fro you, spit in their face."
I find it hilarious coming from an industry that insists there is no such thing as right and wrong.