Mr_White wrote:cosmic wrote:Try to count how many Sasha fans are in the world? 99% will reply, who is Sasha?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sascha_Schmitz
Nice! thank you Mr_White
Moderator: Raytech
Mr_White wrote:cosmic wrote:Try to count how many Sasha fans are in the world? 99% will reply, who is Sasha?
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sascha_Schmitz
cosmic wrote:gapelover wrote:cosmic wrote:
I don't want to pay 30 euro monthly, when i'm interest of 5% of its contents.
There will not be a monthly membership.
You will be able to buy scene by scene, to watch them online with flashplayer or to burn it on your DVD for a fair price.
No! i don't want to download a scene by scene. If a scene interest to me, i can wait when it will be available on DVD.
cosmic wrote:For russian babe lovers, Evil Angel, Devils Film and Combat Zone are the best distributors.
Jimbo0912 wrote:Just a couple of comments with regards to the technology that Sineplex propose to use. Maybe I misunderstand your quoted comment (from Xavier?) but is Sineplex knowingly and surreptitiously placing malware onto the DVD to stop an individual from cracking it? If so, regardless of Anti-Circumvention legislation, they're perhaps on dodgy legal ground here especially if it trashes an OS in the process. The Sony Rootkit debacle in 2005 generated massive amounts of negative publicity but it wasn't as bad as this from a legal perspective. I don't know of anything in the WIPO Copyright Treaty, the Digital Millennium Copyright Act 1998, European Directive 2001/29/EC or any other statute which would knowingly permit this kind of activity. Additionally, there are a number of defences to Anti-Circumvention and something like reverse engineering/decompilation may be applicable here. It's something to perhaps consider before going ahead with this.
As someone who has significant experience in co-ordinating anti-piracy strategies (albeit in the music industry), I'm not entirely convinced that the ID system is a piracy panacea either. Nonetheless, it could have some limited success. For example, if Sineplex find someone sharing when they shouldn't (ID Number etc), the best plan would be to permanently ban that individual's access to the website for simply breaking the terms and conditions. However, this could be fraught with problems too.
I think it's entirely wishful thinking to believe that piracy will end soon and that technology is going to facilitate this. Again, I wouldn't want to take the conversation onto a different tangent but it's simply disingenuous to say that ISPs' will reveal data to anyone off the drop of a hat or will simply turn off an individual’s internet connection for merely 1 Copyright breach. In all European countries, ISPs have numerous obligations as enucleated by Directive 95/46/EC (implemented in UK Law by the Data Protection Act 1998) to keep data private unless limited/exceptional circumstances kick in. For these circumstances to occur, someone would have to be sharing a lot.
Moreover, all the above presupposes the fact that law enforcement gives two shits about a porn company in Russia that suffers from a bit of piracy (this is especially pertinent in foreign jurisdictions). That's not an attack on Sineplex but they don't have nearly the international clout of Movie Studios etc to lobby/influence government policy, get their message out in the press and to generally make a nuisance of themselves via legal means.
Lee wrote:Oh WOW, she's gorgeous!![]()
Do you have anymore photos of her?
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