about DVD piracy, when it?s not financially viable?
No one knows how long the costs of copying a DVD onto another disk will remain expensive, or whether disks would even be the most likely pathways for digital piracy. Current high costs associated with copying DVDs are likely to drop dramatically at some point in the near future. However, questions like this miss the point. Under the law, a copyright owner has the right to control access to and use of its creative products. It does not matter if it costs $1.00, $5.00 or $500.00 to steal or misuse a work. Regardless of cost, it is still wrong, and it is still illegal. OpenLaw’s answer to the question: OpenLaw’s answer to the MPAA: Copyright owners’s rights ARE limited by the fair-use doctrine. The MPAA would like you to believe that they can legally control every aspect of every use of every product that they create from it’s creation, to it’s distruction. This is simply false. The right of the public to Fair Use of copyrighted works is supported by years of copyright history. The MPAA,