Adam used our newssubmit to tell us about an article on the BBC news web page. His thoughts about this article:
There is a lot of nonsense in it, particularly about '£1bn' loses (copies pirated are rarely copies that would otherwise have been bought).
I also disdain 'It isn't your sort of big
multinational companies that are affected
by piracy. It's your small developers, the lads who've have got ideas'. Piracy doesn't hurt minor players very often as there are only two big publishers that make up 95% of the market - EIDOS and Hasbro. The idea that a copied game will degrade over time is complete rubbish.
Anyway, see what you think:
'Britain's computer games industry is |
one of the top ranked players in the world, generating £1bn of annual sales.
But the industry loses at least the same amount every year to software pirates who copy their titles as quickly as they are released.
Seizures of pirate games have risen twelve fold, according to ELSPA. In Manchester, I was able to buy £250 worth of fakes for only £10.
The equipment needed to make the fakes is available from any high street computer store at a very low cost.
But the chances of being caught and the penalties for trading in these games is on the rise.
Over the past four years counterfeit seizures of pirate games have risen twelve fold to over 200,000 titles, according to industry figures.
At a flea market just outside Manchester, thousands of pounds worth of games are openly on sale - all of them fake.
But new initiatives from the industry, police and trading standards are targeting counterfeiters up and down the country.
The police say that one-quarter of organised crime is funded by counterfeiting, and the industry rejects claims that copying games is a victimless crime.
Terry Anslow, chief investigator of the European Leisure Publishers Association, says: "It isn't your sort of big multinational companies that are affected by piracy. It's your small developers, the lads who've have got ideas, the brilliance that's being pushed by universities." He adds: "That's the reason why it isn't a victimless crime and it's basically, those jobs, those livelihoods and those futures that are being affected."
But some smart programmers have developed a new layer of protection to slow down the pirates for games like Operation Flashpoint.
Richard Darling, creative director of Codemasters Software, says: "A copy of one of those games will degrade over time so if you were to copy Operation Flashpoint and play the copied disk then you would find that things would gradually start to go wrong. "If you buy
original video games from your high-street shop, then you'll be fine. If you buy counterfeited games from a car boot sale, they won't be as good." Privately enforcement officers admit they are fighting a losing battle, but the sums involved mean this is a one game they can't afford to lose.'
Hmm £1bn? Games that degrade over time? What's next... self destructing cdr's?
Source: BBC News















