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Author Topic: Hollywood's new hero: Israeli technology that hunts down video pirates
System Notices
Forum Watchdog / Soup Nazi

Posts: 215

Registered: Apr 2004


 - posted 12-31-2010 11:41 PM      Profile for System Notices         Edit/Delete Post 
Hollywood's new hero: Israeli technology that hunts down video pirates
quote:
Tel Aviv, Israel Arieh O’Sullivan - Hollywood’s search for a technical elixir that can curb the billions of dollars worth of revenue lost to people downloading television shows and movies from the Internet may now have a solution that mimics the techniques used to map human DNA.

Researchers at Tel Aviv University say they can hunt down pirates by using what they call the video’s “genetic code.” The system is designed to search videos as quickly as search engines seek out texts. Its developers say the technology will let film producers’ trawl the vast ocean of the Internet in the search for video pirates.

It works by slapping an invisible grid over the original video and using it to detect changes in color, resolution manipulations and geometric transformations, much like DNA is used to trace genealogy.

“The method actually allows a search of a video clip in the same way that bioinformatics are used to detect basic gene sequencing,” said Alex Bronstein of Tel Aviv University's Department of Electrical Engineering, an expert in bioinformatics using algorithms in human genetic research and one of two twin brothers in the team that devised the technolo

The illegal downloading and streaming of movies on the Internet are responsible for up to 40 percent of movie industry losses to piracy, according to the Motion Picture Association of America. The rest comes from illegal DVDs and other physical means of storing and transferring video content.

Global losses for the entertainment industry through video piracy were estimated at about $9 million last year, according to Havascope, an online database of black market activities. In the Middle East, movie piracy losses in Iran were $100 million, Saudi Arabia $95 million, Israel $61 million and Turkey $29 million.

The most pirated video this year, according to The Hollywood Reporter, was the American-produced science fiction hit "Avatar," which was downloaded more than 16 million times. Even after such monumental theft, the movie still was the highest grossing box office hit with $2.8 billion.

Digital encryption has proved ineffective in stopping pirates bootlegging movies, who use high-definition recorders to make a new master. But while technology has been the major factor enabling piracy, Bronstein’s new technique proves technology can be used to combat it.

According to Bronstein, downloading movies on BitTorrent and other file-sharing applications on the Internet are commonplace and the movie studios don’t love them to say the least. These applications work by splitting up movies into thousands of pieces and then assembling them again so that the source can’t be detected.

Bronstein said his video-search technology replicates the process by video sequencing. Called “video DNA matching,” the system automatically sweeps Web sites where suspected pirated videos are offered to locate not only aberrations of the original video’s fingerprint, but common ancestry.

"It's not only members of the animal and plant kingdom that can have DNA," Bronstein, said in a press release. "If a DNA test can identify and catch criminals, we thought that a similar code might be applicable to video. If the code were copied and changed, we'd catch it."

This data would be taken to the owners of the video who would then decide whether to press charges of piracy, said Bronstein, who developed the technique with his twin Michael and Israeli researcher Ron Kimmel.

One of the major video-sharing sites, YouTube, has attempted to detect copyright infringement, but the system they use doesn’t work when a video is altered. According to The New York Times, more than one-third of the 2 billion clips viewed on YouTube each week contain content uploaded without the original owners’ permission.

YouTube has an automated system that detects music uploaded without a license. But its video detection relies on sweeping the text attached to it rather than the video itself, and that can easily be manipulated to get through. Bronstein said his method could save thousands of manhours of search time since it is fully automated and can detect altered videos.

Production companies have been engaged in automating the detection of bootlegged and pirated videos and the introduction of an automated “Video DNA” system is bound to be a welcomed.

Still, some have argued that Hollywood could reduce the incentive to pirate videos if it lowered download costs. Yet, there will always be those who will try to get videos for free no matter what.

David Blumenfeld, a documentary film maker, told The Media Line that the simple knowledge that a film someone is watching was pirated wouldn’t stop the general public from watching it.

“Most people know that when they pay five bucks or download a video from the Internet that they are pirated and I’m not sure they care. A lot of people don’t even think that is stealing, even though it is.”



[ 12-31-2010, 11:55 PM: Message edited by: Adam Martin ]

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Tom Petrov
Five Guys Lover

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From: El Paso, TX
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 - posted 12-31-2010 11:50 PM      Profile for Tom Petrov     Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
This is great news!

I still think they should just make extrodinary criminal penalties for stealing copyrighted material.

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Frank Angel
Film God

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From: Brooklyn NY USA
Registered: Dec 1999


 - posted 01-01-2011 06:11 PM      Profile for Frank Angel   Author's Homepage   Email Frank Angel   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Well, if the studios keeps devaluing their own product, time and time again by allowing movies to be sold in kiosks for a buck and worse, allows Netflix to stream AS MANY AS YOU WANT for under a buck a day, how do they expect the public to value that same product? The fact that now streaming for seemingly free or near free just reenforces the public perception that that's what the internet is for -- getting movies for nothing. The, "if it's in my own home (dorm room, on my ipod, etc), then it's mine and I can do what I want with it" mindset is not going to go away any time soon. "Posession is 9/10s of the law" is pretty much imbedded in the American psyche.

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David E. Nedrow
Master Film Handler

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From: Columbus, OH, USA
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 - posted 01-01-2011 11:44 PM      Profile for David E. Nedrow   Author's Homepage   Email David E. Nedrow   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
And this is different than any other video spider how? Everyone of them uses what sounds like the exact same technique being describe in the article.

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Martin Brooks
Jedi Master Film Handler

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From: Forest Hills, NY, USA
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 - posted 02-05-2011 06:27 PM      Profile for Martin Brooks   Author's Homepage   Email Martin Brooks   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
The problem with these announcements is that they always calculate "losses" as if everyone who watched a pirated product would have bought it if they hadn't pirated it. And that's most certainly not the case.

Furthermore, let's say the technology works and somehow, they're able to track a pirated movie to some "factory" in China, India or Russia. What are they going to do about it? Until every country enforces copyright law, it's all a moot point. And most of these governments have a lot more on their minds than copyright law.

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Joe Redifer
You need a beating today

Posts: 12859
From: Denver, Colorado
Registered: May 99


 - posted 02-05-2011 08:05 PM      Profile for Joe Redifer   Author's Homepage   Email Joe Redifer   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
quote:
The illegal downloading and streaming of movies on the Internet are responsible for up to 40 percent of movie industry losses to piracy, according to the Motion Picture Association of America.
Cry me a river and prove your figures! Martin said it best:

quote: Martin Brooks
The problem with these announcements is that they always calculate "losses" as if everyone who watched a pirated product would have bought it if they hadn't pirated it. And that's most certainly not the case.

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James Westbrook
Phenomenal Film Handler

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From: Lubbock, Texas, Usa
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 - posted 02-06-2011 03:00 AM      Profile for James Westbrook   Email James Westbrook   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Some executive is pulling those numbers out of his ass.

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Randy Stankey
Film God

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From: Erie, Pennsylvania
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 - posted 02-06-2011 03:26 AM      Profile for Randy Stankey   Email Randy Stankey   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Movie piracy is good for the economy because people have to buy computers, equipment and software to pirate movies with then other people have to buy computers, software and video players to watch those pirated copies.

So, let's say it takes a $1,000 computer to create then view a pirated copy of a movie. That's $2,000 worth of stuff used to pirate a $20 video. That's 100 times the value of stuff bought, compared to the value of the movie.

So, if the empty suits at the movie studios could stop their claimed $100 million worth of piracy they would actually be draining $10 billion out of the economy!

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Dave Macaulay
Film God

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From: Toronto, Canada
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 - posted 02-06-2011 09:58 AM      Profile for Dave Macaulay   Email Dave Macaulay   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
 -

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Louis Bornwasser
Film God

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From: prospect ky usa
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 - posted 02-08-2011 04:18 PM      Profile for Louis Bornwasser   Author's Homepage   Email Louis Bornwasser   Send New Private Message       Edit/Delete Post 
Wow! I know BS when I hear it!

Maybe they'll follow this "mother-of-all-scams" back up the tailpipe about 100 times to the screener from whence it originated. Now. . . . are we going to ARREST that studio putz??? Louis

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