Warner Blames Canada for Film Piracy

by Jordan Yerman | May 10, 2007 at 10:54 am
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DV Cam, NYC

DV Cam, NYC

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Ignoring the fact that one can go down to Canal Street in Manhattan to procure a DVD of a film that hasn't even reached cinemas yet, Warner Bros. is no longer holding promotional screenings of its films in Canada, which it decries as a nation of pirates. Economically, it's easier for a studio to square up against Canada, as the market there is smaller and therefore, should a move like this upset anybody, less money is at stake than in, say, China.

Warner Bros. announced this week it would no longer hold promotional screenings of movies in Canada, and all press screenings would take place in a private room. The move comes in response to increasing movie piracy in the country, which the studio blames on lax laws.

While China and Russia often thought as the largest sources of pirated content, Warner Bros. claims Canada is the real problem. The company says 70 percent of its films have been pirated in Canada over the last 18 months. Those illegal -- and often poor quality -- copies are then sold around the world.

"The newly enacted policy represents the studio's response to the lack of legislation in Canada to curtail the growing wave of camcorder-shot ("camcorded") films being trafficked around the world,” Warner Bros. said in a statement.

"Despite incontrovertible evidence that film piracy has become a major economic and law enforcement issue, Canada has not adopted a federal law making camcording illegal or permitting the confiscation of equipment, and, as a result, has become the main source for most of the world's film piracy."

The studio said that within the first week of a screening, a Canadian copy usually surfaces on the Internet before spreading to other countries.

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