Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
June 15, 2010
"Anti-piracy campaigns come and go every other month – most of them are either endlessly boring or end up becoming an object of ridicule. A new one just launched takes the form of a site which appears to offer free downloads from top artists, but with a twist. Clicking to download results in various pop stars meeting a grisly end by a bullet to the head or a careless hand grenade.
Many anti-piracy campaigns of the last decade or so have been pretty entertaining in a twisted way, but if you’re the entertainment industries hoping to encourage change they have also been an almost universal failure. The entertainment factor has come from the fact that most of them, especially the “You Wouldn’t Steal a….” campaign, have been unintentionally funny and have provoked a whole stream of parodies.
Undeterred, it’s now the turn of Chinese music publication RE:SPECT to go where no other anti-piracy campaign has gone before. With a fake website which looks like a ‘legitimate’ pirate download site, would be downloaders are suckered in to download music from their favorite stars.
Sadly it’s not all fun for the multi-millionaire artists feature on the site as they end paying the ultimate price for their fans’ piracy.
After clicking on an album cover, users are presented with a download button. Once this is clicked it is the start of a permanent good night for the unfortunate melody maker as they meet with a grisly end.
":source: Source: http://torrentfreak.com/assassinate-...-music-100615/
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Oh, man. I sure wouldn't want to hurt the artists I enjoy. Maybe this is a bad idea to download their songs before buying shirts and seeing them in concert where the artists actually make their money.
Thank you, stupid record exec fukz for helping me see the error of my ways. It is ideas like this where I see you truly deserve everything you get in this industry. You are truly awesome and worth every penny. :rolleyes:
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
lol wtf, as if that can possibly be taken seriously..
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Unfortunately, if this is happening in China, then the opposite is more likely to be true, ie it could be the visitors to the site that get the death sentence. The Chinese government likes nothing better than killing its own 'citizens'.
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Quote:
Originally Posted by
c0ld
Unfortunately, if this is happening in China, then the opposite is more likely to be true, ie it could be the visitors to the site that get the death sentence. The Chinese government likes nothing better than killing its own 'citizens'.
:huh:
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Quote:
Originally Posted by
megabyteme
:huh:
Quote:
Originally Posted by http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Capital_punishment_in_the_People%27s_Republic_of_China
Capital punishment is applied flexibly to a wide range of crimes, some of which are punishable by death in no other judicial system in the world.[citation needed] Economic crimes such as tax fraud have appeared routinely among the dockets of those receiving the death sentence, as have relatively small-scale drug offenses. Capital punishment in China can be imposed on crimes against national symbols and treasures, such as theft of cultural relics and (before 1997) the killing of pandas[8]. Corruption, property crimes such as theft, and smuggling gold, silver or other precious metals are also amongst the 68 crimes that are eligible for the death penalty in China.
Capital punishment is also imposed on inchoate offenses, that is, attempted crimes which are not actually fully carried out, including repeat offenses such as attempted fraud. The recidivistic nature of the offenses, not their seriousness per se, is what is adjudicated to merit the capital sentence.
Saying that though, this looks like it's in HK which has a different legal system. Still, it reeks of government propaganda.
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
I pretty much stopped reading at wiki-. The reasons for my post were:
1. I must have skipped over the part where it said "China" the first time I read the article.
2. I realize that China has some serious, f'ked up things going on, but your post had a ring of, "hey, I'll use this as a chance to bash China" to it. I wasn't roused into a political discussion by your comment, but thought it a bit over-zealous.
I doubt China wants to execute file-sharers when it is more likely they could be put into Nike plants labor camps.
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Quote:
Originally Posted by
megabyteme
I pretty much stopped reading at wiki-.
People still use this line?
Re: Assassinate a Pop Star By Illegally Downloading Music
Quote:
Originally Posted by
c0ld
Quote:
Originally Posted by
megabyteme
I pretty much stopped reading at wiki-.
People still use this line?
OK, I stopped at "sources needed". People still try to use wikipedia as proof of something? :rolleyes: