Even pirates can fall upon hard times.
It’s not enough to be a run-of-the-mill vendor of counterfeit DVDs in China anymore. Now there's stiffer competition.
We got the first sign at our house that the pirates are getting whacked themselves, so to speak. A friend of my wife’s was visiting the other day and saw a stack of DVDs. She looked at my wife rather incredulously and said, “You still pay for DVDs?”
It turns out the guest has been using websites such as www.plcsky.com and http://bt.mydvdrip.net which offer hundreds of counterfeit movies for free downloading. Only in China! Getting cheap merchandise isn’t enough! Gotta be free.
At one site, I see you can download everything from Oprah to ESPN highlights, as well as a series of Chinese and English-language movies. Among the movies I saw for free download were Firewall, X-Men, Basic Instinct 2 and Angel Eyes.
My office assistant looked at me quizzically when I told her about this. All young people download free movies, she said. The above two websites are only a drop in the bucket of what’s out there, she added.

While hawking fake DVDs does seem to be a Chinese thing (and a Turkish, Malaysian, and probably lots of other countries where the studio mark-up prices movies at a week's salary) downloading seems more generational.
Those of us in college around the turn of the millenium--I started in fall 2000, at Napster's peak--tend to regard the idea of passing music, and now movies, over the internet with little difference than passing them around the dorms. I don't find myself doing it so much now, a few years past graduation, but a good friend who is about the same age has taken to calling us all "The Entitled Generation."
It is sometimes hard to fight the notion that everything really is available free, somewhere.
Posted by: Chris | December 17, 2006 at 10:57 PM
This is pretty blatent, particularly since China just signed a pledge to crack down on online piracy. I'm betting these sites get shut down or at least blocked fairly soon.
Posted by: China Law Blog | December 19, 2006 at 02:33 AM