It seems the Motion Picture Association of America is going after online piracy again. The MPAA, which represents the major Hollywood studios including those owned by Comcast, msnbc’s parent company, is now trying to make an argument that embedding videos on websites is actually a form of copyright infringement. This comes on the heels of the Association’s support of SOPA, the controversial bill that was killed after websites, including Wikipedia, went dark in protest.
The reason for the MPAA to enter this argument now is because of a recent court case involving the distribution of online pornography. The Judge in that case drew no distinction between “hosting” a video and “embedding” a video, essentially arguing that the website was responsible for the videos appearing on it. With that, The Motion Picture Association of America, the organization responsible for rating movies based on nudity and violence, sided with the porn industry.
They filed an amicus brief stating, “Pirate sites can offer extensive libraries of popular copyrighted content without any hosting costs to store content, bandwidth costs to deliver the content, and of course licensing costs to legitimately acquire the content.” The MPAA went on to argue that by surrounding these embedded videos with ads, people can earn advertising revenue from illegal content. You can find a breakdown of the MPAA’s argument here.









