U.S. Immigration and Customs Enforcement’s (ICE) Homeland Security Investigations (HSI) has joined forces with the Motion Picture Association (MPA) to launch a new initiative aimed at countering digital piracy and protecting a vital sector of the U.S economy.
The initiative is called Operation Intangibles.
Digital streaming services provide quick and easy access to creative works, such as music, television, movies. However, the growth of digital streaming services has presented new challenges when it comes to law enforcement’s ability to ensure vital copyright protection for the industry. This technology that has provided millions of people access to their favorite shows, has also enabled criminals to turn piracy into a crime that is no longer restricted to the hand-to-hand sale of illegally pirated media.
Digital piracy negatively impacts millions of jobs, results in less taxes being paid, and threatens innovation and creativity. Its effects are felt across multiple industries and includes the cost of corollary crimes on consumers such as the potential damage caused by hidden or embedded malware, as well as identity theft and financial crimes, such as credit card fraud.
There exists a National Intellectual Property Rights Coordination Center.
Recall, Napster was shut down in 2001. Limewire was shut down in 2010. Illicit downloading is happening through other channels.
According to this graph, people spent almost as much on vinyl records as they did on CDs in 2018. The Economist provided a nice chart (last updated in 2019) on the rise of streaming revenue and the collapse of traditional records sales.