eBay DVDs: Legal?
Posted: Sat 02 Jul, 2005 10.54
I have seen eBay members creating DVDs of shows that haven't been released and selling them. Would anyone say this is illegal?
Err yea it doesJ.Christie wrote: Also, does it even matter if the company doesn't intend to release a DVD in the UK?
As previously stated, your buying a DVD from Woolies is an actual licence for the stuff on the disc, not the stuff that's on said disc.J.Christie wrote:Well how can sellers get away with it?
Also, does it even matter if the company doesn't intend to release a DVD in the UK?
Actually mate, I haven't been copying anything. I was looking for Max and Paddy's Road To Nowhere stuff, and it was clogged with homemade DVDs.Neil Jones wrote:As previously stated, your buying a DVD from Woolies is an actual licence for the stuff on the disc, not the stuff that's on said disc.J.Christie wrote:Well how can sellers get away with it?
Also, does it even matter if the company doesn't intend to release a DVD in the UK?
Therefore you may sell DVDs on eBay and other auction sites, providing that you don't keep any copies of it afterwards, in lieu of the fact that you shouldn't have been copying it in the first place.
In the real world, um, it's about as enforceable as stopping people taping stuff off the telly.
He wasn't accusing you of copying anything. He was using you as an example if you were to copy anything. It's the conditional, I believe?J.Christie wrote:Actually mate, I haven't been copying anything. I was looking for Max and Paddy's Road To Nowhere stuff, and it was clogged with homemade DVDs.Neil Jones wrote:As previously stated, your buying a DVD from Woolies is an actual licence for the stuff on the disc, not the stuff that's on said disc.J.Christie wrote:Well how can sellers get away with it?
Also, does it even matter if the company doesn't intend to release a DVD in the UK?
Therefore you may sell DVDs on eBay and other auction sites, providing that you don't keep any copies of it afterwards, in lieu of the fact that you shouldn't have been copying it in the first place.
In the real world, um, it's about as enforceable as stopping people taping stuff off the telly.
I remember hearing a few years ago that this law had been scrapped due to it being unenforcable, so those of us with tapes full of idents and news opening titles are no longer law-breakers.Brad wrote:If I recall, I read somewhere that taping stuff of the TV is legal but only if you wipe the contents of the tape after 3 months. Yeah, like we all do that!
It may have only applied to schools programmes at one point?