Coming soon to kindergarten class: antipiracy ed
WASHINGTON--Tired of their antipiracy messages being ignored by the teen- and college-age set, the entertainment industry is attempting to indoctrinate far younger disciples.
Representatives from the Entertainment Software Association, the video game industry's trade group, and the Canadian Recording Industry Association shed some light on their strategies at an antipiracy summit hosted by the U.S. Chamber of Commerce here.

Screenshot of the video game industry's copyright curriculum Web site
"In the 15- to 24-year-old (range), reaching that demographic with morality-based messages is an impossible proposition...which is why we have really focused our efforts on elementary school children," said Ric Hirsch, the ESA's senior vice president of intellectual property enforcement. "At those ages, children are open to receiving messages, guidelines, rules of the road, if you will, with respect to intellectual property."
The ESA has gone so far as to develop a copyright education curriculum geared toward the kindergarten through fifth-grade set. Since 2005, the organization has been trying to find ways to get teachers to incorporate its tenets into their everyday lessons, although Hirsch did not say how successful that effort has been. The components, which include charts, teachers guides, lesson plans and a wall poster imploring students to "Join the © Team," are also now available online.
The reason for targeting youth at that age is that they're at an "inflection point" where they're just learning how to use computers and the Internet, and the classroom seems a perfect opportunity for delivering copyright education, Hirsch said. The ESA devised its own curriculum after finding "very little out there in the form of institutional education addressing this issue," he said.
The video game industry isn't alone in trying to infiltrate classrooms with its antipiracy messages, although it appears to be targeting younger kids than some of its counterparts. The Recording Industry Association of America offers a similar set of curriculum ideas, but none of them appears to target students younger than third grade. The Motion Picture Association of America last year released a "Respect Copyrights" curriculum (PDF) tailored to merit-badge-seeking Boy Scouts in the Los Angeles area.
Some fair-use advocates have argued the copyright-dependent industries send contradictory messages through such materials. They've criticized, for example, an RIAA video intended for college students that they argue gives mixed messages about when it's legal to copy music for personal listening or to share with friends.
The Canadian record industry group, for its part, would like to work with provincial governments to help schools develop their own copyright-minded curriculums "so it's organic...it's not something they're tacking on," said Graham Henderson, the group's president.
Youthful voices may be able to help to influence parents who themselves don't set such a great example on the copyright-protection front, much in the same way some kids have been able to pressure adults to stop harmful habits like smoking, he suggested.
Parents--and mothers in particular--do represent an important audience to educate, though, Henderson added. That means planting messages in places that may seem less-than-traditional, such as women's interest or general parenting magazines, he said.
I don't know about you, but I have to wonder what's next: exposing babies still in the womb to antipiracy audio messages, a la the so-called Mozart effect?
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my parents. It's a sad state of the times that such key character
building lessons need to be programmed within the school system.
Sounds like the recording industry needs to build a better mouse
trap as oppsed to relying on the failed public schooling system to
teach the essentails in life. About all the public school system is
good for these days is pumping out consumers and not much else.
Anyways, for a sector that goes around and sues their customers, installs rootkits on their machines, employs deceitful tactics there will always be a large percentage that are pro-"piracy".
Introduce the concept when they're young, have them sing along in a "i don't download mp3s, la la la la lee" song, whatever. Once they get to highschool or college, it'll stick about as well as the DARE program.
Downloading photoshop is bad, m'kay. You shouldn't download photoshop.
Sickening.
When the horse and buggy petered out, did they resort to this?
Can't wait to hear my daughter come home and tell me how important it is to save the newspaper industry and local travel agency.
Then I will give her my "anti-encumbent business model" ed.
I think it's disgusting, preaching against my thieving lifestyle. It's hate speech! You have no right to force your morality on me!
http://www.lyricsenergy.com/lyrics/m/madonna/index.php
http://www.lyricsenergy.com/lyrics/z/zucchero/index.php
The reality is by the time today's kindergarten glass reaches 18 the RIAA and the music industry will probably be belly up anyway.
* Buying music fuels the artists' drug habits!
* Music videos are just soft-core porn!
* Movies come in pairs because the makers copy each other!
* Special effects do not compensate for plot and characters - but noone told Hollywood!
* Passive entertainment is bad for you - go play a videogame instead!
* Wait for bargains or buy second-hand instead of falling for the industry's over-priced initial offerings!
* Support small music labels and independent artists, not the cartels!