Malaysia has started using its latest weapons in an aim to tacle the high piracy of music and movie content going through the country’s biggest international airport. Like how officers often use sniffing dogs for drugs, in this case, they are using two black Labradors on hire from the MPAA, which have gone through nine months of training to sniff for polycarbonates, which are chemicals used in the production of optical discs.
While some may wonder how the dogs can be used if some packages may contain legitimately bought DVDs, such as a spindle of blanks, what they target are packages where the contents are marked as something else, such as to fetch discs hidden in parcels. When the dogs were left to sniff 50 boxes with a cargo complex, in under 10 minutes, the dogs uncovered a box containing pirated content of the TV show Friends. The dogs have been found to be more cost effective and quicker than enforcement officers and Malaysia is evaluating whether to take on its own dogs. Malaysia is one of the 36 counties being watched for serious copyright violations by the US and around 5 million discs were seized in the country last year, with over 2,000 raids.
Thanks to RTV71 for letting us know about this news.
2 Comments
Most popular headlines
Grandmother is falsely accused of file-sharing (11)
- Wed 3 Feb 03:00 by JaredNewman
- Piracy
A woman falsely accused of downloading copyrighted movies might've lost her Internet connection had she not taken her case to the media.
PS3 closing ground on Xbox 360 (1)
- Sat 6 Feb 14:00 by Randomus
- Game Consoles
After years of trailing the Nintendo Wii and Microsoft Xbox 360 on the sales charts, the Sony PlayStation 3 continues to close the gap on the Xbox 360.
Blame Blu-ray for lack of PS3 game downloads (14)
- Thu 4 Feb 09:00 by JaredNewman
- Game Consoles
Don't expect Sony to offer its full game catalog for download over the Playstation 3 any time soon.
Murdoch: Avatar DVD won't be 3D (17)
- Thu 4 Feb 00:00 by Randomus
- Blu-Ray writers & players, LCD TV
News Corp. CEO Robert Murdoch confirmed the DVD release of Avatar won't have 3D support, with no word on a possible 3D Blu-ray version.
