Warp films in 'don't treat customers as criminals' shock!

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In April, Warp Films will launch DRM-free film download sales from its online store at www.warpfilmstore.com. Warp will start with a small selection of films that includes the Artic Monkeys - Live at the Apollo, the film of All Tomorrow's Parties and Le Donk and Scor-Zay-Zee directed by Shane Meadows and starring Paddy Considine. The list of films will grow over time to include future releases such as Chris Morris' Four Lions and most of Warp films' back catalogue.

We Love The Web ltd. worked with Warp Films to design and build the site.

It¹s a shame that this is in any way newsworthy. DRM is the copy protection stuff that¹s been so successful in keeping the Internet free of music and film piracy*, whilst giving customers who support artists and film-makers a worse experience than you get by pirating the film. Films bought by download are usually locked to a single computer and iPod**: so you if you want to watch that film at a mate's house, you'll have to take your computer with you. Using the files on your next computer may not work either.

There was real debate throughout the site¹s development about whether to go for copy protection or not. The decider was that we were able to find copies of Le Donk and Scor-Zay-Zee on Pirate Bay, Rapidshare and myriad bit torrent sites within 30 seconds of looking: this was weeks before the DVD was released. We¹ve been lucky in working with Warp. The 'Bleep' music store www.bleep.net run by Warp Records led the way in 2006 by in selling legal MP3s without copy restrictions. They've built a good business doing so.

We respect Warp Films for having the guts to trust its customers. Piracy is a major problem, but punishing the people who have chosen to support you seems contrary at best. Copy protection doesn't prevent piracy. Most major releases are on Rapidshare or Pirate Bay before they are even available to buy, so it's evidently not working. We understand how scary it is for film-makers to release this stuff, but it's the right thing to do. Surrendering the illusion of control is hard, but deliberately crippling your product only makes paying customers cross.


* the 'Sarcasm' warning flag is raised.
** iPod or other digital media player.

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