Cell in Theater Could Lead to a Cell in Prison

Sometimes before advance screenings, security guards will confiscate camera phones for the duration of the movie in order to prevent piracy. Most people’s reaction is to question the likelihood of someone actually pirating a movie they record with their phone. Aside from the fact that few people could be interested in such a bad-quality product, there don’t seem to be any phones capable of recording an entire feature-length film. Well, ludicrous reasoning never stops the MPA from enforcing their anti-piracy policies, and now at least one man is facing imprisonment for recording a few minutes of The Fast and the Furious: Tokyo Drift onto his phone. Either they’ve got some better phones in Taiwan or the guy had a ton of memory cards — the police only confiscated one additional card to the one inside the phone — and planned to include a significant amount of gaps on his end product. He now faces a large fine and the possibility of becoming a different kind of pirate in jail. Another man in an unrelated incident was also recently caught recording the same movie on his cell phone but he was not charged because he was either able to erase the recording or his phone broke and lost its memory.





  1. Axion22

    Well this is quite a step closer to just flat out chasing people out of the theaters.

    Gee I can’t help but wonder why box office numbers just ain’t what they used to be.

    Reply · Aug. 25 2006 at 7:14 pm
  2. sadchild

    can we get an external link that verifies this information. to something like cnn or cnet?

    Reply · Aug. 25 2006 at 12:50 pm
  3. bobhss

    Their content is priceless at any quality. Yeah right. My baby teeth get $1 million on the black market too.

    Reply · Aug. 24 2006 at 11:09 pm

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