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7[[quoteright:249:[[Website/ModernHumorist https://static.tvtropes.org/pmwiki/pub/images/modernhumorist_mp3s_communism.jpg]]]]
8[[caption-width-right:249:Only total surveillance from the RIAA can stop this [[HypocriticalHumor totalitarian]] horror!]]
9
10->''"But deep in your heart you know the guilt would drive you mad\
11And the shame would leave a permanent scar\
12'Cause you start out stealing songs and then you're robbing liquor stores\
13And sellin' crack and runnin' over school kids with your car!"''
14-->--'''Music/WeirdAlYankovic''', [[Music/StraightOuttaLynwood "Don't Download This Song"]]
15
16If you're watching television, it doesn't matter if the characters are drug-smuggling, whore-mongering, granny-beating, world-destroying murderers: the illegal downloading of movies and music [[EvenEvilHasStandards is guaranteed to morally offend them]]. Any good character who doesn't fall in with this philosophy will [[AnAesop learn their lesson]] by the end of the episode. Expect physical theft to be used as a comparison and/or a plot point.
17
18When you start a commercially released [[Platform/{{VCR}} VHS tape]], Platform/{{DVD}}, or [[Platform/BluRay Blu-ray Disc]], they usually open with verbose, [[MediaNotes/UserOperationProhibitFlag unskippable]] screens from the FBI or Interpol warning the viewer massive fines and time in jail can happen as a result of piracy. Many [=DVDs=] also include a [[PublicServiceAnnouncement PSA]] in the beginning about how piracy is wrong. In the most extreme cases, this segment can't be skipped... sometimes the disc can't even be stopped while it's playing. Ironically, the person who's logically most likely to see it is someone who legally paid to own a copy, because those who end up distributing these downloads like to edit them out. In Europe this can lead to three almost identical warnings in German (Germany, Austria, Switzerland), two in Dutch (The Netherlands and Belgium) at least three in French (France and Belgium and Switzerland again), two in Italian (Italy and, you guessed it, Switzerland), two in English (the UK and Ireland), a number of very similar Slavic languages as well as a number of similar warnings in the Nordic countries.
19
20The unintended side effect of browbeating legitimate paying customers while pirates don't see these warnings anyway has also led to subversions where [=DVDs=] will thank the viewer for paying for the movie.
21
22KeepCirculatingTheTapes and {{Abandonware}} are related concepts. However, in regards to this trope, they are usually ignored. This is because companies that are the victims of such types of piracy often give subtle glances that they don't particularly care, [[DigitalPiracyIsOkay may even actively encourage it]], or have ceased to exist and so left the material in limbo, and tends to be virtually unsellable anyway, since it is often obsolete systems and formats that were commercially viable in the day but are now barely supportable now. InformationWantsToBeFree, on the other hand, will usually pose a clear danger and demand swift action. [[CantStopTheSignal Not that it will help much]]. Not to mention, people typically don't complain about KeepCirculatingTheTapes and {{Abandonware}} anyways, since it's not hurting any business if the market's non-existent in the first place.
23
24See also NewMediaAreEvil, EvenEvilHasStandards, FelonyMisdemeanor, CopyProtection. See MediaNotes/DigitalDistribution for a form of media which can be tarred with the same brush. For the common catalyst on both sides of the argument, see MediaNotes/{{D|igitalRightsManagement}}RM. Similar arguments are occasionally made against FanFic by authors, complete with the analogy to stealing cars. Also, see InternetCounterattack for one example of what happens when the pirates throw tantrums, as well as FlameWar for what happens when pirates and anti-pirates collide online.
25
26This has resulted in a major shift in the way music artists actually make a living. The paradigm used to be you made money from selling albums and tours were to promote your new album so people would buy it. Nowadays the inverse is true--you make money from touring, and releasing an album is a way to encourage people to come to your shows. Just compare the relative costs of albums and tour tickets since popular music began.
27
28It should be noted that there are degrees to this. ''Most'' artists are okay with free distribution of live tapes or other material that isn't going to be officially released. ''Some'' artists are okay with free distribution of material that isn't out yet but will be in the future. ''Very few'' artists are okay with for-profit distribution of their officially released material.
29
30For the opposite trope, see DigitalPiracyIsOkay.
31
32This is far from being a DiscreditedTrope or a DeadHorseTrope. It's more of a CyclicTrope given how public opinion swings on the issue of copyright protection at any given time. [[HilariousInHindsight Given]] [[MemeticMutation you can now]] [[http://www.independent.co.uk/life-style/gadgets-and-tech/news/would-you-download-a-car-man-3d-prints-lifesize-aston-martin-db4-8744159.html download a car...]]
33
34For the ''other'' kind of present-day [[PirateTropes pirates]], who are generally agreed to be pretty evil, you want RuthlessModernPirates.
35
36[[noreallife]]
37----
38!!Examples:
39[[foldercontrol]]
40[[folder:Advertising]]
41* According to Microsoft in their campaign and posts, piracy leads to security risks, apparently unaware that phishing and malvertising also leads to security risks regardless, whether the software and hardware is legal or not.
42* The ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=HmZm8vNHBSU "Piracy: It's A Crime"]]'' ad first gives you several "you wouldn't steal <item>" examples, and then says, "but downloading pirated films is stealing". It then feels the need to point out that stealing is against the law. The ad is also translated into other languages, such as this French ad: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sODZLSHJm6Q "Le piratage, c'est du vol."]]. The Ad in question [[ImmediateSelfContradiction illegally uses another artist's music]].
43* Some anti-piracy [=PSAs=] claim that "Buying Pirated Films is Stealing". This reasoning does get shaky if the pirated goods ''look'' authentic, though -- then you're just a ''dupe'' in someone else's piracy, and the fault lies with the those who actually perpetrate it.
44* In China, they have propaganda commercials where steamrollers are crushing pirated goods, despite the fact that piracy is done not only on streets and some stores, but some goods are actually shipped to America. In a news special, they showed some knockoff brands like Time detergent (instead of Tide).
45* A Chinese anti-piracy ad from Hong Kong that has people saying "Thank you!" is a great example. The message at the end is so hilarious. This message says "The crime world thanks you! Without your help, how can piracy be so profitable? Keep away from pirated goods. Don't finance crime!" [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7ur_uLazgM8 Watch it here.]]
46* Many British video tapes featured a bumper discussing anti-piracy holograms which unironically proclaimed that video piracy funds ''international terrorism, as in 9/11.''
47* Beware of Illegal Videocassettes and Pirate Videos and Daylight Robbery are just two examples of these ads in the UK, along with the above example. The "piracy funds terrorism" ad sometimes appeared on VHS tapes from other companies, such as the UK release of Disney's ''Film/SnowDogs''.
48-->'''Man:''' 'scuse me, I bought this video from you last Saturday.\
49'''Vendor:''' So?\
50'''Man:''' Well I can't understand a word.\
51'''Vendor:''' ''Literature/{{Trainspotting}}''? Not surprised. [[ComicallyMissingThePoint Whole movie's Scot]], you need anything?
52* "Creator/{{Jackie|Chan}} and [[Creator/ArnoldSchwarzenegger I]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5SIxsVZ61Ow are on a mission to stop piracy!"]]
53* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_-Vm-Xwg0MA&t=24s An Malaysian promo]] has a spy trying to get a DVD. Then the scene cuts to a guy holding a DVD on a DVD vendor, which the spy segment turns out to be an ImagineSpot, and the DVD vendor claims that the DVD is a very good one, and it turns out that the DVD the guy is holding is a fictitious DVD with a man imprisoned behind bars on the cover with the text "THEIF" on it, and he then [[TheFourthWallWillNotProtectYou throws the DVD to the camera.]] The same fictitious DVD then appears on the black screen with the infamous "Piracy. It's a Crime" text on it, with the logos of the Motion Picture Association, Malaysian government, and the Ministry of Domestic Trade and Consumer Affairs[[note]](Kementerian Perdagangan Dalam Negeri dan Hal Ehwal Pengguna)[[/note]] appearing below the image.
54* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Tlh4DN4jjf4 Another UK piracy trailer]] was about a girl named Rebecca who watches a pirated video which she wanted for a long time, but as facts about piracy are displayed, the video becomes a violent movie.
55* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=plrcDeDa7LQ This Anti-Piracy ad featuring Mario]] claims that "Original games and software perform better". This is displayed by the music being off-key, Mario moving like he's drunk, him being beaten up by a baby, and Bowser bursting into flames at the end.
56* An Australian ad that commonly appeared on videotapes in the 90s, "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1FNqBZ9n-A8 Have You Got What You Paid For?]]", which was notably designed to be read even when fast-forwarded through.
57-->"Have you ever bought or rented a video tape that wasn't quite right? It may have been a pirate copy. An illegal and inferior copy for which you paid good money. Pirated tapes are recognisable by poorly presented or photocopied jackets, poor sound and/or picture quality, the lack of censor and other labels on the face and spine of the tape, and the absence of warnings, such as this at the beginning of the tape presentation. Pirate tapes rob artists and studios of their rightful income, and add to the cost of a video to the consumer."
58** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=JctiSHJDslM This]] ad from New Zealand takes a similar if rather more melodramatic approach.
59** Used in the beginning of [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=gmLPvMlKNBU this video]], The DVD Pirate.
60** Also parodied in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=limqnlOwna8 this video]] by The Consumption, which starts as a pitch-perfect imitation of the original ad before going off on several bizarre and increasingly creepy tangents.
61-->"Pirate copies are recognisable by poorly presented or photocopied jackets, poor sound and/or picture quality, or the film not being quite as good as you remember. You may find that, somehow, ''WesternAnimation/TheChipmunkAdventure'' just isn't as much fun as it was on that chilly Sunday morning in 1993, no matter how accurately you recreate the pillow fort you watched it from. This lack of fun is probably because it's a pirate copy, not because you're now 31 and the eight original members of the sleepover you've gathered for the repeat viewing don't seem super into it and are actively trying to leave through that door you locked."\
62"Pirate copies rob artists and studios of their rightful income, forcing Australian actors to drive Ubers, make bad coffee and host lifestyle shows."\
63"Piracy has also led to the collapse of national economies, and in some cases, biblical flooding."
64* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=m6xj4jS8cho They bought it. He's gonna steal it!]]
65* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oyr4h_0HZq8&feature=relmfu "Bob's invited his friends to watch a DVD he brought in the store! Jim's invited his friends to watch a pirated DVD he brought on the street!"]]
66* In Mexico there is a campaign against piracy, which features direct links between you buying a pirate and your children learning to copy in exams and steal. "Pirate movies look bad, but you as a parent look worse" and [[ThinkOfTheChildren "what you are teaching to your children?"]] are the (in)famous slogans of this campaign.
67* In a similar vein, in Chile, the pay-TV provider VTR, made a campaign against people who were illegally using cable TV without paying using the [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=KS1NIhc_3uc "don't teaching kids stealing by not using or cable system without paying"]] message.
68* [[http://opinion.latimes.com/bitplayer/images/2008/06/12/mpaa_dvd_piracy_warning_3.jpg This]] 2008 subway advertisement against purchasing illegally created [=DVDs=] parodies MPAA ratings to describe illegal movies as having awful sound and visuals, with ratings like RO for "ripped off," PS for "poor sound" (the guy recorded the movie while sitting next to a very loud laughing lady), OV for "obstructred view" (the guy in front of the recorder kept getting up for more concessions), and F for "fake." They also had a television campaign that showed clips of movies like ''Film/Titanic1997'' and ''WesternAnimation/HappyFeet'' as if they were poorly recorded off a movie screen, showing how bad the quality of pirated films can be.
69* An ad campaign in the UK called "Knock-Off Nigel" is being used in an attempt to actually create and promote a stigma to buying pirate [=DVD=]s and downloading movies. The titular Nigel is accosted in one advert by a singing old man who talks about his "shady" dealings, prompting the entire pub he is in to start singing along. The second advert involves the same thing, except he's now in an office and his workmates are doing it instead. The ad campaign tries to put across the idea that people who download or pirate films steal from their grandmother's purse and give their girlfriends gifts they find lying on the street. These ads wind up making Nigel UnintentionallySympathetic, since it simply appears that he's getting assaulted by these irritating, high-and-mighty gits.
70** Also became an AppropriatedAppellation; more than a couple of street vendors started branding themselves as Knock-Off Nigel.
71* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=i5lp7eHzj9w Here's the Federation Against Copyright Theft's first video-piracy awarness.]] That's the fact.
72** It also have an [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9BXxWTmN0-A German version by FAcT's German counterpart GVU too!]]
73*** GVU also have the second anti-piracy promo in the 1990s. Every one got a downgrade because of video piracy. You can see [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=8GhAN5X0qAw here.]]
74* Disney has made a few anti-piracy ads, mainly in United Kingdom, Europe and Asia.
75** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=kz2lPNgQQqU The first ad]] features a VHS tape of the film you are about to watch, as John Sachs explains this information: "We want you to enjoy this video as much as possible. Unfortunately, there are many poor quality, illegal video cassettes now available to buy or rent from sources other than reputable retailers. Not only do these reduce the sound and picture quality of the film, but they may also damage your videocassette recorder. To make sure you're watching the genuine product, check for this security sticker on the cassette, and ensure your purchased your videos from a reputable retailer. If you can't find this sticker on your videocassette, telephone the Federation Against Copyright Theft at 0181 568 6646. Or in the Republic of Ireland on 353 1677 7071. Video piracy is a crime. Please help us to fight it."
76** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=SNp_0S_MN0s The second ad]] contains side by side comparisons of pirated and Disney videos, had background music called "Disney is Magic, Disney is Joy", and featured such lines as "Mum, it's no good, the picture's all funny!" and "I can't hear it!"
77*** There is also a longer variant in Southeast Asia and the Philippines with clips from ''WesternAnimation/{{Dumbo}}'', ''WesternAnimation/{{Cinderella}}'', and ''WesternAnimation/OneHundredAndOneDalmatians'' shown and the children's accents and dialogue, as well as the VHS effects, were changed. It can be [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=IodOODyQNTU viewed here.]]
78*** There's also a Spanish version of "Disney is Magic, Disney is Joy" song too. Check it out [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yMH91fQGWNo yourself.]]
79*** [[https://youtu.be/FbxpUqb0sMs?t=25 Here's the Taiwanese Chinese version of this ad,]] based off the Southeast Asian version, but Disney have added another anti-counterfeiting measure for their Taiwanese Chinese VHS: the purple VHS skin. Now there's also a [[https://youtu.be/J05TGcmdsGI?t=26 full version with the Mickey Mouse hologram part too.]]
80*** [[https://youtu.be/se3i3dtSwnQ?t=72 And there's also the Greek version of this ad,]] but instead it based off the Taiwanese Chinese version[[note]]with the Chinese texts on blue squares removed[[/note]], and they also redone the hologram awareness part with new background, and also to showcase another anti-counterfeiting measures that's only exclusive to official Greek releases of Disney VHS and now Mickey Mouse hologram instead featured in the cassette.
81*** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=n9gBePiuERY And there's even also the Chinese VCD version of this ad,]] featuring clips from ''WesternAnimation/ToyStory1'', ''WesternAnimation/BeautyAndTheBeast'' and ''WesternAnimation/TheLionKing1994''.
82** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zP1Of9_v7Do The third ad]] used clips from more recent Disney films such as ''Toy Story'' and ''A Bug's Life''.
83** The fourth ad was exclusive to [=DVDs=], and it talked about "the heroes and villains" in Disney movies. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=wYDtDSD-73s You can watch it here.]]
84** "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=QXnb_hnTdX0 Just a reminder of what could happen with movies if you keep making or buying fraudulent copies,]] this is the end."
85** During TheNineties, the Malaysian VHS/VCD company Berjaya HVN had an anti-piracy awareness message to help viewers of their programs to recognize a genuine HVN VHS. It included a genuine label hologram (either a Disney hologram for Disney tapes or just a white sticker with copies of the HVN logo on it) on either the spine of the cover or the cassette's spine, a blue videocassette skin, etc. However, it was inside the VHS which stores the cassette (also called inlays), and now HVN's tapes are long out-of-print, with seemingly no one being interested in taking a scan of the ad (or even posting it online), thus putting the message [[KeepCirculatingTheTapes in lost territory.]] That was it, until on February 14, 2022, when a [=YouTube=] channel named "The Video Archive" posted a video called [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oRLI9SfUpe8 "Quick-Fire Collections: Malaysia,"]] in which the video uploader showcased a few Malaysian VHS tapes he bought and also showed the inlaid warning messages for a while. CIC Video Malaysia did a similar thing for their genuine VHS release, but like the HVN one, it wasn't discovered for many years until The Video Archive showed it on an video. The Lost Media Archive Wikia even had an article about it [[https://lostmediaarchive.fandom.com/wiki/Southeast_Asian_VHS_Inlay_Warning_Messages here,]] which made a few months after its discovery.
86*** Brazilian home video distributor company Abril Video has made [[https://youtu.be/f9x6w4iMSI8?t=268 two similar]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=z6UXamTh5Lw animated promos]] help their viewers to recognize a genuine Abril Video VHS. The company also has put a short message on their print advertisements encouraging readers to check for the hologram, but their video cassette also has a similar message above the copyright warning.
87** Although there's no Arabian anti-piracy promo for the official Arabian Disney VHS tapes, they have an genuine label holographic Disney sticker on the front of the cover alongside with an Arabian/English message that tells the customers to make sure that they buy the original Disney videos by checking that the sticker is present on the front.
88** From the early 1990s to the early 2000s, Italy has also had their own promo. A Disney VHS floating in an blue gradient background, before the camera moves to the zoom-in shot of the spine to reveal the Disney hologram with the two swooshes on it, followed by the Univideo logo (the logo appears on the back cover of the genuine Italian VHS), then an Italian message appears telling the viewers not to accept the fake and always demand only the genuine Disney videocassettes. [[https://disneytapesandmore.altervista.org/vero-walt-disney-antipirateria-vhs/ This Italian blog has an in-depth detailed history]] of the promo.
89*** In TheEighties, Disney has also done [[https://i.imgur.com/ZsHgCTw.jpg an Italian print ad]] encouraging the readers to check for the original Disney [=VHS=]. In the promo, four Beagle Boys are stealing [=VHS=] from an giant Walt Disney Home Video [=VHS=] while detective Mickey is hiding behind it.
90** European Spanish anti-piracy promos have a Disney VHS floating on a background with duplicates of the Buena Vista/Disney Castle on it, before the Disney hologram flies out from the front end of the spine of the Disney videotape and the middle of the screen for several seconds, followed by the Spanish message warning viewers about the counterfeit videotapes.
91** Halven Video also has [[https://youtu.be/3DbFV0Bkhrs a promo]] demonstrating the idenifiers of a genuine video tape the company has distributed (including Walt Disney Home Video), while a relaxing musical piece plays in the background.
92** In 2009, the American Disney company started putting anti-piracy ads on some of its [=DVDs=]. One ad features Tinkerbell, and the other is the Knock-Off Nigel Wall-E ad, but with "Don't Be A Knock-Off Nigel" replaced with "Don't Buy Rubbish".
93* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=eW2oYJi7zqw This Korean promo]] is about an animated talking videocassette warning about the counterfeit VHS tapes.
94* Japan has a very famous anti-piracy ad series which is as famous as "You Wouldn't Steal a Car" called "No More Movie Thieves". The ads involve a man with a video camera head dancing while a female voiceover tells about how it is illegal to record movies in theaters and what the consequences are. Many people on the Internet parodied the ad by creating costumes similar to the ones used in the ads.
95** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_UXI1ToueMk Here is the first ad in the series.]]
96** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=nT7ijnOHEDs The second ad features a woman watching the camera man dancing in a theater and looking surprised at him. It also mentions that illegally uploaded files on the Internet are illegal to download.]] [[http://youtu.be/k7tEc1pp7bg This version was recreated frame-for-frame and parodied in]] the second ''Manga/{{Gintama}}'' film.
97** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6Xzd0NaW2-A The third, released in December of 2012, is really weird and contains many clones of the famous camera head man.]]
98* The Dutch company filmwereld has created a few anti-piracy ads.
99** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=tfogrh_uEZg The first in the series]] thanks the viewer for buying a legal copy.
100** The second one, which [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1jXV4SgUZng has]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=A9avGMTByY4 many]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=dYpvfAYiNOA variants,]] gives you a glimpse into the film world and ends with them showing that they fight piracy.
101* VHS tapes and [=VCDs=] released by Telaga Biru have a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=uRd-KXpe5kc warning]] that blames counterfeits for other crimes such as fraud, theft, vandalism, murder, etc., says that purchasing counterfeits might condone, support and promote evil, and says you must only purchase the "halal" original copies. It is followed by a fade into an triangle symbol with the text "ORIGINAL" and the Arabic translation on it, with the green lines with Malay/Indonesian text such as "Cetak Rompak Adalah Haram Di Sisi Islam" (Counterfeit copies are haram on the side of Islam) and "Beli Yang Original" (Buy the Original), and another text below it that reads "Sebuah lagi produk bermutu dari TELAGA BIRU SDN BHD" (Another quality product from TELAGA BIRU SDN BHD).
102* In Philippine cinemas, there is an anti-piracy campaign featuring a guy went inside the movie theater while he bring up his camcorder then suddenly a guy with a black jacket (who appears to be an undercover agent) show up trying to go close to the guy in the red shirt then he ran away after he show his badge to him. He ran outside from the theater while these two guys chasing him then when the guy manage to escape, the gate is locked then afterwards, then he surrenders. After the scene, the guy with a black jacket telling the viewer to not pirate the film. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zFh-nB7eJoQ You can see this ad here.]]
103* [[https://m.youtube.com/watch?v=iSxUq_IlCEM This anti-piracy ad]] about music piracy from the Philippines, which was created in 1999, involves a father and his daughter being killed by a terrorist. Shockingly enough, this ad showed up on children's music-related [=DVDs=] and [=VCDs=], including "Mga Awitin ng Batang Pinoy". [[note]] "Songs for Batang Pinoy"[[/note]]
104* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xn0BWW-4K90 An Italian promo]] features a man walking in an VHS storeroom. As he gets a VHS tape, a stack of VHS tapes collapses on him. While he is sitting on a stack of collapsed VHS tapes, he realizes that the VHS tape he's holding has a skull and crossbones on its tape label, while the red bleeding text reading "Le Cassette Pirata Ammazzano Il Cinema[[note]]The Cassette Piracy Kills the Cinema[[/note]]" appears.
105* A series of ads for ''VideoGame/CrusaderKingsII'' themed around the SevenDeadlySins skipped gluttony to [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PvO50GYniiI take a look at piracy.]] While they're ostensibly dealing with high seas pirates, the fact that the pirate in question's name is meant to be heard as "Downloading of Games" makes it clear what they're really talking about. That said, the ad is also tongue-in-cheek (even more than the rest of the series), with the actors reading off scripts (the pirate lifts his eyepatch to do so); the king has a WhoWritesThisCrap attitude toward the whole thing.
106-->'''King:''' Ha! By following your life of piracy, you have hobbled yourself! You are unable to enjoy multiplayer, and it will be hard for you to enjoy updates or DLC.
107* An 1998 Argentinean anti-piracy promo surprisingly contains an English swear word on VHS player after a man trying to play an VHS (with Spanish words "El Maraja de San Telmo" on label) several times but explodes. See [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=0bPYBlR6oWw here.]] Also shockingly enough, this promo also can be seen on Argentinian children's VHS (including an ''WesternAnimation/{{Animaniacs}}'' VHS. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CTOrogS4ISQ We're not joking about that.]]) [[https://i.imgur.com/11pV6lF.jpg An similar print ad]] also exists too.
108* A Hong Kong anti-counterfeit VCD promo has an Asian man using the concretes to fill a stack of counterfeit [=VCDs=], with a Cantonese pop-song playing on the background. It turns out that he built a prison for himself to close in. [[https://youtu.be/LDaCHUm6R30 You can see the promo here.]] For the English variant, you can see the official upload [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=VR3AiiAo6K0 here.]]
109* A lot of [=DVDs=] from cheapo distributor Madacy Entertainment (and its apparent subsidiary, DVD-4-U Entertainment) used an FBI warning that has a sad CGI prison inmate going to jail for his punishment with sad harmonica music. While he was sobbing over his punishment, a scroll-up message appears. There are, in fact, [[https://youtube.com/watch?v=Bs3e3XOifcM two]] [[https://youtube.com/watch?v=-KeoUif6prA versions.]]
110* Richard Simmons' videotape programs, namely his ''Sweatin' to the Oldies'' series as well as the Deal-a-Meal diet, are infamous for their ''unique'' FBI warnings. These include [[https://youtu.be/A35IEhyHIsw a gun shooting at the viewer]] as the ''Series/{{Dragnet}}'' theme plays, a [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1CUiEP87Dq0 dramatic black-and-white courtroom scene]] where a man is convicted for copying videotapes, and [[https://youtu.be/I0pzlOOh8EE?t=9 a comedy sketch]] where Richard's mom gets caught illegally copying his program.
111* In Brazil, this can even be played for laughs. There is a commercial in which a girl says that because her father bought a pirated DVD, the next day they would sell firearms at school; in another one, it says that if you buy a pirated DVD, you will indirectly be contributing with the war.
112[[/folder]]
113
114[[folder:Anime & Manga]]
115* Parodied in a live-action promo for the English release of ''Literature/HaruhiSuzumiya'': Haruhi tells the viewers that downloading fansubs via [=BitTorrent=] is bad (especially odd considering Haruhi's [[OOCIsSeriousBusiness usual attitude towards rules]]), immediately followed by a flashing sign saying "THIS EPISODE NOW AVAILABLE VIA BITTORRENT". At the end of this and all the other promos, the credits take a more serious stance: thanking fansub watchers that buy the [=DVD=]s after they come out and condemning those that do not.
116* The North American [=DVD=]s of ''Literature/FullMetalPanic'' have the American voice actors threaten those who pirate with in-character dialog. Teletha promises to "Send a cruise missile down your chimney." The version read by [[SmugSnake Gauron]] has the same attitude as a Mafia heavy leaning on someone. The Japanese release had these as well, and they are included in the extras.
117* In the DVD version of ''Anime/ExcelSaga'' the FBI Warning at the beginning is parodied with a warning from ACROSS and threatens pirates with a punishment involving tar-and-feathering and a [[NoodleImplements depraved walrus]]. This warning had its formatting altered for its release in other regions to make it resemble the warnings found on [=DVD=]s in those regions as well.
118* The American release of the ''Manga/{{Chobits}}'' manga clothes its end-of-volume teasers as conversations between characters in the story, and in one makes sure to take a dig at "fan-scans". "No, I ''bought'' [[FictionalDocument that book you mentioned]] and didn't click your immoral Internet link..."
119* In episode four of ''Anime/KaitouTenshiTwinAngel'', a group of small time thugs that got away from the titular magical girls team up. They include a costume fetishist, a burglar, a marriage swindler, and an uploader of illegal videos, presented as a fat {{otaku}}. The Angels consider him as bad as the other three.
120* ''Manga/ChargerGirl'' had [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9JQdQXww5gE several anti-piracy promos]] that played at the beginning of the each episode.
121[[/folder]]
122
123[[folder:Asian Animation]]
124* At the end of ''Animation/HappyHeroes'' episode 51, Big M. and Little M. are seen selling pirated copies of [=DVDs=], only to get arrested soon afterwards for that, with a monster following the police car.
125[[/folder]]
126
127[[folder:Comic Books]]
128* At the start of one issue of Ellis' ''ComicBook/{{Nextwave}}'', there's a somewhat tongue-in-cheek bit which says "You have just bought a copy of NEXTWAVE (unless you stole it off the Internet)"
129* In ''ComicBook/PS238'', Zodon makes passing reference to Herschel possessing illegal [[Platform/MP3 MP3]]s, dubbing him a "Relativist" after he's forced to move cables used for sharing said [=MP3s=] as punishment for inside-trading of stocks.
130* The Swedish version of the WesternAnimation/DonaldDuck magazine [[http://www.upi.com/Odd_News/2009/07/28/Donald-Duck-comic-stirs-piracy-controversy/UPI-55081248811909/ ran a strip]] in which Donald Duck starts a pirated CD business. He then is threatened with being sued by his uncle Scrooge, who owns the record company, and ends up on his knees begging for forgiveness. Interestingly enough, the same story has Huey, Dewey and Louie download a song illegally and get away scot-free... then again, they're only downloading it to "sample" the CD and at the end of the story have bought it. Unlike Donald, they're not actually burning and trying to sell pirated [=CDs=].
131* Played for laughs in an issue of ''Spider-Man Unlimited''. A former [[HarmlessVillain supervillain]] thinks that as part of a HeelFaceTurn he "MustMakeAmends" by helping Spidey fight crime. Spider-Man decides [[UnwantedAssistance to find some small-time heist the guy can help him stop]].
132-->'''Spider-Man''': There's got to be ''someone'' illegally downloading music around here.
133* In the ComicBook/DarkwingDuck comic, Honker is arrested for downloading music, though the event is treated as a part of St. Canard's slide into an over-litigious laws-enforced-by-robots dystopia.
134* Played for laughs in the intro of ''[[ComicBook/GreatLakesAvengers GLA: Misassembled]] #2'', where Squirrel Girl warns readers not to do anything Mr. Immortal does in this issue, "especially on page seven. That's where he downloads stuff off the Internet for free."
135* ''ComicBook/MarvelZombies 3'' has a particularly [[SpaceWhaleAesop out there lesson]] by showing a cyberpunk world where people consume media through cybernetic implants. An evil Jocasta of that world sets off a ZombieApocalypse by installing malware in a pirated copy of a highly popular show that makes people it infects into mindless cannibals.
136[[/folder]]
137
138[[folder:Comic Strips]]
139* In a ''ComicStrip/{{Yenny}}'' story arc, the title character goes to see ''Film/Transformers2007'' at a theater, but her lizard, Zacha, takes a camera with her to record the movie off the screen and sell pirated [=DVDs=] of it, much to Yenny's annoyance.
140* The ''ComicStrip/DickTracy'' comic went as far as creating a new roster of digital piracy-themed villains, and doing scare-messages at the end implying that parents could be arrested and thrown in jail if their children download an [=MP3=].
141* The original strips of ''ComicStrip/TheBoondocks'' had a couple of Sunday strips parodying the anti-piracy videos in the beginning of movies. One of them was of a man bemoaning that downloading movies was taking money away from the people selling bootlegs off the street.
142[[/folder]]
143
144[[folder:Fan Works]]
145* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7FqHSTBFONI This]] fan-made parody using ''Manga/OnePiece''.
146* ''WebVideo/ImAMarvelAndImADC'' addresses this in "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yTokEDMaDWY Public Service Announcement]]", where the casts of ''Watchmen'' and ''X-Men'' encourage viewers not to pirate ''X-Men Origins'', on the grounds that 1. It hurts the ordinary people who work in the entertainment industry well before it does anything to the big, fat, well-publicized millionaires, and 2. In the meantime, the sales lost on ''Wolverine'' [[SpoofAesop will give the edge to a bad chick flick]].
147-->'''Dr. Manhattan:''' Leaks like this affect not just the highly-paid stars and producers...\
148'''Sabretooth:''' ...but also thousands of working-class people, just trying to make an honest living.\
149'''Rorschach:''' Not only that, but if too many watch this movie illegally, you know who wins?\
150'''Cyclops:''' ''Creator/MatthewMcConaughey.''\
151'''Night Owl:''' By illegally downloading this film, you'll be helping ''Film/GhostsOfGirlfriendsPast'' become the #1 movie in America.\
152'''Wolverine:''' You sure you want that on your conscience?
153* Inverted in episode 50 of ''WebVideo/YuGiOhTheAbridgedSeries'', where Joey defends the series in court against charges of copyright infringement brought by the Creator/FourKidsEntertainment legal department. Funnily enough, turns out that 4Kids is fine with the abridged series. It's just bots that keep removing Creator/LittleKuriboh's accounts on Website/YouTube.
154* In ''Fanfic/TheWebOfTheSpiderMan'', Peter is worried what Ben and May would think of him if they learned of the immoral, clandestine, and illicit things that he does at Ned's house... then it turns out that he's just talking about streaming anime and it isn't quite as "super clandestine, illicit or necessarily immoral" as he might think it is, especially since he's running on a tight budget anyhow.
155[[/folder]]
156
157[[folder:Films -- Animation]]
158* The CouchGag from ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsonsMovie'', where Bart was writing on the blackboard ''"I will not illegally download this movie"''. Though it's less of a condemnation and more of an utterly hilarious in-joke if you just illegally downloaded the movie.
159* Pirated copies of the German, French, and Italian releases of ''WesternAnimation/ThePiratesWhoDontDoAnythingAVeggieTalesMovie'' send you right back to the language selection screen after selecting a language and the warning.
160* In ''WesternAnimation/{{Scoob}}'', Dick Dastardly is stated to be a villain because he doesn't pay for Netflix.
161[[/folder]]
162
163[[folder:Films -- Live-Action]]
164* Both played straight and parodied in the intro for the ''Film Cow Master Collection'' [=DVD=] (from the guy who did ''WebAnimation/CharlieTheUnicorn''). Disguised as an unskippable video on why piracy is wrong, it's actually nonsensical (and entirely skippable).
165-->"You wouldn't steal a giraffe, neh?"
166* In the ''Dante's Inferno'' puppet movie, there is a scene in which a Judge in Hell is sentencing sinners to their respective places in Hell. The first soul that comes up says he is there for downloading Music/{{Metallica}}. The Judge sentences him to circle 7, level 1 of Hell for that.
167* One of the sketches in ''Film/AmazonWomenOnTheMoon'' is "Video Pirates": a stereotypical pirate ship captures a prize and in the captain's cabin discovers a treasure... of videotapes and Laserdiscs. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=7I5dVBezF9k&t=1m43s They throw one in the VCR and see the standard FBI warning, causing the captain to go "Oooo, I'm ''so'' scared!" and the crew to break into hysterical laughter.]]
168* In ''Film/GymTeacherTheMovie'', a teacher tries to get rid of a troublesome student by planting enough pirated [=DVD=]s in his locker -- "[[GRatedDrug to prove intent to sell]]".
169* A bit of a twist on the ''WebVideo/DoctorHorriblesSingAlongBlog'' DVD: the FBI warning changes to reveal a warning from the Evil League of Evil itself, only allowing ''evil'' use of the DVD.
170* Given a wink in ''Film/Transformers2007'', Glen Whitman confessing "I may have downloaded a couple thousand songs off the Internet, but who hasn't? WHO HASN'T?" during the interrogation scene.
171* In ''Film/HardCandy'', Jeff Kohlver offers to send a bootleg [=MP3=] (from the Goldfrapp concert he claims to have seen) to Hayley, after meeting her in a coffee shop:
172-->'''Hayley:''' You have the concert?!\
173'''Jeff:''' Just one song. And a little louder, please, so the authorities know!
174* They're putting these warnings [[TheInternetIsForPorn on porn [=DVD=]s]], of all places. Porn producers have an advantage in that some of their material can embarrass even the most brazen pirate. Some companies concentrate their copyright-infringement efforts on their kinkiest products in order to maximize the potential embarrassment of fighting them in court, to the point of even [[https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Prenda_Law uploading and seeding]] the content to induce the piracy in the first place.
175* Pre-Internet example: In ''Film/NightOfTheComet'', the biggest JerkAss is a movie-theater manager who covertly loans movie reels to an accomplice overnight so they can be copied, then sells the bootlegs. He becomes an AssholeVictim pretty quickly.
176** Even funnier is when he negotiates for his cut, the other guy offers $100, which the jerk says isn't enough because the print is in 3-D (in 1984). When he is offered $110, the jerk says, "OK, ''now'' you're talking."
177* In ''Film/GhostRiderSpiritOfVengeance'', Johnny implies that an illegal download would be judged just as harshly as a white lie. Then again, he states earlier on in his narration that the Ghost Rider has become so KnightTemplar-crazy in the TimeSkip between films that said "harsh judgement" would '''definitely''' get you killed, which is why he's been WalkingTheEarth and staying away from other people.
178* ''Film/TheCompleatAl'' begins with an anti-piracy notice that warns of the dangers of unlawful duplication, such as discoloration of fine upholstery, headaches, drowsiness, nausea, high blood pressure, the spontaneous combustion of pets, civil unrest, meteorological disturbances, volcanic eruptions, and the Earth falling out of its orbit and plunging into the sun.
179-->"The producers of this program assume no liability for any of the consequences resulting from your stupid, unthinking, greedy and careless attempt to deprive them of income."
180* ''Film/XXx'' did this on a meta level with the film's title, which was picked not just for its ''[[ExtremeSportsPlot EXXXTREME]]'' [[XtremeKoolLetterz connotations]] but also to make the film harder to find on torrent sites, which are already [[TheInternetIsForPorn filled with things labeled "XXX"]].
181[[/folder]]
182
183[[folder:Literature]]
184* Inverted in ''Born To Run'' by Creator/MercedesLackey, in which the villains are particularly proud of the unbreakable[[note]]it's magical, [[ItMakesSenseInContext they're elves]][[/note]] CopyProtection on their torture, pedophilia and snuff videos.
185* Creator/PeterFHamilton's ''MisspentYouth'' features some rather ham-handed anti-piracy propaganda, assuming a future where the authorities stopped caring about copyright in 2010, at which point all art turned to crap. We see later in the ''Literature/CommonwealthSaga'' that the world has evolved into an almost-utopia nonetheless (which, this being Hamilton, [[HordeOfAlienLocusts doesn't last]]) leaving us [[BrokenAesop confused as to Hamilton's actual message.]] Especially as fans, and Hamilton himself, consider ''Misspent Youth'' one of his weaker works.
186** It is likely that instead of trying to convey a message Hamilton was simply trying to extrapolate what he thought was likely to happen to media from technological trends. This is how he comes up with most of the social and technological developments in his books.
187** One singer in ''Literature/TheNightsDawnTrilogy'', who does interstellar tours rather than just the usual planetary ones, takes great satisfaction in depriving starship crews of one of their main revenue sidelines: Since she sells recordings everywhere she goes, there's no real market for their bootlegs of her work.
188* In one of the first book of the ''Literature/NetForce'' series, author Steve Perry [[AuthorFilibuster stops the action so that two characters can debate digital piracy]]. However, since the Anti-Piracy advocate is the dashing lantern-jawed hero, and the Pro-Piracy advocate is his 15 year old son, we are invited to shake our heads at the kid's "naive" arguments.
189* Played all the way to its most horrible conclusion, in ''Noir'' by Creator/KWJeter, which tells of a world in which (besides other implications of a society where free market capitalism holds absolute sway) there are police forces that hunt down copyright pirates, one memorable punishment for said pirates is having their spine & brain extracted from their bodies, then transformed into high-fidelity audio cables, in which the pirate/victim '''still lives''', being tortured by every note/sound that passes through, essentially, their nerve system.
190* In Creator/RobertAHeinlein's ''Literature/JobAComedyOfJustice'', Gerald (Jerry) Farnsworth makes it a point to ask his daughter if she legally paid for a pornographic hologram. After finding out that, yes she did (because she is a "good girl"), he mentions that he happens to already own a copy which she could have borrowed from him.
191* ''Steal This Book'' advocates rebelling against authority in all forms, governmental and corporate. See [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Steal_this_book the Other Wiki.]]
192* The ''Literature/HyperionCantos'' by Dan Simmons has the poet Martin Silenus thrust into massive debt when his second book bombs horribly. It's actually quite popular amongst the AI, but only one of them actually bought a copy; that AI then transmitted the contents to every other AI in existence. "Interstellar copyright doesn't mean shit when you're dealing with silicon."
193* One story from the collection All Hell Breaking Loose featured a [[CorruptCorporateExecutive recording executive]] making a deal with the devil that allowed Satan to steal the souls of anyone who illegally downloaded music.
194* One of Creator/DaveBarry's "Year in review" column mentions the U.S. economy going back up when it's discovered a teenager has actually purchased a music CD. The embarrassed teenager reveals that his computer is out of order.
195* Played with in the ''Creator/HarryTurtledove'' AlternateHistory novel ''Literature/RuledBritannia''. Creator/WilliamShakespeare doesn't like the contemporary equivalent of digital piracy - people creating transcripts of his plays and selling them, rather than buying the scripts directly from him - but he's more upset by the poor quality of the "pirate" scripts, which often butcher his dialogue or confuse characters (note-it takes place before the first copyright law in England, so this is legal).
196* In ''Mind Scan'' by Robert J. Sawyer, one of the motives for the character Karen Bessarian, a famous writer in-universe to undergo the titular BrainUploading was so she'll retain control of her copyrights indefinitely, expressing disgust at the idea that someone could make works with her character she would find objectionable. Her son is ''not'' pleased with the news that she's done him out of his inheritance, as she'll know outlive him in an android body, setting up the plot-central courtroom battle on whether [[WhatMeasureIsANonHuman uploads retain the originals' identity, or even have rights]] when he attempts to get the estate.
197* ''Galaxy Tunes'' by Rob Reid. Aliens find out in horror that they inadvertently violated Earths copyright rules (by listening to the radio wave scatter) and want to set things right. [[HilarityEnsues You guess what happens.]]
198* ''Literature/MurderAtColefaxManor'': Averted with the [[https://goo.gl/7IlMZf free PDF version of the book,]] released by the author.
199* At the start of ''[[Literature/FoxAndOHare The Heist]]'', Kate is assigned to assist the MPAA in breaking up a piracy ring.
200* ''Literature/YearZero'': The galactic civilization that gets in touch with the protagonists did so because they respect each planet's local copyright laws so much, they went into a tizzy because they had [[AliensStealCable started file-sharing our radio and music broadcasts]] ''before'' they found out Earth's laws. Not only do we have the best music, we have the most stringent laws and fines/penalties... and they want a lawyer on their side.
201[[/folder]]
202
203[[folder:Live-Action TV]]
204* On a sketch from Cleveland's ''Big Chuck & Lil John Show'' Lil John has just been incarcerated for five years. When his cellmates ask him what he's in for, he says he dubbed a copy of ''WesternAnimation/{{Cinderella}}'' for his daughter.
205* ''Series/TheITCrowd'' has [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ALZZx1xmAzg a parody]] of one of the more annoying anti-piracy trailers.
206--> "You wouldn't shoot a policeman... and then steal his helmet. You wouldn't go to the ''toilet'' in his helmet. [[ForTheEvulz And then send it to the policeman's grieving widow]]...''and then steal it AGAIN!''"
207** And then later in the episode, the police raid the apartment of the German not because he was [[ImAHumanitarian a cannibal]], but because they were watching a pirated film.
208* An episode of the family sitcom series ''Series/SmartGuy'' started out with this Aesop with the main character buying pirated games from a person he met online. Said character immediately [[JumpingOffTheSlipperySlope jumps off the slippery slope]] by revealing he only pirates games so he can seduce little boys. The moral? Either "People who pirate software are pedophiles" or perhaps "if you pirate software, a 30-year old man will try to rape you."
209* One might think this is a modern trope, but one episode of ''Series/WhatsHappening'' shows concert bootleggers (Way back before the music industry tried to conflate copyright infringement with privateering, they used to try to conflate it with alcohol smuggling) as a gang of murderous thugs.
210* ''Series/TheDailyShow'' has Jon Stewart advertise his show's full availability on Comedy Central's own website moments after referencing the Viacom lawsuit against Website/YouTube, while ''Series/TheColbertReport'' ends some episodes with an advertisement to "watch every clip ever!" online.
211* ''Series/ICarly'':
212** Carly and her friends don't seem to have a problem with it but they use anti-piracy laws to get one of their {{Sadist Teacher}}s arrested.
213** Referenced in another episode, where Carly's apartment is used as a base when police investigate a nearby store allegedly selling pirated movies. Turns out they were literally just {{pirate}} movies.
214* ''Series/TheYoungOnes'' used this trope in regards to TV license evasion, by having Vyvyan [[spoiler:eat the evidence]].
215* Presented with a patient who has shoved an [=MP3=] player up his ass, Series/{{House}} plays this for humor when he passes the dirty work on to Dr. Cuddy -- along with the message that the RIAA wants her to check for illegal downloads.
216* ''Series/{{Leverage}}:'' Hardison mentions having to route through three different satellites to get a decent signal and download the latest ''Series/DoctorWho'' torrent -- Parker turns on a lighter and says: "Hey... Illegal downloading is wrong!" Then she sets fire to a wastebasket inside a small van. This is especially ironic because Leverage is a gang of thieves and con men who repeatedly do things like ''steal from the Department of Defense.''
217* On ''Series/ThirtyRock'', Liz listed the things "I don't do", which included "I don't download music without paying for it." Averted in "Believe in the Stars," where Jack tries to prove there's a limit to Kenneth's IncorruptiblePurePureness. Jack ''is'' eventually able to entice him to steal his neighbors' cable, which remains pretty much the only bad thing Kenneth ever did on the show. Even [[OurAngelsAreDifferent immortal]] [[ThePollyanna Pollyannas]] can be tempted by ''WesternAnimation/SpongeBobSquarePants''.
218* One episode of ''Series/LawAndOrderCriminalIntent'' edges into this, although it's a bit more complicated than that; it involves organized crime running a DVD bootlegging operation and killing a former member because he tried to go around them to set up his own side business.
219* When stealing files from a villain in ''Series/BurnNotice'' Michael Weston's scene narration explains the easiest way to get files out of a guarded building is to put them on the Internet via a free file host. The downside being the files would be accessible to anyone online, but most of them don't care as they're only on it looking for the latest music CD making this a pretty safe way to go about it. It's hard to tell if this is for or against file sharing, but given how many [[ArsonMurderAndJaywalking other blatantly illegal things Michael does...]]
220** It's perfectly confidential to use a public host if you use strong encryption and give the files a cryptic, or better yet, misleading filename. To the Average Joe it will look like they are corrupted or fakes (common with just released movies and games, made by the studios and Internet trolls to annoy the would-be pirates).
221** Let's just say if your mom gets honored at a police reception for reporting all the cars you stole, the "you wouldn't steal a car" analogy is going to [[AnalogyBackfire fall a bit flat]].
222* ''Series/{{Seinfeld}}'':
223** One episode had Kramer convince Jerry to get an illegal cable hookup. Jerry subsequently has a dream where he's busted, and is shot hundreds of times while trying to make a run for it, dying in Kramer's arms.
224---> "[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=yKlxy1ZFhMA What have you done to my little cable boy?!]]"
225** In "The Tiny Kicks", Kramer gives an opening night pass ticket to a movie to a "friend" who videotapes the movie off the screen for street sales. When he takes ill, Jerry is forced into finishing the taping... and does such a good job that he is given other assignments.
226* In one ''Series/{{Ghostwriter}}'' StoryArc, the villain turns out to be a VHS tape pirate (his case isn't helped by having started a fire earlier).
227* In ''Series/{{Bones}}'' The team learns that their boss once was in a 70s blaxploitation flick and absolutely have to get their hands on a copy, but the film is out of print. The following dialogue ensues:
228--> '''Angela''': I thought you said this was out of print.
229--> '''Hodgins''': You're telling me you have millions of dollars of computer equipment, and you can't rustle up a copy of ''Invasion of the Mother-Suckers''?
230--> '''Angela''': ...I'm on it.
231** She ends up contacting the director via email, who finds the last remaining print in his garage, and sends it to her by mail.
232* In ''Series/{{Caprica}}'', Daniel Greystone invented the holonet, which is exactly what it sounds like--a virtual reality, holographic Internet. Greystone Industries had huge problems with digital piracy and people finding all sorts of loopholes to get free access, which they tried to stop to no avail. While on a talk show with his wife, Daniel has an epiphany, and declares that the basic service will now be completely free. When his board tries to vote him out, he explains his reasoning: They were already losing. By fighting the inevitable, they only painted themselves as the bad guys. By making it free, they generated ''massive'' amounts of good will. The board votes in favor of keeping him as CEO.
233* On ''{{Series/Wiseguy}}'', the OCB treats Winston Newquay's record bootlegging operations with the same seriousness with which they approached Mel Profitt's drug empire or Rick Pinzolo's labor racketeering.
234* [[http://www.cnbc.com/crime-inc-hollywood-robbery/ An episode of the documentary television series Crime, Inc]] (not to be confused with the 1945 film Film/CrimeInc) on CNBC explores the effect of digital and media piracy (though thankfully in a non-Anvilicious manner). While it is true that many works of commercial fiction such as movies and video games can be worth millions and that the actors/voice actors, directors, and other high ranking producers involved may make a big paycheck (and [[{{Anvilicious}} thus are notoriously used as]] {{Straw Character}}s by pro-piracy individuals to mock traditional consumers) and thus their incomes will not be in jeopardy, however claiming that piracy doesn't harm anyone is not accurate. The episode also shows how the unsung contributors who don't get to be on screen (e.g. stunt performers, camera men/women, editors, and other computer specialists) to be a very considerable part (and in most cases more so than well known celebrities) of movies' and games' production, but don't get paid anywhere near the amount of big name individuals, depend on the income they get for their work that goes unseen by the general public that is now lost because of illegal online sharing.
235* Discussed in detail in [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=DRdw15eWOgY a segment]] of ''Series/TheWeeklyWithCharliePickering'', which included two clips of then-Communications Minister Malcolm Turnbull making contradictory arguments - in one he argued that piracy would stop if Australians could get their media on time and affordably, in the other, he argued that the entertainment industry needed to get aggressive about suing individual downloaders (while pointing emphatically at the camera).
236-->'''Charlie''': But which Malcolm is right? Happy Malcolm, or Pointy Malcolm? And isn't there some sort of Series/{{Malcolm in the middle}}?
237* Minus the "digital" part, this is the key trope for ''Series/TheDukesOfHazzard'''s [[Recap/TheDukesOfHazzardS1E2DaisysSong very own second episode]], since we see [[spoiler:Boss Hogg's bootleg record operation]] in action. [[JustifiedTrope Justified]] in that Daisy is being [[spoiler:conned out of her legitimately-owned royalty earnings]].
238** In the same fashion, there is a [[Recap/TheDukesOfHazzardS4E14TheSoundOfMusicHazzardStyle 4th season episode]] in which we see [[spoiler:Hogg's bootleg operation]] in action again as [[spoiler:country star Mickey Gilley performs a major concert at the Hazzard Town Square]]. [[spoiler:Boss uses the opportunity to confer with record pirates to record the concert and sell records on the black market, pining the fault on the Dukes]].
239* ''Series/{{Frasier}}'': In "Roe to Perdition", Frasier and Niles board a freighter to buy caviar that's implied to have been smuggled out of Russia. As they're closing the deal, U.S. Customs agents storm the ship, causing Frasier and Niles to panic about being arrested. Turns out the agents were just looking for some pirated [=DVD=]s being smuggled on the same ship and have no interest in the caviar.
240* The 2000 Creator/{{MTV}} Video Music Awards featured [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=aQc0x5E9jOc a skit]] starring Lars Ulrich of Music/{{Metallica}} in which a {{fratbro}} played by Creator/MarlonWayans is downloading Metallica's songs off of Napster. When Lars enters his room and challenges him on it, and he responds that he's not stealing, just sharing, Lars decides that "sharing" sounds pretty cool. He brings in the rest of Metallica to "share" everything that this poor guy owns, taking his soda, his computer, his clothes, his car, and [[EmasculatedCuckold his girlfriend]]. (Napster creator Shawn Fanning was also at the [=VMAs=] and [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_q0Z3gBActg responded in kind,]] wearing a Metallica shirt that he claimed a friend "shared" with him and stepping out on stage to the tune of "For Whom the Bell Tolls" to introduce a performance by Music/BritneySpears.)
241* Discussed in an [[https://archive.org/details/Software1985 episode]] of ''Series/TheComputerChronicles'' where representatives from both the software industry and a warez group cracker known only by his alias "Frankie Mouse" were present each giving their side of the story.
242[[/folder]]
243
244[[folder:Music]]
245* Illegal, or at least unauthorized, transcription of someone else's music is actually OlderThanRadio. Much like how blurry mobile-phone recordings of your favorite musical can now be found on [=YouTube=], {{opera}} was often the victim of this practice, with hawkers waiting outside the theatre to sell unauthorized sheet music to the audience. And there's also the story of a composer named Gregorio Allegri who wrote a gorgeous [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=IX1zicNRLmY 9-part choral piece]] in the 1630s, which Pope Urban VIII decreed should only be performed in the Art/SistineChapel a few times a year. And thus it remained until the 1770s, when some 14-year-old Austrian punk heard it, memorized it on the spot, and wrote it down, thus smuggling state secrets out of the Vatican. Amusingly enough, the current pope, Clement XIV, actually praised the kid for his talent. The miscreant's name? Music/WolfgangAmadeusMozart.
246* Averted by Music/NineInchNails. Trent Reznor has his own account on The Pirate Bay, [=seed0=], which he's used to upload live audio as well as the "Closure" DVD, and the formerly KeepCirculatingTheTapes "Broken" movie, a full-album music video.
247%%* Marvelously showcased by Bow Wow Wow in their 1980 single [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=6_R0Kvk7G9U C30 C60 C90 Go]].
248* The Music/{{Mastodon}} song that played at the beginning of ''WesternAnimation/AquaTeenHungerForce Colon Movie Film For Theaters'' was a parody of this: "If I see you videotaping this movie, Satan will rain down your throat with hot acid and dissolve your testicles and turn your guts into snakes! This is a copyrighted movie for Time Warner. If I find that you've sold it on eBay, I will break into your house and tear your wife IN HALF!!!!"
249* Parodied in Music/WeirdAlYankovic's "Don't Download This Song". Which he made available for downloading for free off [[http://www.myspace.com/weirdal his MySpace page]] several weeks before the album came out, thus ensuring the only way to hear it initially was to [[HypocriticalHumor download the song]]. The video which accompanies it is absolutely not to be missed... but [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=zGM8PT1eAvY how does one go about finding and watching a several-years-old music video]]?[[note]] The previous video we linked to was taken down...[[{{Irony}} for violating copyright.]][[/note]]
250** Amusingly, the version that's on MTV's music video site is actually edited to censor the names of the file sharing programs Al mentions in the song; the logic behind this was that if the video was to air on their network, MTV wouldn't want to be party to encouraging filesharing. (The video never aired on television, though -- at least not on MTV.) As of 2012, all the listed file-sharing sites are no longer in business.
251** A number of comments seemed to be ComicallyMissingThePoint and taking the song at face value.
252* Comedy writer and actor Adam Buxton created a song called "The Mind Of A Pirate", using bits of music from a bombastic piracy ad (the same one parodied in the above ''Series/TheITCrowd'' example) [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin that depicts "the mind of a pirate", who makes ridiculously evil statements about buying knock-off [=DVD=]s and downloading music.]] Interludes in the music involve TakeThat after TakeThat aimed at the entertainment industry and "artists" who are only interested in making music and movies for money. The pirate ends up destroying the world:
253-->''And at the end of days''\
254''I'll download ''Film/EndOfDays\
255''Though because it is an old one and could take quite a while''\
256''I might have to go and buy it anyway...''\
257''Which would be ironic.''
258* After an unfinished form of one of Music/SystemOfADown's albums was leaked under the name ''Toxicity II'', they changed the name to ''Steal This Album!'', and changed the art to look like it was a burned CD with the title hastily written in sharpie. It might also be a reference to the aforementioned ''Steal This Book''. They've since said [[DigitalPiracyIsOkay they don't care if fans pirate their music]] as long as it's the finished versions making the rounds. They were kind of pissed about the leak of the unfinished demos, however.
259* The debut album by Californian alt-rock band The Matches contained the message inside: "Unauthorised copying and distribution of this recording is a criminal offense... You rebel, you."
260* Parodied by The Lancashire Hotpots in "Deirdre".
261* Music/{{Current 93}} played this trope straight when they sent out promos of their latest album to reviewers, with an added notice at the beginning spoken by a [[CreepyChild little girl]]: "[[http://www.guardian.co.uk/music/2009/oct/15/illegal-file-sharing-promo-copies This is a promotional CD. Anyone illegally selling, copying, uploading or downloading this material is condemned to eternal hellfire. Happy listening, God is love.]]" It was creepy enough to make some people think twice about ripping the promos and putting them up for download before the album came out. From that same article:
262-->"Illegal downloads are making it unfeasible for bands like Current 93, who put out their own material, to continue. One loses a little of your soul when you exploit someone in that way. Once your soul has gone, you are in hell."
263* Sabaton's ''Art of War'' album includes a bonus track called "A Secret", which is broadly interpreted as a joke directed at music pirates.
264* Princess F - "Internet Kills The Eurobeat Stars", on ''Super Eurobeat vol 202'' and the eponymous Hi-NRG Attack compilation.
265* The original warning on Music/MyChemicalRomance's "I Brought You My Bullets..." threatened to have Gerard come to your house and suck your blood for making illegal copies of the album.
266** Eyeball Records re-released the album a few years later, with a less exciting warning.
267* A TakeThat: Doc (Sweden) released a single "[[http://www.jamendo.com/en/album/41566 Pirate Bay]]" containing samples cut from audio material from the Pirate Bay trial, with a comment: "for years Pirate Bay has served netlabel Musictrade as a great global distribution platform" (he's on Musictrade). Now with [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4hx9HKZBXiQ video]]. Also releasing it on torrents.
268* After the Napster lawsuit, Johnny Crass made a TakeThat song against Metallica with a parody of their hit song "Enter Sandman" called [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iNLw6XFOwCE "Internet Sandman"]].
269--> Now I lay Lars down to sleep
270--> I pray his copyrights to keep
271--> If he gets poor before he wakes
272--> He'll have to sell fries and shakes
273* Noel Gallagher hasn't expressed much criticism on piracy, but after Music/{{Oasis}}' ''Heathen Chemistry'' was leaked, he introduced a song with "[[http://www.mtv.com/news/articles/1453651/20020429/oasis.jhtml off our new album, you thieving bastards]]". Proving his point right, the audience sung along to all the new songs (making him say at the end of the concert "thank you all for coming, and for stealing the fucking album").
274* Done in true tongue-in-cheek gangsta style by Music/IceT:
275--> Chillin' in my crib cold VCR dubbin'\
276FBI warnin'? Huh, don't mean nothin.
277* Music/CamperVanBeethoven's David Lowery has come out pretty strongly against digital piracy (see blog posts [[http://www.davidlowerymusic.com/300songsblog.cfm?feature=1650209&postid=1769157 here]] and [[http://thetrichordist.wordpress.com/2012/04/08/meet-the-new-boss-worse-than-the-old-boss-part-1/ here]]). That said, his position chiefly applies to the unauthorized sharing of commercially released material - Camper Van Beethoven and Cracker both have open taping policies for their shows, and he's included [=MP3=]s of studio outtakes and album versions of songs alike on his own 300 Songs Blog.
278* iPod disclaimer: "Please don't steal music!"
279* Music/{{Turisas}} commented on this in their song "Hunting Pirates", which otherwise might as well be read as a song about, well, hunting {{Pirate}}s.
280* Printed on the CD of (The) Music/{{Melvins}}' ''(A) Senile Animal'' is a rather different version of the typical FBI Warning. [[PoesLaw It's ambiguous]] as to whether it's meant as an over-the-top parody of the normal warning, an expression of the band's actual thoughts on piracy, or something in between:
281--> FBI Anti Piracy Warning: Unauthorized Copying is punishable under federal law. So don't do it or the FBI will come and get you and then your life will be ruined and it won't be anyone's fault but your own so don't go trying to blame someone else for your reckless disregard for the legal system. Your sense of entitlement is astonishing and it will inevitably be your downfall if you don't grow up and take responsibility for your actions.
282* Music/MCFrontalot has a song called "Charity Case" in which he literally begs his listeners to buy his music so he won't starve.
283--> It's true!\
284Frontalot's destitute!
285--> I need you..to buy my CD so I can buy food!
286* The disclaimer on the back of the Music/AllTimeLow album So Wrong It's Right says this:
287-->Unauthorized duplicators will have their homes [[KillItWithFire burned to the ground]] by the band.
288* Music/DiabloSwingOrchestra's albums ''Sing Along Songs for the Damned & Delirious'' and ''Pandora's Piñata'' both have a notice on the back cover: "Unauthorized duplication, while sometimes necessary, is never as good as the real thing."
289* Music/DanielAmos' ''Dig Here Said the Angel'' has a message right after the copyright notice: "Please don't copy, share, or bootleg this recording. This is how we feed our families. Thank you."
290* This is the essence of "Dream Thieves" by Music/SonataArctica
291* Sometime after the release of ''Everblack'', [[Music/TheBlackDahliaMurder Trevor Strnad]] posted a lengthy diatribe on the band's Facebook page about how downloading only hurt them. Not only were downloaders not "sticking it to the man" by downloading their material, but they actually had the potential to jeopardize their standing with the label if downloading sufficiently weakened their sales to the point that they had reason to believe that they were becoming old news, which could mean anything from reduced support to being dropped altogether. Trevor also went on to state that yes, they ''did'' make enough to live comfortably, but that they were nowhere near rich and still needed to work their asses off for that money.
292* {{Music/Brentalfloss}}'s ''Bits of Me'' album was circulating on torrent sites for over half a year. What pirates were unaware of when they got this album, though, was that they got [[https://brentalfloss.bandcamp.com/album/bits-of-me-pirated-edition this]] instead. The actual album is also on Brent's Bandcamp, should you want to buy it.
293* Putridity made a rather irritated post on their Facebook page that was aimed at Indonesian fans who were bootlegging their merch telling them that they weren't happy with unofficial merch and that they needed to go to the Willowtip Records webstore if they wanted the real deal. This is apparently quite a common thing for death metal acts to experience; "Indonesians are bootlegging our merch" is something that you'll hear from more than a few acts who have been around for long enough.
294* Peter Gabriel semi-subverts this; he's never come out and supported music piracy, but he feels current punishments are far too severe and that the current outlets for selling music are simply not working. He's also been vocal in opposing laws such as SOPA.
295* Certain tracks on promotional copies of Music/{{Alestorm}}'s ''Black Sails at Midnight'' open with a voice-over of the vocalist saying [[TalkLikeAPirate "Yarrr, you’re listening to the new Alestorm album, Black Sails at Midnight... remember, piracy is a crime!"]], presumably in order to discourage the sharing of these tracks. Pretty weird that they try to combat pirates, considering that the band is pirate-themed.
296* Music/{{Cormorant}} subverts this, having no beef with pirates but preferring that they support the band at some point, but this trope is PlayedForLaughs on a joke Facebook post:
297--> ''Attempting to illegally let your friends hear the new Cormorant album while in your home will cause your computer to explode.''
298* This trope is criticized in "Download This Song" by MC Lars.
299* How does Music/{{Kiss}} feel about it? Gene Simmons has said he wants anyone who downloads music to be thrown in prison for life. [[MoneyDearBoy He's not making money from people who do that for free, of course he would have such a stance]].
300* Done in a tongue-in-cheek manner by [[Music/{{Oasis}} Liam Gallagher]], who made his own tea in an online video and said that he used to have four people who'd do it for him in the '90s. Unfortunately, smartasses who illegally download records have resulted in him having to do it on his own, and that is why there are no real rock and roll stars anymore.
301* The Bob Rivers song "I Want My [=MP3=]", a parody of Music/DireStraits' "Money for Nothing", is a satire on illegally downloading music.
302-->That ain't crooked, everybody's doin' it. Let me tell you, them kids ain't dumb.\
303They don't give a rip about their favorite singer. They just keep ripping off their songs.
304* Zig-zagged in the Music/ForegroundEclipse song "Angels, Monsters, The Secret Lyrics". It calls out people who listen to the song on [=YouTube=] or Nicovideo, but makes an exception for people who live overseas and can't buy {{doujin|shi}} [=CDs=].
305* "Home Taping is Killing Music" was the pre-Internet version of this trope. The cassette of ''In God We Trust, Inc'' by Music/DeadKennedys has this message on side two:
306--> Home taping is killing record industry profits! We left this side blank so you can help.
307:: [[https://flic.kr/p/4KWc4H Here's a picture]].
308* The Music/{{Horslips}} subverted this one with a banner "advert" across the gatefold of an early LP that said, in large unfriendly letters in the same font as "HOME TAPING IS KILLING MUSIC":
309--> ''You can not, shall not, must not, will not, et c. If in doubt, consult your dealer.''
310* Music/{{Metallica}} -- more specifically, drummer/co-founder Lars Ulrich -- became notorious in the early 2000's for their hardline stance against peer-to-peer downloading, to the point of ([[PyrrhicVictory technically successfully]]) suing Napster. Ulrich and the band have chilled out on digital media significantly in the following decades (from releasing music on streaming platforms and giving free digital copies to concert attendees) but the sheer unpopularity of their crusade led to [[StreisandEffect even more of their songs becoming downloaded]], not to mention [[TakeThat many potshots throughout pop media]].
311* Music/{{Eminem}} has frequently expressed his frustration with piracy of his music, but he's also said he isn't mad at anyone for doing it because "if I'd had the Internet as a kid I'd have been all on that shit".
312** "I'm Shady":
313--->People don't buy shit no more, they just dub it\
314That's why I'm still broke and had the number-one club hit
315** One of the humiliations Slim Shady was going to dish out to Music/ChristinaAguilera in "The Real Slim Shady" was to 'download your audio on [=MP3=]'.
316** In "Roman's Revenge", he pisses on a [[{{Metaphorgotten}} metaphorical (?) woman]] in revenge for her pirating his music.
317* Members of Music/{{Skinless}} revealed during an interview promoting their 2015 album, ''Only The Ruthless Remain'', that they were not only aware of the supposed pirate copy of the album already widely circulating among online DeathMetal communities, but had even listened in...and found it was actually their 2003 album ''From Sacrifice To Survival''[[note]]considered an AudienceAlienatingEra by the fans and subject to heavy CreatorBacklash by the band's current members as well as Music/{{Origin}}'s John Longstreth, who played drums on the album[[/note]] with ''Ruthless'''s track titles digitally bolted on the front. Their demeanor during this could easily be described as "amused", although they declined to state whether they themselves had anything to do with the mix-up.
318* Music/TheEraserheads were featured in the Joey de Leon comedy film ''Run Barbi Run'', with a subplot involving their efforts at cracking down on a crime syndicate who were bootlegging their music. Around that time, illicit duplication of cassette tapes and [=CDs=] was rampant in developing countries such as the Philippines and Indonesia, hence why record labels and artists themselves took action to curb on pirating.
319* The controversial BlackMetal band Music/{{Gorgoroth}}--whose stage image and ideology is openly supportive of Satanism--has been very vocal against fan transcriptions of their songs' lyrics and has sent cease-and-desist letters against those trafficking said lyrics, also expressing their [[FanworkBan disdain]] towards the prospect of third parties covering their music for some reason.
320[[/folder]]
321
322[[folder:Podcasts]]
323* Podcast/RiffTrax averts it with a donation page that can be summed up as "we know you've probably at least had the opportunity to grab our stuff without paying -- it's the Internet, these things happen, toss us a few bucks here and we'll call it even."
324[[/folder]]
325
326[[folder:Tabletop Games]]
327* ''TabletopGame/FearItself'', a horror RPG, includes as part of its character creation process, asking the player to name the worst his character has ever done. The last example given is "illegally downloaded a role playing game off the Internet, depriving starving writers of their rightfully deserved income."
328[[/folder]]
329
330[[folder:Video Games]]
331* In pirated copies of ''VideoGame/{{RUMU}}'', at the end of the first act, the character Sabrina will lecture the player for pirating the game. The game will close, and a browser window to the game's Steam page will open.
332* In ''VideoGame/Hitman2SilentAssassin'', specifically the mission "Tunnel Rat", you will find your target (an Afghani arms dealer) in a back room, checking out his stash of contraband. The target will be in his closet admiring his pirated copies of ''Hitman''.
333* The ''VideoGame/TalesOf'' series has anti-piracy messages at the start of some of their games; when the game is booted up, a character will come on screen and talk about they're relying on the player to keep the industry alive, et al.
334* ''VideoGame/UltimaVIIPartII'' has, in addition to several of the regular kind, a nefarious Software Pirate.
335* SNK made a knowing wink to their own piracy problems (from Chinese bootleggers, primarily) in ''VideoGame/NeoGeoBattleColiseum'', where the evil organization hosting the tournament is called WAREZ.
336* In the pirated version of ''VideoGame/BatmanArkhamAsylum'', Batman's glider cape will stop working after a set point, making the game {{unwinnable}}. This yielded an epic moment where one pirate asked on Rocksteady's forums how to fix the "bug" and was told [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech "It's not a bug in the game's code, it's a bug in your]] ''[[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech moral]]'' [[TheReasonYouSuckspeech code."]] This ultimately backfired when the buggy behavior starting cropping up in legitimate copies.
337* ''VideoGame/CommandAndConquerRedAlert2'' has a rather hilarious and mean one, if the game detects it's been pirated, then, no matter what, a few seconds after starting any map, your units, buildings and everything will EXPLODE. Resulting in an instant loss.
338** This also occasionally happened on non-pirated versions of the game, even after weeks of being installed and running normally until the software checks started failing without obvious cause.
339* Parodied in ''VideoGame/{{Iji}}'' where the [[FunWithAcronyms Komato Imperial Weapons Industry]] claim that pirating weapons by combining two other nanotechnology weapons through cracking instead of paying their exorbitant prices is akin to high treason.
340** Three crackers find ways to circumvent weaponry DRM, and have the bright idea of ''publishing them''. Guess what happens when the crazy alien with a stolen nanogun finds them?
341*** She takes great pains [[PacifistRun not to hurt them]]?
342** Since they were cracking down on the crackers before the events of ''Iji'', where the crazy alien with the stolen nanogun wasn't an issue so much. Furthermore, KIWI's prices for the cracked weapons were ''ridiculous''; in one example, it'd be some ''32 times cheaper'' to buy the two weapons needed as components and crack them than buying it from KIWI.
343* Oddly subverted in the Scholastic ''Microzine'' video game ''Pirates of the Soft Seas.'' The player is welcomed into a software pirate crew and seeks to help them steal video games. What's really strange is that this involves ''physically stealing computer discs,'' which would typically be considered a much worse crime.
344* ''VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosForNintendo3DSAndWiiU'' was originally slated to have a story mode like the Subspace Emissary from ''[[VideoGame/SuperSmashBrosBrawl Brawl]]'', but the idea was scrapped when Creator/MasahiroSakurai determined it would be pointless, since those who wanted to see the story could see the cutscenes uploaded to Website/YouTube in lieu of actually buying the game. Instead, he decided to use [=YouTube=] to hype up the new game with trailers for each new character.
345* ''VideoGame/SpyroYearOfTheDragon'', if you are playing a cracked copy, has Zoe the Fairy appearing at the latter part of Sunrise Spring telling you that [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3ZnCcOe59CY your copy is hacked and may be an illegal copy, which will lead you to experience "problems" you would not experience on a legal copy]].
346** The game also features a "save file erasure" thing similar to ''VideoGame/EarthBound1994'', although in a more subtle manner: instead of just taking you back to an empty "select your save file" screen, it stops the boss battle against the Sorceress and then a travel-between-worlds Saving-LoadingScreen appears, and after it, you return back to the Sunrise Spring Home with your hot air balloon, with the only difference that your save file has been written with a new status - namely, a fat zero over everything you can collect. To sum it up, instead of erasing your save file, the game resets it back to the beginning. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZT9O62ZNQSU&feature=related You can see it here.]]
347* In the DOS days, Creator/{{id Software}} used to have some very creative anti-piracy messages on their exit screens. For ''VideoGame/{{Doom}}'', the message read like this:
348-->"If you haven't paid for DOOM, you are playing illegally. That means you owe us money. Of course, a guy like you probably owes a lot of people money -- your friends, maybe even your parents. Stop being a freeloader and register DOOM. Call us now at 1-800-IDGAMES. We can help!"
349** Similarly in the older ''VideoGame/Wolfenstein3D'':
350--->Hope this is your registered copy of Wolfenstein 3-D. If not, then we've got a problem. We need you to call Apogee and register. If you don't, well, [[ShameIfSomethingHappened it's funny how hard drives can get--you know--erased and all]]. I'd be a-registerin', if I was you.
351** Raven Software did the same as well, for instance from the full version of ''VideoGame/{{Heretic}}'':
352--->"For those of you who have paid for SHADOW OF THE SERPENT RIDERS, we hope it made all your nightmares come true.\
353If you have NOT paid for SHADOW OF THE SERPENT RIDERS, call 1-800-IDGAMES and register this game, or we'll send a Maulotaur out to visit you."
354* In ''VideoGame/VampireTheMasqueradeBloodlines'', the main character encounters a seer early in the game and can ask her questions, which she answers vaguely and cryptically. But if asked "Will I win in the end" she replies something along the lines of "It doesn't matter if you win or lose the game, the important thing is if you've bought it."
355* ''VideoGame/{{Neptunia}}'' has Platform/NintendoDS flashcarts (and Custom Firmware) as the BigBad. Yes, this trope is applied literally InUniverse, and even justified: the patron goddess of each console grows weaker if they lose market share, and nobody benefits from pirate sales.
356** ''[[VideoGame/HyperdimensionNeptuniaMk2 mk2]]'' and ''[[VideoGame/HyperdimensionNeptuniaVictory Victory]]'' continue the theme. By ''Victory'', you have a council of villains including members with names like Pirachu (an intentionally obvious [[Franchise/{{Pokemon}} Pikachu]] knockoff) and Copypaste.
357* In ''VideoGame/ShinMegamiTenseiStrangeJourney'', you can try and convince demons to join your party if they like you enough. They randomly ask what your hi-tech helmet does, and one of the possible answers is that it plays [[UsefulNotes/ReadOnlyMemory ROMs]] easily. If you choose this answer, the demon proceeds to call you "worse than a demon" before instantly attacking you.
358* Not so much evil, but in ''VideoGame/NoMoreHeroes'', Diane from Beef Head Video Store calls Travis at the beginning of every new assassination chapter to remind him to return one of the various pornos he rented. In one call, she kindly tells Travis that one of the videos he returned to the store was a copy of one of their videos (he kept the real one). The recording ends a short while into the video. Diane asks Travis to ''please'' return the original copy.
359* The cells in the police station in ''VideoGame/PoliceQuest1InPursuitOfTheDeathAngel'' hold a great big ScaryBlackMan. His crime? Video game piracy, naturally.
360* ''VideoGame/JaggedAlliance: Deadly Games'' features a mission where you raid a shack of armed software pirates, recovering the master CD of the game you are playing.
361* The manuals for each of Bungie's ''VideoGame/{{Marathon}}'' installments had a "Please don't pirate!" disclaimer.
362* ''VideoGame/SeriousSam 3: BFE'' has possibly the greatest DRM ever - if it detects your game is pirated, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=e91q5BtlxK0 the game will summon an unkillable, impossibly fast pink Arachnoid]] to hunt you down and kill you in the first level.
363** There's another layer to this protection, if you make it to the third level at some point it will make the player aim to the left and upward at the maximum possible speed, basically leaving them spinning in place and helpless as it is exceedingly difficult to counter. This protection is also used in some of the HD re-releases of the older games in the series.
364* ''VideoGame/Borderlands2'' parodies this attitude with the questgiving NPC Censorbot, a Hyperion loader obsessed with conservative values and, obviously, censorship in particular. The second quest he gives you sends you to a literal pirate den, where you kill pirates and collect physical copies of their pirated "ECHO sims"; Censorbot feels death is the only appropriate punishment for their crime, and openly wishes all DRM could simply shoot the user in the face.
365* Pirated copies of ''VideoGame/{{Rogue}}'' [[CopyProtection increase the monster damage sixfold]], and upon death, the player's tombstone lists their name as "Software Pirate" and the cause of death as "Killed by the Copy Protection Mafia".
366* If ''VideoGame/MirrorsEdge'' thinks that you have a pirated copy of the game, it decides to slow Faith to a crawl at the most crucial of moments, such as building up speed to clear a big jump, effectively making the game impossible to play. [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=_fI6cVBD9Ok See it in all its glory(?) here]].
367* If you downloaded a pirated copy of ''VideoGame/FarCry4'', you will be stuck with a low FOV with no ability to adjust it to your preference. When players flooded complaints about the FOV on Ubisoft's forum and on Reddit, [[http://www.eurogamer.net/articles/2014-11-19-far-cry-4-users-complain-about-lack-of-fov-controls-reveal-themselves-to-have-pirated-game Alex Hutchinson (the game's director) tweeted that they are accidentally revealing that they pirated the game.]]
368* In ''VideoGame/PokemonFireRedAndLeafGreen'', an anti piracy message that says "By the way, if you like this game, buy it or die" will activate by using a Seagallop Ferry when playing a dumped ROM version of the game. Ironically, this was actually added in by the hackers that dumped the ROM originally, and isn't in the official game code.
369* The Platform/{{Amiga}} game ''Lionheart'' had an "Info" screen questioning whether a game for "a pirate tormented machine" that took "four young and idealistic, but nevertheless PAID people" 16 months of effort to make would be able to pay off its development costs, and warning people who copied the game, "I hope you won't run around complaining that there are no good action titles for your machine anymore. Not we decide to quit developing those for the Amiga. You do. You did." Unfortunately, the prediction that ''Lionheart'' might be "the last action game by Thalion" proved correct, as Thalion folded the next year; fortunately, programmer Erwin Kloibhofer and graphic designer Henk Nieborg went on to develop similar games for other systems at Creator/{{Psygnosis}}.
370* ''VideoGame/GuitarHero'' - PlayedForLaughs. The description for the pirate (the kind that sails the high seas) themed guitar says "We all love pirates. That is, until they start sending illegal copies of your music throughout the Internet."
371* ''VideoGame/GameDevTycoon'' turns the tables on people who play pirated copies of the game [[LaserGuidedKarma by having your in-game customers pirate the games you make in the game]], eventually making the game UnwinnableByDesign. The proper game has a (one-off) piracy event where you can do nothing about it or try to sue. A later update introduced "Pirate Mode", where the player's games are pirated on a regular basis, but the player can implement CopyProtection in order to slow them down.
372* Parodied in ''VideoGame/CharlieMurder''. TheRival, Gore Quaffer, has an IT guy who pirates Charlie Murder's albums... on-board a literal pirate ship no less.
373* The Platform/{{Amiga}} BeatEmUp ''VideoGame/FrankoTheCrazyRevenge'' was developed in early-1990s Poland, where software piracy was not yet illegal. However, developers World Software found a way to get back at pirates regardless: at the end of the second level, you must beat up the real-life owner of a pirate software store in Szczecin, where the developers lived!
374* If your copy of ''VideoGame/{{Skullgirls}}'' is pirated, it will print the nonsense message "What is the square root of a fish? Now I'm sad." on the title screen. This became famous when a player accidentally outed himself as a pirate by [[https://web.archive.org/web/20190426235728/https://www.geek.com/games/game-dev-uses-brilliant-psychological-trick-to-make-pirate-reveal-himself-1598912/ asking the dev team about it]] on Website/{{Twitter}}.
375* Game programmers can get livid about their creations being distributed illegally by pirates. They can leave angry rants hidden in the code, for instance. One programmer, Richard Aplin, decided instead to mock the pirates' SmallNameBigEgo personalities by writing [[https://tcrf.net/Final_Fight_(Amiga)#Developer_Message a rant hidden in the code]] of the Platform/{{Amiga}} version of ''VideoGame/FinalFight'', which opens:
376-->Ok. Remember Line Of Fire? Here we go again, crackers! Fill in the blanks:\
377(Loads of pointless ANSI codes and whizzy animated bits)\
378_____ of _____ presents the latest in Hot Warez..\
379Final Fight ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++ 14925%!\
380Cracked, Trained, Nobbed-Up and ½-parted by the amazing _______!!!\
381Call our UK HQ on ____-______ for 1.4Tetrabytes of warez stored on Sinclair Microdrive, on-line 25hrs a minute, 75-19.2Gigabaud.
382* Nintendo is infamous for having an immense hatred for piracy, and has had a history of litigation against companies or entities engaged in unauthorised distribution of their software. In 2018 they sued ROM download sites [=LoveROMs=] and [=LoveRetro=] for offering ROM images of popular Nintendo games, going so far as to demanding ''hundreds of millions'' worth of damages. Despite piracy being a contentious issue at best, the suits didn't sit well with the gaming public, who equated Nintendo's heavy-handed actions to bullying.
383** It is reported that Nintendo once had an anti-counterfeit campaign in real life: at an Netherlands airport in 1994, a steamroller was publicly destroying confiscated Nintendo games (imported from Hong Kong), with a cosplayer in Mario costume also joining in.
384** It has gotten to the point where Nintendo purposely refuses to launch their services and Android games in countries that has black marks for piracy, for example, VideoGame/AnimalCrossingPocketCamp - a freemium Android game of all things. When asked why the game wasn't launched in Malaysia among many others, for example, Nintendo got their spokesperson to go on a long tirade about how the country's home to piracy and unauthorized modding and gloating that they will launch the game in those countries when the people stop pirating[[note]]While it is undeniable that piracy exists in the country, it's mostly confined to the older generation with their nationalist anti-western, anti-Japanese attitude who feel it fair to give The Man the finger for treating them like slaves during the British colonial and Japanese rule, and this generation are dying out. In the meantime, the younger generation who're much more well educated go all out to buy original, which is clearly reflected in many polls and researches held in the country[[/note]]. Naturally, the true fans of the franchise who has never ever illegally downloaded the games are very angry, especially [[AnalogyBackfire since piracy is also happening in other countries that the game is launched in]][[note]]Very notably in Italy where music from the game were stolen wholesale and put into kiddie rides, and the Americas where all the "unauthorized modding" (ie cracks to get unlimited leaf ticket) originates[[/note]]. It's also hurting the sales of their hardware in the countries that were accused of piracy and thus denied of their services.
385** During the Platform/GameBoyAdvance era, a line of Game Boy Advance Video cartridges were made for the titular handheld console. These were white cartridges that contained full movies (including ''WesternAnimation/Shrek1'', ''WesternAnimation/Shrek2'', and ''WesternAnimation/SharkTale'') and television show episodes, compressed to fit the GBA's hardware limitations. These cartridges were incompatible with the Platform/NintendoGamecube's Platform/GameBoyPlayer accessory, as they would simply boot to a "Not Compatible with Game Boy Player" screen and lock up, preventing anyone from recording footage from the cartridges using a VCR for the purpose of selling bootleg VHS tapes. Even if one does manage to get the cartridges working on the GBA Player via hacking, the larger screen does not do any favors for the low video quality.
386* Pirated copies of ''[[VideoGame/{{Dirt}} DiRT: Showdown]]'' are perfectly playable........so long as you didn't mind random strings of text, like opponent names, being replaced with pirate-speak (eg. YARRRRR).
387* ''Bucky O'Hare'' on NES is already a NintendoHard game normally, but pirated copies of the game would be defaulted to an even harder difficulty setting where one hit will instantly kill you.
388* Parodied in pirated copies of ''VideoGame/JustShapesAndBeats'', where the game [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WNT5Knu7Xdw admonishes you]] in a parody of the "You Wouldn't Steal A Car" PSA. Then a message from Lachhh (one of the developers) plays telling you he's also pirated games and to enjoy the game and support the developers through words.
389-->DOWNLOADING PIRATED GAMES '''IS STEALING!'''\
390STEALING IS AGAINST '''THE LAW!'''
391* ''VideoGame/FairyBloomFreesia'': The manual ends with a warning of Freesia doing violence to the pirate:
392--> This product is licensed for use by the purchaser only. Distribution by file sharing programs such as [=P2P=], [=BitTorrent=], etc. is strictly prohibited and we will send Freesia your way to punch your face into oblivion.
393* One open source dev, chrisps, suddenly had this rationale and proceeded to add an anti-piracy measure to an emulator of all things. The Canary branch of the Platform/Xbox360 emulator Xenia got a brief update near the end of July 2023 where loading a game's ISO (a common file format for game [=ROMs=]) would cause it to [[SensoryAbuse let out a high-pitched beep]] (funnily enough, only on Windows, so other OS users were spared). All because the emulator's Discord server [[ApathyKilledTheCat got swamped with users asking about piracy]], while also (accidentally) dragging in the ones that did dump their own copies since they also use the same format. The change was reverted, [[TheReasonYouSuckSpeech but not before the dev got several choice words from the users and other devs]].
394* A Game Boy emulator named no$gmb called out those that pirated the emulator (it was a paid software) in its readme. Never mind that its CopyProtection is basically malware.[[note]]Similar to the Xenia Canary mess above, it involved [[SensoryAbuse loud beeps]], but as mentioned before, this is triggered if the emulator was registered with a stolen registered key, not from attempting to load a game ROM. This is worse than the Xenia Canary example, in fact, as this locked down the user's computer unless the user ''[[ButtonMashing mashes the Space key 500 times]]'' (and a total of ''2,500 keystrokes'' are needed to stop it altogether).[[/note]]
395-->'''Readme:'''
396-->A message says ILLEGAL COPY and beeps whenever I turn on my computer!
397
398-->Yup, that's what happens to people like you. However, as that message said, you can still use your computer (after hitting space 500 times), and after doing that five times (ie. 2500 keystrokes alltogether) the program will assume that you have realized your fault, and delete your harddisk, no, no, just joking, it'll stop bothering you at that time.
399
400-->Additionally you are encouraged to report your actions to your local police office.
401
402-->Note: That happens -only- to people whom have actually stolen a registration key, not to normal registered or unregistered users.
403[[/folder]]
404
405[[folder:Web Animation]]
406* Website/YouTube's video about Copyright Infringement, starring none other than [[WebAnimation/HappyTreeFriends Russell]]!: [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=InzDjH1-9Ns&feature=relmfu]]
407* Parodied mercilessly by a ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' public service announcement, [[http://roosterteeth.com/archive/?id=112 "The RvBIAA"]]. Church and Sarge are complaining about people pirating ''WebAnimation/RedVsBlue'' instead of buying the DVD, with the other cast members trying to explain to them that A) it's already on the web for free, and B) they haven't released a DVD yet (which has since happened). In a later ''Creator/AchievementHunter'' video Geoff talked about originally having no issue with digital piracy until he discovered an entire series they had produced on torrent. Realizing the lost revenue from something they had put so much work into he abruptly found himself siding with the anti-piracy crowd.
408* A coked-up Pinkie Pie rants about digital piracy in the ''WebAnimation/PonyDotMov'' series, and asks passerby how ''they'd'' feel if musicians came in and stole their things.
409-->'''Octavia:''' I think I'd mostly just be confused?
410[[/folder]]
411
412[[folder:Web Comics]]
413* ''Webcomic/{{Slackerz}}'' parodied the "Don't copy that floppy!" ad to show us that [[http://theslackerz.com/index.php?nav=Comic&Page=71 when you copy a game]], you ''destroy the universe.''
414* Justified in ''Webcomic/MacHall''. [[http://machall.com/view.php?date=2002-08-15 A]] [[http://www.machall.com/view.php?date=2002-08-21 three]] [[http://www.machall.com/view.php?date=2002-08-30 strip]] arc, which points out that while anti-piracy measures may be inconvenient, all the blather pirates throw around doesn't change the fact that they'll pirate from ''anyone'', bad DRM or not. The strip was done in 2002, and still remains relevant.
415* One arc of ''HelpDesk'' followed a deal between the RIAA and [[FictionalCounterpart Ubersoft]], wherein pirates could confess their crimes and gain absolution in exchange for giving Ubersoft their personal data. And then one caller [[http://www.ubersoft.net/comic/hd/2003/09/exactly-wrong-kind-pirate confesses to raiding ships]]. And then Ubersoft and the RIAA get ''sued by the seafaring [[WeirdTradeUnion Pirate's Union]]'' for "violating their trademark and diluting the strength of their product line".
416* ''[[http://workhate.co.uk/?p=9 Captain Broadband]]'' exists solely to promote digital piracy, and comes off as a raving lunatic masquerading as a super hero. His usual adventures revolve round improving the flow of broadband (usually to download torrents),, getting angry at Internet Service Providers over the phone, and influencing innocent children to get their video games over the Internet rather than through legitimate retail stores.
417* ''Webcomic/QuentynQuinnSpaceRanger'' had an interplanetary MegaCorp that owned all copyrights up to brain-stripping elderly scientists and artists, at which point an alliance led by [[{{Utopia}} Empire of the Seven Systems]] declared war on them and shot their CEO out of a railgun at the moon. The name of that corporation, [[{{Anvilicious}} the R.I.A.A.]] (though it might ''be'' the RIAA; Earth is implied to be part of the Empire).
418* ''Webcomic/AntiheroForHire'' [[https://web.archive.org/web/20110301012130/http://antihero.keenspot.com/d/20090420.html mused]] on suddenly being strafed with ''mini-nuclear explosions'':
419-->'''Shadehawk:''' You returned that movie we rented, right?\
420'''[[PlayfulHacker Wrench]]:''' [[MostDefinitelyNotAVillain Rrright... rented. That's how I got that movie]].\
421'''Shadehawk:''' Well, it's not MPAA: ''they can't fly''.
422* ''Webcomic/PennyArcade'' seems to hold this view, evidenced [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2010/02/19/ here]] and [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2008/09/29/ here]]. Unusually, they lampoon the makers of DRM as well as the pirates, something the usual designers of stealth [[PublicServiceAnnouncement PSAs]] rarely do.
423** Considering the [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2008/09/24/ first part]] of the second example, [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/1999/02/03/ and some of the earliest strips]], they admit that it's somewhat ingrained into the gaming culture.
424** It's kind of a BrokenAesop, see: [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2003/09/12/ here]], [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2001/08/22/ here]] and [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2000/07/28/ here]]. Especially when [[http://www.penny-arcade.com/comic/2002/05/01/ getting your console modded]] usually violates the DMCA and/or any End User Agreements.
425* Webcomic/TheOatmeal's "I tried to watch ''Series/GameOfThrones'' and [[http://theoatmeal.com/comics/game_of_thrones this is what happened]]'', with a dose of GoodAngelBadAngel, shows how digital piracy can be justifiable.
426* Parodied in ''Webcomic/{{Raruto}}'' (parody of Naruto), where in a flashback the Third Bigboss [Hokage] goes to arrest a criminal who had been downloading [=CDs=] from the net. It turns out the criminal is Chochimaru [Orochimaru], and the Bigboss says: "Then all the stolen corpses, the murders... It was all your doing! I'm sort of glad you don't download music. It's a relief."
427* The ''Webcomic/ElectricWonderland'' comic "Shrooming With Shroomy" has a few scenes that promote this mindset while NJ, Aerynn, and Shroomy use the Internet to circulate some tapes that NJ's grandfather made of movies and shows that had recently become unavailable to stream. NJ and Aerynn have trouble deciding whether or not to adopt this attitude, since they know piracy has become illegal, but also that their business prevents old works from becoming forever lost to the public. [[spoiler: They stop circulating the tapes in the end, after the company holding official distribution rights to those movies and shows passes on the rights to someone more willing to keep those works available.]]
428* The premise of the web manga series, ''MusicMoralKeepers'' starring a music group who show the consequences of uploading and downloading music.
429* ''Webcomic/ExterminatusNow'': [[http://exterminatusnow.co.uk/2013-05-26/comic/the-phone-book-of-the-dead/horatio-von-googlyeyes-attorney/ Apparently]] Inquisitorial immunity that covers everything up to genocide doesn't include file-sharing charges.
430* ''Webcomic/AlienHandSyndrome'': [[http://ahs-comic.com/archive/page-110/ Here]], Mina feels guilty about downloading pirated comics, but she only does it because she was scared off visiting comic stores by a bad childhood experience. Erin seems to think piracy is OK even though she's rich and can afford all the comics she wants.
431* Kim Jung Hyun of ''Webcomic/WelcomeToRoom305'' berates his teenage sister for having manga downloads on her computer.
432* One ''Webcomic/DorkTower'' strip had Matt puzzled as to how his favourite game system was going bust when everyone he knew owned all their products. It turned out that nobody he knew had ''bought'' any of their products.
433[[/folder]]
434
435[[folder:Web Videos]]
436* [[InvertedTrope Inverted]] on the ''WebVideo/DrHorriblesSingAlongBlog'' DVD when the League warns you against using the DVD for non-evil purposes. Ripping the DVD reveals a screen reading "You ripped our DVD? How do you not fear us yet?"
437* Parodied in a viral video by Music/KidRock, where he not only states that he's alright with fans downloading his music, but urges them to steal ''anything'' they want so as to "level the playing field".
438* In this [[SarcasmMode incredibly well made]] [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=LZgeIReY04c public service announcement]] a master criminal is caught in the act of illegally downloading music (specifically trying to download the Foo Fighters) when our hero kicks down the door and arrests him with his trusty sidearm, a pair of staplers.
439* As one might expect given the nature of the series, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=pmjoPW7HfQI this]] ''WebVideo/LG15TheResistance'' promo vid averts this.
440* [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Q2tlHq7frRU This]] parody by [[http://www.hearseclub.com/SORPFILMS3/SORP_FILMS_HOME_3.htm SORP Films]] (Warning: NSFW)
441* ''WebVideo/MrCoatAndFriends'' spoofed this at [[http://thatfellowinthecoat.com/vaultingtinytoons.php the end of this video]].
442* Another parody: the first thing you see upon starting up the ''WebVideo/MarbleHornets'' DVD is: "Please don't copy this DVD. Or else [[Franchise/TheSlenderManMythos Slender Man]] will get you."[[note]]The message was added by the DVD editor without the permission of the creators, and they were actually rather pissed, not least because in ''MH'', [[IAmNotShazam he's called "the Operator," not Slender Man]].[[/note]]
443* Lampooned by the Creator/MontyPython crew, [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_embedded&v=OGqX-tkDXEk when they launched]] their official Website/YouTube channel:
444-->For 3 years you [=YouTubers=] have been ripping us off, taking tens of thousands of our videos and putting them on [=YouTube=]. Now the tables are turned. It's time for us to take matters into our own hands. We know who you are, we know where you live and we could come after you in ways too horrible to tell. But being the extraordinarily nice chaps we are, we've figured a better way to get our own back: We've launched our own Monty Python channel on [=YouTube=]. No more of those crap quality videos you've been posting. We're giving you the real thing - HQ videos delivered straight from our vault. What's more, we're taking our most viewed clips and uploading brand new HQ versions. And what's even more, we're letting you see absolutely everything for free. So there! But we want something in return. None of your driveling, mindless comments. Instead, we want you to click on the links, buy our movies & TV shows and soften our pain and disgust at being ripped off all these years.
445* Gaming Wildlife, a production of Website/ChannelAwesome, has released videos about video game piracy and emulation, which in general come off as paid corporate-sponsored propaganda videos. The videos make such wild claims as "people who pirate games are naturally bad at games" and generally try to guilt, shame and insult anyone who doesn't pay money.
446* In general, a lot of gaming channels on Website/YouTube, especially those run by those who collect game cartridges and hardware, will be anywhere from passive-aggressive to outright vicious at the idea of playing old games on emulators. Though it does come off as a bit hypocritical of them to do so, since many of them admit to buying their game collections USED meaning the game companies don't see a dime off their purchases.
447* Geoff Thew from ''WebVideo/MothersBasement'' avidly believes this. In his video "There's NO GOOD REASON to Pirate Legally Available Anime" he goes on about not just the moral aspects, but also counters the reasoning of those who say that DigitalPiracyIsOkay. In the end, he points out the importance of the economic aspects: if we don't buy the product, the industry won't be able to sustain its supply. On the other hand, his zealous stance and unwillingness to platform the arguments he tries to rebut got him into a bit of controversy when he was called out by fellow anime Youtuber {{WebVideo/Uniquenameosaurus}}, who made two videos arguing in favor of pirating anime on the grounds of questionable industry practices and inadequate consumer options. As of May 2020, Geoff's video has about equal likes and dislikes.
448* WebVideo/SarahZ shoots this trope to hell in ''[[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=sL-3a0SeESo The Weird World of Theatre Bootlegs]]'' regarding [[ExactlyWhatItSaysOnTheTin bootleg videos of Broadway shows]]. She raises the points that a) most shows are expensive to go to and someone who watches bootleg is doing so because they're unlikely to ever afford to see the show (due to ticket prices or being unable to travel for it), b) a pirated theatre show is very different from a pirated film, as the experience of theatre is largely dependent on being physically in the building (and a person who enjoys a bootleg version of a show might still be likely to pay to see it in the flesh if they get the chance), and c) sometimes a bootleg version of a show can be beneficial; the ''{{Theatre/Heathers}}'' musical did poorly in its first run, but it developed a large fandom thanks to people watching bootleg videos of the show - and this led to a West End revival where it was much more successful.
449* ''WebVideo/MarioPartyDSAntiPiracy'' focuses on the (fictional) CopyProtection of ''VideoGame/MarioPartyDS''. Hints show that these measures were added by a rogue employee who believes in this trope to an extreme, to the point of adding an entire character to punish pirates [[spoiler:and who can manifest in the real world to kill them or call the cops to arrest them]].
450[[/folder]]
451
452[[folder:Web Original]]
453* The PC gaming website [=TweakGuides.com=] has an exhaustively researched treatise on piracy [[https://xjdhdr.gitlab.io/tweakguides/system_guides/Piracy/Piracy_1.xhtml archived here]]. The author has some very strong words to say about the subject; stating that piracy is very widespread on PC, greed is the primary motivation behind it, none of the excuses commonly presented stand up to scrutiny and that piracy has caused significant damage to the gaming industry. On the other hand, he does give some suggestions that game developers and publishers can follow to help the situation; such as releasing demos for their games and to stop delaying releases by region.
454* Remember those ''D&D'' scare comics? [[http://blog.wired.com/27bstroke6/2008/08/nonprofit-distr.html They're trying to do it again.]] Oddly enough, the comic has a B-plot about the main character's grandmother trying to fight the city's using eminent domain to evict her from her house, albeit with (in her view, inadequate) compensation -- the city technically wins but can't pay the revised total. It's apparently supposed to be analogous to the downloading story, possibly in applying moral equivalence between what the sympathetically portrayed homeowners are doing and the record companies, but it ends up not making much sense in context because of the [[{{Dissimile}} dissimilar situations]].
455%%* Parodied by ''For Tax Reason'''s [[http://www.fortaxreasons.com/animation.html Digital Pirates of Dark Water]].
456* ''Dorm of the Undead'', a new feature on [=Take180=].com, has a guy download a movie illegally. The movie file contains a virus. The virus turns him into a ''ZOMBIE''. And it's all brought to you by Buena Vista Home Entertainment. Which explains why the "About the Show" page begins with quotes like
457-->Downloading fake movies may infect your computer with viruses that can be transmitted while you're downloading. Not only do you risk crashing your computer, but you also risk acquiring malicious spyware which will steal your personal information.
458* Lazlow of ''Radio/GTARadio'' fame hosts a satellite radio show periodically, of which he gives away the most recent episode, but sells the back catalog as a box set online. Upon learning that the entire box set was being passed around on torrents, he wrote an angry article and ranted about it during the following show.
459* "[[http://www.theonion.com/articles/kid-rock-starves-to-death,342/ Kid Rock Starves to Death]]", an article from ''Website/TheOnion'' in 2000. It also reminds readers of the tragic death of Elton John in 1978, before private ownership of cassette decks was outlawed.
460* [[http://www.ebaumsworld.com/video/watch/147/ This anti-downloading PSA]] from Ebaumsworld uses footage from ''Film/AnAmericanWerewolfInLondon''.
461* The official ''VideoGame/{{Jardinains}}'' website acknowledges that it's possible to pirate the 100 bonus levels, but claims that you'll get "a heaping portion of '''''soul rending shame'''''" (original emphasis) if you do it.
462* [[TabletopGame/{{Warhammer 40000}} Imperial]] {{Commissar}} Fuclaw from [[Website/FourChan /tg/]] would like to [[http://1d4chan.org/images/8/8c/Fucklaw.jpg remind you]]: downloading illegal [=MP3s=] is '''HERESY'''.
463* "[[http://caricatura.ru/parad/grinchenko/3695/ That's patented!]]"; "[[http://caricatura.ru/parad/grinchenko/3718/ With copyright in head]]"; "[[http://caricatura.ru/parad/grinchenko/3786/ The Patent]]"; "[[http://caricatura.ru/parad/korsun/3921/ Attack]]" (text:"How do you think -- are our disks licensed?"); "[[http://caricatura.ru/parad/dubinin/3823/ Creative labour]]" (text:"Let's use protection ?.."); "[[http://caricatura.ru/black/korsun/457/ Civilized approach]]" (text:"...we chose deliberate and civilized approach to the protection of copyrights"; the author's comment: made for a journal article about "anti-pirate campaign" which turned out to be part of war between traders in infringing copies).
464[[/folder]]
465
466[[folder:Western Animation]]
467* ''WesternAnimation/{{Futurama}}'':
468** In "[[Recap/FuturamaS1E9HellIsOtherRobots Hell is Other Robots]]", one of the sins Bender is being punished for in Robot Hell is selling bootleg cassettes ([[{{Zeerust}} in the year 3000]]). Cheating others and forging [=IOUs=] (both forms of stealing) is level two of Hell whereas piracy (another form of stealing) is level five. And, to add salt to the wound, he's punished by the artists he bootlegged in the first place: Music/BeastieBoys.
469** "[[Recap/FuturamaS2E10ACloneOfMyOwn A Clone of My Own]]" features the [[CouchGag opening subtitle]] ''"Coming Soon to an Illegal DVD"''.
470** In "[[Recap/FuturamaS3E15IDatedARobot I Dated a Robot]]", those who facilitate illegal downloads will also [[SpaceWhaleAesop unleash killer Lucy Liu-bots to protect their sinister racket]]. In ''this'' case what's being downloaded illegally is personality imprints painfully derived from heads-in-jars being held prisoner for the purpose. ''Slightly'' different from a normal recording. Downloaded from [[spoiler:Kid]]nappster.com!
471** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OWPfcEOr2Yg Spoofed]] with the [[FunWithAcronyms Downloading Often Is Terrible]] extra on the ''[[Recap/FuturamaM3BendersGame Bender's Game]]'' DVD, which parodies that "You wouldn't do crime X" ad by having [[{{Jerkass}} Bender]] reply that he ''has'' done those things.
472* ''WesternAnimation/TheBoondocks''
473** In "[[Recap/TheBoondocksS1E5ADateWithTheHealthInspector A Date with the Health Inspector]]", Jazmine's father Tom condemned his wife for downloading music not for any moral reason, but out of an irrational fear of being caught and sent to prison (and then being anally raped).
474** In "[[Recap/TheBoondocksS2E1OrDieTrying ...Or Die Trying]]", after Granddad forced Jazmine to accompany him and the boys while they sneak into the movies, an ad that played before the movie compared digital piracy (and "stealing movies") to murder and featured a movie stuntman who said that it hurts when someone "steals all that work". Jazmine started crying, said "I'm sorry, Mr. Stuntman," and wanted to turn herself in to her father, the assistant district attorney. The actual episode ends with Huey saying they should have just downloaded the movie off the Internet instead of sneaking into the theater.
475* ''WesternAnimation/SouthPark'':
476** The episode "[[Recap/SouthParkS7E9ChristianRockHard Christian Rock Hard]]" has the kids download at most 2 songs from the Internet, but within seconds of the deed being done, the house is then stormed by FBI agents as if they were Waco or something. Afterward, the lead FBI agent takes them around the houses of various musicians who, as a result of illegal downloading, are now forced to buy slightly ''less'' glamorous private jets (ones without a remote control for the surround sound plasma screen TV and DVD entertainment system), not being able to buy a French-Polynesian island, or waiting a few weeks for luxuries rather than buying them now, as if it were a Christmas episode and the villain was being shown all the orphanages that were suffering as a result of his stinginess.
477** [[https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lZ1tJqTOnQc A UK advertisement]] for the show was a song that contained these lyrics:
478--->''We get 'em straight after the yanks, so fuck The Pirate Bay.\
479If you're compelled to torrent stuff then make it ''Series/GameOfThrones''\
480And do your legal viewing here, coz ''South Park'''s coming home!''
481* That really weird {{Anvilicious}} episode of ''WesternAnimation/TheProudFamily'', "EZ-Jackster". Penny meets a mysterious, ''[[Film/TheMatrix Matrix]]''-like stranger who upgrades her old computer that can only play Pong into one that can browse the Internet. Then he shows her the stash of illegal music on the Internet. Soon, the whole world knows about it and the music companies don't make any money anymore. The episode also compared downloading music to using drugs.
482* ''WesternAnimation/TheSimpsons'':
483** Not exactly digital piracy in the sense of downloading movies/music, but when Homer got [[Recap/TheSimpsonsS2E13HomerVsLisaAndThe8thCommandment stolen cable]] (cable, now, being digital for many North Americans, though arguably not at the time), this trope is played remarkably straight. Even the guy who hooks up the cable is later shown to be stealing car stereos and breaking into houses. Homer, who's shown to have stolen from Moe's and work and is an unabashed alcoholic and JerkAss, comes to view this (although only after [[SoapboxSadie Lisa and Marge]] guilt-tripped him to the point he gave in) as a kind of [[EvenEvilHasStandards evil even]] ''[[EvenEvilHasStandards he]]'' [[EvenEvilHasStandards can't support]].
484** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS19E8FuneralForAFiend Funeral for a Fiend]]", ''commercial skipping'' is treated as something akin to piracy... somewhat... It all starts with Homer going out to buy a battery, but he gets it for free because he used the choice of buying a $200 [=TiVo=] with subscription. After installing it, the Simpsons, especially Marge, start getting used to skipping commercials. But then Marge falls asleep and has a nightmare with Creator/KeithOlbermann warning against such a terrible action, so she starts watching all commercials. It is then that her woke-up family meet her in the living room and a new restaurant ad appears; they like it, so they happily go to the restaurant opening. When they arrive there, [[spoiler:they discover an empty room and the restaurant owner ties them up in chairs. They had fallen into Sideshow Bob's newest murder plot]]. [[BrokenAesop So,]] DigitalPiracyIsOkay [[BrokenAesop and you shouldn't watch TV commercials so]] [[spoiler:[[BrokenAesop you don't end up killed]]]]?
485** In "[[Recap/TheSimpsonsS25E9StealThisEpisode Steal This Episode]]", Homer sets up a movie theater showing pirated movies in his backyard, but Marge rats out the operation to the FBI. After hiding in the Swedish consulate, because they have a lax notion of copyright, he gets arrested and put on trial by a large group of Hollywood stars and producers. However, after it's pointed out that it's a David vs Goliath type of situation, they let Homer off, and even make a movie out of the whole story. Homer then moves on to criticizing people for pirating the movie (even though it's a story of how piracy is cool), and in the end, Lisa concludes that while both sides call themselves noble, both are just greedy.
486*** In that same episode, as Homer is hauled off to jail along with a busload of convicted felons, he tells them what he's in for. [[EvenEvilHasStandards Every single one of them is utterly disgusted by Homer's piracy]].
487* ''WesternAnimation/FamilyGuy'': As soon as Peter tries to record ''Series/MondayNightFootball'' on his VCR, armed FBI officers kick down his front door demanding him to present the written consent from ABC and the NFL to record the show. Peter only has consent from ABC and so the FBI destroy his VCR.
488* ''WesternAnimation/KappaMikey'':
489** Parodied in one episode; when Mikey is unable to obtain a legal copy of the Lily Mu video game, he acquires a copy from pirates (complete with eye patches, wooden legs and parrots), accidentally selling Gonard in the process. At the end of the episode, Mikey promises himself to never prefer a video game to a good friend again. Then Ozu flips out the one last copy of the game, and [[AesopAmnesia Mikey and Gonard immediately start fighting over it]].
490** In season 2, we have "Back To School", where the crew has to work with a lower budget (cardboard cut-out props, costumes made out of paper, etc...) because they're losing money to grade schoolers getting pirated [=DVDs=] of their show instead of watching them on TV, and they spend the rest of the episode tracking down the culprit.
491* Played for laughs on ''WesternAnimation/DextersLaboratory'''s "Bad Cable Manners", where Dexter managed to steal satellite TV since his dad couldn't do it. Then the "Satellite S.W.A.T." arrive to arrest Dexter's Dad.
492-->"Mr. Dexter's Dad. We're well aware of your current situation. Piracy of our satellite broadcast is a felony. This is your last warning. Legal action will be taken".
493** Not as much of an overreaction as it is an escalation, when you consider that Dexter kept overpowering their attempts to block the pirated signal, thus requiring them to take more drastic action.
494** It also didn't help that even when it is explained to Dad that he has to pay them for the satellite TV or he can't have it, he refuses to pay, believing cable to be a right instead of a privilege and attacks them, leading to him fighting them and landing him in jail.
495* ''WesternAnimation/TeenTitans2003'' had an episode where Beast Boy illegally downloaded a game and it gave Cyborg a virus since he did it on Cyborg's power charger which he mistook for a computer. It had Cyborg seeing [[MeatOVision food-based hallucinations]]. It was one of the more realistic examples (aside from the question of how a power charger could play a game and store a virus in the first place, much less transfer that data to Cyborg rather than just charge his batteries). He downloaded a supposed prerelease of a very popular and anticipated game. Those sorts of things would be prime targets for viruses. Then again, [[TechnologyMarchesOn what do you use nowadays to charge your cellphone?]]
496* ''WesternAnimation/RobotChicken'' had an ending gag around this, where some text debunked an argument about the damage caused by downloading movies on the economy as a whole, then stated that TV piracy, on the other hand, was destroying this great nation.
497* ''WesternAnimation/SpaceGhostCoastToCoast'' plays this for laughs at the beginning of "Knifin' Around", with Space Ghost's failed attempt at copying a Music/{{Radiohead}} CD. At worst, Thom Yorke was only amused at the sight of the supposed CD burner blowing up.
498* Dethklok visits a record store in the season 3 premiere of ''WesternAnimation/{{Metalocalypse}}'', where the announcement is made that "This record store will be closing in five minutes. Forever. Because it's a record store. Enjoy illegally downloading all your music."
499** The band also has their own method of fighting piracy. They send strike teams to kidnap anyone who has illegally downloaded their songs. The downloads come with a warning, though. Because [[NGOSuperpower Dethklok sales are so vital to the world economy]], the UN allows them to carry this on.
500* An episode of ''WesternAnimation/TransformersAnimated'' dealt with it in an almost-BrokenAesop. The episode was mostly about illegal street racing, that Sari and Bumblebee would watch on bootleg cable, a subplot that felt like an afterthought compared to the rest of the episode. Once the street racing was dealt with, Bumblebee decided to cut their cable to "set an example" for Sari. Okay, not only did the whole piracy issue feel tacked onto the otherwise perfectly-fine street racing plot, but how did the Transformers have such a full grasp of the concept of piracy at a time when they were still getting a feel for Earth customs?
501* Quite literal in ''WesternAnimation/ReBoot'', with actual software pirates. They quit the evil part [[CutLexLuthorACheck after being shown how much profit can be made in legitimate business]], but still act like pirates.
502* The "Piracy is Stealing" campaign got referenced in ''WesternAnimation/TheAmazingWorldOfGumball'' when Gumball and Darwin are considering their options regarding an overdue DVD which is now in several pieces:
503-->'''Gumball:''' We need a copy of "Alligators on a Train". I know, I'm gonna download it!\
504'''Darwin:''' Gumball!! You wouldn't steal a car, you wouldn't steal a woman's purse, you wouldn't steal a cellphone, [[PunctuatedForEmphasis PIRACY! IS! STEALING!!]]
505** And then they make [[TheMockbuster a cheap knockoff version of the movie instead.]]
506* Played with in the "Downloaded Music Awards" in one ''WesternAnimation/KimPossible'' episode:
507-->'''Musician #1:''' Downloading is about the fans, yeah.\
508'''Musician #2:''' Fans rock.\
509'''Musician #1:''' Even though we don't get any money when you download.\
510'''Musician #2:''' No money... rocks!\
511'''Musician #1:''' No, mate, no money does not rock.
512* There was a ''Franchise/ScoobyDoo'' episode where the bad guys recorded songs from the radio, duplicated the tapes, and sold them by the thousands. This being Scooby-Doo, one of them had to smuggle the tapes out of the studio (hidden in a cave), [[ScoobyDooHoax dressed as a pterodactyl]]. There was also one where the bad guy was selling illegal copies of a video game.
513* ''WesternAnimation/MyDadTheRockStar'' had an episode where some music pirates recruited Buzz to steal a copy of Rock's latest album. Willy and his friends stealthily replace the CD with an album of NewAge music Rock's hippie wife had made, to the disgust of the pirates.
514* ''WesternAnimation/TheTwistedTalesOfFelixTheCat'' had an episode where Da King of another planet stole the Earth (he believed to have won the rights to it from gambling) for its "Felkron". When Felix confronted him for this, Da King showed a videotape to explain his reasons. The tape had an F.B.I. warning that illegal reproduction would result in ''"violent-type actions"''.
515** An earlier episode "Night Drop" had Felix being eaten by a VCR when sleeping at a video store. The warning said "Do not copy this tape, or we will find you and flick your ear".
516* ''WesternAnimation/YoungJustice2010'' plays with this trope. One episode involves a guy who sells pirated [=DVDs=] and video games, and Comicbook/BlueBeetle mentions that he will be arrested for it offscreen. While his piracy is depicted as a bad thing, Blue Beetle only got involved in the incident because he thought the guy was involved in [[HumanTrafficking something much worse]], he barely even cared about the pirated merchandise, and it's made out to be small potatoes compared to his status as a {{Domestic Abuse}}r.
517* ''WesternAnimation/AdventureTime'' treats this trope as seriously as they do everything else. Finn and Jake are in the habit of hosting movie nights for their friends, but when the FBI warning about unauthorized public performance is pointed out to them, they react in horror and refuse to show any more movies, because they can't get permission and heroes don't break the law. The main reason they can't get permission in the first place is that they just so happen to live on a [[AfterTheEnd post-apocalyptic Earth]], several ''thousand'' years after the civilization that made those movies (and the FBI warnings) was destroyed, and they've been finding the tapes in the rubble of old cities.
518* ''WesternAnimation/{{Robotboy}}'' did a weird take on this: in one episode, Gus used Robotboy to pirate an unreleased video game, which messed with the poor robot's brain and caused him to hallucinate that he was a character in the game and surrounded by hostile aliens. Not having learned his lesson after the initial few outbursts, a later scene had Tommy getting a call from Gus and refusing to let him use Robotboy to pirate another game.
519[[/folder]]
520
521[[folder:Others]]
522* Like the Nintendo example above, Taiwan's Government Information Office and National Anti-Counterfeiting Committee have been [[https://youtu.be/l0Yh2Ox2-8w reported]] to have once held a public event where a steamroller crushed counterfeit video cassettes lying in the streets.
523[[/folder]]
524----
525
526->''"So don't download this song! (Nanananananaaaaah!)\
527You'll burn in hell before too long! (And you'll deserve it!)\
528Go and buy the CD (just buy it!) like you know that you should...(YOU CHEAP BASTARD!)"''
529
530-->--'''Music/WeirdAlYankovic'''

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