Quote:
Originally Posted by Robbie
You're off base here.
We are some of the best marketers and promoters in the world. Why? Because our product (the actual PORN) sells like candy.
We have NO other things we CAN sell to monetize our content. No mainstream affiliate will accept adult traffic. NONE.
You're speaking in nice intelligent terms...but in the end everything you are saying has ALREADY been tried, and failed. I have vids that I put up on Pornhub (they are an affilate of mine) The vids have MILLIONS of views. That resulted in 12,654 unique hits to Claudia-Marie.Com and SEVEN sales.
That is pathetic. Beyond pathetic.
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I can't argue with that. Numbers don't lie.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Robbie
WE know what we are doing. We know how and what to sell.
Most of us have already tried every imaginable way to monetize this thieving even though we KNEW it wouldn't work.
So let's be clear...the ONLY person who makes REAL money off of a Pirate site, is the fucking thief who OWNS it. Everybody else gets screwed.
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Point taken.
Quote:
Originally Posted by Alprazolam
pink visual is not the first group to make a summit on piracy. it was done before and it failed miserably. pink visual also does not have any of the leading anti piracy people that are effective at twarting piracy.
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OK, so there was an effort made to reach out to torrent owners/sharers.
Knowing the type of person who runs in those circles, they probably thought it was a sting op - which is why it likely failed.
I understand what is being said (i.e. content should be as protected against piracy as possible), but I still have some apprehension as to how this will play out over the long term.
The argument could be made that defending adult industry content from being pirated in a court of law does lend the industry legal credibility in terms of the rights for adult content to be distributed. Once the legal system finds itself protecting the adult industry, it thereby has to acknowledge it as normal part of the entire system.