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Movies Piracy Entertainment

Sony Blunders By Uploading Full Movie To YouTube Instead of Trailer (torrentfreak.com) 113

Instead of uploading a trailer of "Khali the Killer," an upcoming move from Sony Pictures Entertainment, the conglomerate accidentally uploaded the entire movie on Google's video platform, according to users. TorrentFreak: When we started writing this article the movie had around 8,000 views. Just a few paragraphs later that had swelled to almost 11,000. However, while news may be traveling quickly, those numbers probably won't reach epic levels anytime soon.

As usual, the comments on YouTube are absolutely brutal. The section includes gems such as "Trailer gave the whole plot away. Pass," "It's just the trailer the whole movie will be 4 hours," and the rather blunt "Someone's getting the sackï."

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Sony Blunders By Uploading Full Movie To YouTube Instead of Trailer

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  • by cre1mer ( 5440320 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @12:53PM (#56887078) Homepage
    Try uploading the video file as a thumbnail by accident. YouTube will upload the whole file before rejecting it as being too big to be a thumbnail.
  • by Volatile_Memory ( 140227 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @12:57PM (#56887108)

    ...I would like to see more trailers like this. For every film.

  • Shadenfreude (Score:5, Informative)

    by Misagon ( 1135 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @12:59PM (#56887122)

    Thanks! I needed a good laugh today, to get my mind off my own mistakes.
    However much you have effed up yourself, there is always a bigger idiot who did something bigger.

    • North Korea agreed to stop hacking Sony since the Singapore summit, so now Sony have to hack themselves.
  • Now, let those who hate SONY begin trolling the poor company.

    I used to love their products. Not any more.

    I can see someone getting fired, fast!

  • Maybe I'm cynical... (Score:5, Interesting)

    by Oswald McWeany ( 2428506 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @01:01PM (#56887140)

    Maybe I'm cynical... but I wouldn't be surprised if this was done on purpose to get people talking about the movie that otherwise no one would have heard of.

    • Exactly. A couple thousand views is hardly a significant loss of potential sales.

      • Exactly. A couple thousand views is hardly a significant loss of potential sales.

        That's where you're wrong. According to MPAA logic, every pirated copy equals one million copies so this mistake means they lost 50 quazillion dollars and everyone on the planet has already seen the movie eight times.

        • by Raenex ( 947668 )

          According to MPAA logic, every pirated copy equals one million copies so this mistake means they lost 50 quazillion dollars

          That's the downside of torrents. It makes everybody that uses them a distributor as opposed to just a single infringement. It's prohibitively expensive to sue everybody that just watches something on YouTube for a minimal amount of damages.

      • by xlsior ( 524145 )
        Except it would have been trivial for some people to grab a copy and start spreading it elsewhere, presumably even before it hit the theaters. It could very well have an impact on revenue - if nothing else, I'd expect Sony will get sued over it by the other parties involved with some Hollywood-math level of missed revenue claims.
      • You underestimate the greed of corporations like Sony. These are according to their delusions 11.000 people who would have spent 20 bucks each to watch that movie in a theater.

    • by bahwi ( 43111 )

      That's what I was thinking too. Why would marketing even have the entire film in the same directory as the trailer? Wouldn't it just be emailed across the company network or somesuch?

      And didn't they notice it taking even many further hours to upload.

      • Why would marketing even have access to the whole movie?

        • by Kjella ( 173770 )

          Why would marketing even have access to the whole movie?

          A trailer is pretty much a giant ad. Why wouldn't marketing be involved in the creation of it? They're probably also making posters and billboards and paper ads and merchandise design and whatever, lots of reasons they could have access to the whole movie. It makes everything easier until someone screws up...

      • by Anonymous Coward on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @01:33PM (#56887354)

        I work in the industry and upload trailers and complete screeners of the entire film all the time. The trailer and the film are often the same file size because my trailer is usually in 4K ProRes HQ which will be about 4gb. My screener is compressed heavily to H264 and also usually about 4gb. They could be named similarly as well and in the same folder. So I see exactly how this could happen.

    • by sexconker ( 1179573 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @03:49PM (#56888270)

      You're not cynical, just observant.

      Sony did the exact same thing with the crappy movie "The Interview". Thy had a turd on their hands and they tossed it out into the open just to get some attention for it. Bonus - they used this to divert attention from the fact that their massive security breach was an inside job. Remember when the intelligence agencies were trying to blame North Korea for it and stir the pot for cyber warfare and other imagined bullshit? Absolutely no one credible in the security sector believes there is any evidence that NK was involved at all in the Sony hack. Oh, and remember when actual hackers dumped all the NSA tools on the net and we all learned that a key focus of their toolkits is making it look like attacks originated from Russia, China, NK, etc. so they could engineer false flag operations?

      • by pnutjam ( 523990 )
        I'd like a citation for that claim. I haven't heard it before, the false flag stuff.
        • You can search Slashdot for The Shadow Brokers.
          A year or so ago, they dumped a whole buttload of tools and exploit kits that our intelligence agencies use to hack shit. A lot of it was centered around making it look like the attacks had come from specific countries.

    • Maybe I'm cynical... but I wouldn't be surprised if this was done on purpose to get people talking about the movie that otherwise no one would have heard of.

      Ah, but by doing this, they have finally released a movie that won't get pirated. TAKE THAT, INTERWABZ PIRATES!
  • still Piracy and they can sue people who downloaded it or at least try to bully them into an copyright settlement

    • still Piracy and they can sue people who downloaded it

      And how exactly will they prove a particular person downloaded it? I know of a place where a single IP is shared among several folks between two floors of a huge apartment complex.

      And BTW, since when has an IP been deemed a person?

      • The various frivolous lawsuits surrounding copyright claims in the past 20 or so years have passed you by?

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Nope. The company distributed it themselves.

      • Exactly. This is piracy the same way watching a movie on Netflix is piracy: it's not.
        • by dknj ( 441802 )

          I can understand copyright infringement when a movie is still in the theaters. However, once the video is made available to you, you are free to make a backup copy for your own purposes. No one knows when or how you made the backup. *hint*, *hint*

          Free loophole for everyone to exploit.. kinda like reprogramming DirecTV cards. Enjoy it now, this all goes away within the next 10 years when blockchain DRM becomes the norm

          -dk

        • by Altrag ( 195300 )

          Depends on the judge and whether they determine that simply uploading the file to YouTube constitutes a carte blanche license to the entire world. I suspect it probably doesn't. I mean it's probably grey enough that Sony wouldn't bother pursuing it (especially since it would be nearly impossible to identify "infringers") and it is their fault after all but if for some crazyassed reason, they did decide to take it to a judge.. I wouldnt put a whole lot of faith in the judge deeming it a legal licensing.

          • No, it's pretty cut and dry. Copyright infringement occurs when an unauthorized party makes a copy. By uploading to YouTube, you agree, as per YouTube's terms of use, to authorize them to distribute the content.
  • I still don't care and won't watch it.

  • by rnturn ( 11092 ) on Tuesday July 03, 2018 @01:20PM (#56887278)

    "...uploading this trailer is taking so long... I'm going out for a latte."

    • "...uploading this trailer is taking so long... I'm going out for a latte."

      I'm not sure about Sony, but media production tends to own some high bandwidth shit. I wouldn't be surprised if Sony have peering straight into Google at Gb speeds. So this could've been all done in a minute or two.

  • This is exactly why I hate seeing trailers these days... they practically spoil the whole movie!

    • by Anonymous Coward

      Congrats! You just won the, "Couldn't even bother to read the summary" award!

  • It used to be the case that trailers were separately-produced promotional shorts. It was slightly before my time, but I think my favorite is the one Hitchcock did for The Birds...

    https://www.youtube.com/watch?... [youtube.com]

  • Guess this movie must be their rock-bottom, now they can't even rely on torrents anymore to get their movies distributed, they even have to do that themselves now. Talk about desperation!

    But it kinda tells you something if even for free only about 11k people gave a fuck. There are literally movies that aren't even worth the time it takes to watch them, let alone pay to see them.

  • I can finally talk about a movie with my friends the weekend it's released!
  • Maybe itâ(TM)s a movie to advertise the trailer

"I've seen it. It's rubbish." -- Marvin the Paranoid Android

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