Let me start by making it clear up front that I am a DirecTV subscriber and am pretty happy with my service from same. I like the company, like the service I get, and though I wish that I could get more for less, for the most part I'm happy with how much the service costs me.
Let me continue by saying that I have no sympathy for people that are pirating DirecTV and are caught at it. If you are stealing signals from DirecTV then you deserve to face the consequences and pay the fees for the service you stole, or could steal, and pay some very hefty fines on top of that. You do the crime, you do the time.
Where I beg to differ with DirecTV, much the same as I would beg to differ with the heavy handed tactics of the RIAA and MPAA when it comes to supposed piracy of music and movies, is when a crime has actually be commited.
Again, don't get me wrong, if someone is actively involved in sharing music or movies, and/or you see someone downloading movies or music from another site (not iTunes, or Wal-Mart or Urge music sites, but from p2p {peer-to-peer} networks, or other clandestine sites) then as far as I am concerned you got 'em dead to rights, throw the book at 'em for their theft and move on.
In the case of the RIAA and MPAA, I beg to differ with them that the mere fact that someone may be running a p2p application on their system means that individual is going to be, or has commited music or movie piracy. What the RIAA and MPAA would have you believe is that they are operating in the world of the Tom Cruise movie Minority Report (WARNING SMALL SPOILERS AHEAD HERE, but not enough to really matter....) where there's a room of pre-cogs that have used their abilities to determine that you'll eventually be stealing music or movies by downloading them using the p2p software you installed on your system.
What the RIAA and MPAA have done, up to this point, is just as bad, if not worse, than a lot of what DirecTV is alleged to have been doing as discussed in the article I'll be linking to in a bit. The sad part is that the RIAA and MPAA have had co-conspirators, or at least have had people in the legal world that have been complicit with the ideas of the RIAA and MPAA who have gone along with the idea that just possessing a tool that has multiple uses is enough to find someone guilty of a crime that there is absolutely no other proof has been commited or will be commited.
I continue to hope that eventually the cases that the RIAA and MPAA have pressed forward make it up through the legal system and that finally someone with a brain that is actually engaged and working reviews the cases and says WTF?! and WHHHATTTTT? What? What?!!?! I would like to think that eventually someone will wake up and figure it out and realize that the judges at lower levels that have let these practices go un-checked are just as bad, if not worse, than any of the Patriot act stuff that has so many people in an up-roar over Bush administration anti-terrorism efforts (as well as other practices by the Bush era judicial branch).
Anyway, in the DirecTV case discussed here: DirecTV faces setback in dubious antipiracy campaign. Good. (from C-Net's news.com.com site), we see that someone does seem to have finally woken up a little about some of these issues.
I'll clip a few choice words and include them in the comment area. Please take the time to read the linked article though. It's worth a complete read-thru.