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Ironically interesting!
Cecilia Chen - Nov 18, 2002
 Cecilia Chen Nov 18, 2002
Heh, it seems VCDHelp has similar forum problems of their own.

The only diffrence is it seems managment has the right idea, and their admin Lieutenants are out in full force.

http://www.vcdhelp.com/forum/viewtopic.php?t=12447...

Man, they run a tight clean ship. Their rules even include "implied" piracy.

 MasterAkumaMatata Nov 19, 2002
I thought you were referring to a mutiny among upper management there. You got me all excited for nothing.

 Cecilia Chen Nov 19, 2002
Bah! They seem a bit more organized

 Xavier Dec 2, 2002
I think this board is funny, since 90% of VCDs are illegal bootlegs.

I think eBay should ban the selling of VCDs; most idiots on eBay don't understand the difference between VCDs and DVDs and are lucky enough to have a newer DVD player that accepts them. They also don't know that VCD's usual retail price is $5 not $20. Dumbasses...

 googlefest1 Dec 2, 2002
Hey, if people buy stuff without doing research, shame on them, not the entrepreneur!

 Xavier Dec 2, 2002
The biggest reason I think they should be banned is they're not really legal; it'd be like me selling a burned cd of roms.

 Cecilia Chen Dec 2, 2002
Well, on the internet, most people use VCDs for pirating. However, almost all Chinese movies were produced for VCD rather than VHS (in North Amarica). In Asia, the big companys which all operate here sell the same movies, but for VCD format. In China, VCD was the format of yesteryear, not VHS. However, if you aren't buying a Chinese movie, you're probably getting a pirated VCD (i.e, if your Chinese movie has no hologram, in which case it's pirated as well).

 gamefoo21 Dec 2, 2002
It makes sense to use VCD instead of VHS; there is a lot less material used in the production of a plasitice disc as compared to many meters of coated plastic.

My two cents:

Most VCDs are illegal pirate copies over here in North America. Trying to get a VCD to run on a PC took me two hours. Errr... why did my uncle get a Dell without a CD-RW drive?

 Xavier Dec 2, 2002
I don't even think most Chinese (Asian) VCDs are legal. I doubt they send money to the film companies for a movie that hasn't even come out yet. Most of the stuff that comes out of China is pirated: games... music... so why wouldn't movies be?

 Cecilia Chen Dec 2, 2002
Chinese movies, as well as English movies, usualy come out first in Asia (e.g., Crouching Tiger Hidden Dragon). As long as you buy the CD and it's from the original company (e.g., B.O.B, Mei Ah, UFO, Universal, Sony, etc.), you're usually fine. But even if pirates copy the logos and everything, the original CDs all come with holographic marks (like Microsoft) which proves that they in fact did come from those sources.

Of course, there is general pirating as well, but obviously, there are loads of original products sold too. Otherwise, such industries would have folded a long time ago.