MMA  > General MMA  > Is the UFC approaching Internet Piracy in the right manner?
March 19, 2012, 05:25 PM
Suing UFC Fans Isn't the Way to Combat Internet Piracy, or to Turn Freeloaders Into Customers


By Ben Fowlkes - Senior Writer

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Mar 19, 2012 - From the UFC???s perspective, internet piracy is a pretty straightforward issue. Websites that illegally stream UFC pay-per-view events are criminals, and individuals who watch those streams are their accomplices. The UFC has said it will aggressively pursue legal remedies against both, and now that the world???s foremost MMA organization has obtained user information from Greenfeedz.com -- a streaming website that was recently shut down -- it says that it intends to do just that.

"We believe that we've got an obligation to go out there and try to protect the intellectual property and protect both our rights and the rights of our fighter-partners," UFC chief legal counsel Lawrence Epstein told MMAjunkie.com last week.

Translation: If you watched UFC pay-per-views on Greenfeedz.com, prepare to get sued for, in the words of one attorney representing the UFC in this case, "significantly more" than the cost of a pay-per-view.

What such a strategy might ultimately cost the UFC and its parent company Zuffa, however, seems to be a question that the MMA giant hasn???t fully considered.

To hear the UFC???s Epstein tell it, suits against those who illegally streamed UFC events wouldn???t technically be suits against the organization???s own fans because "people that steal our stuff ??? they're not our fans." Except that they are, or else they probably wouldn???t be sitting in front of a laptop on a Saturday night watching a UFC event, whether they paid for it or not.

When Epstein says that those people aren???t the UFC???s fans, what he really means is, they aren???t the fans the UFC wants. That???s why the UFC feels just fine about threatening to sue those particular fans (though it???s arguable whether that threat is a legitimate one), and also why it seems to think this would ultimately be good for the organization. It wouldn???t, and there are a few different reasons why.

For starters, the UFC seems to believe that there are two types of MMA fans: the type who buys the pay-per-views, and the type who watches them illegally. In reality, the line between those two groups is probably a lot blurrier than Zuffa realizes. Chances are very good that some of the people who have streamed events in the past have also bought them, and probably will buy them again at some point in the future. Maybe they only pony up the $55 for the pay-per-view when the card is good enough, or when they can get friends to split the cost with them. Maybe they stream it when they only care about one or two fights, or when they???re simply too strapped for cash to afford it.

My point is, not all piracy is created equal, at least on the receiving end, and attacking viewers as if they are distributors could do much more harm than good.

For instance, picture a 19-year-old college student just about anywhere in America. He wants to see a UFC event, but maybe he can???t even afford basic cable, let alone a pay-per-view. He can???t go to a bar to watch the fights (unless he has a convincing fake ID), so he stays home and finds an illegal stream on his laptop, because he can't stand to miss the big fight. Then, months later, he gets sued by the UFC.

What???s going to happen when that kid graduates, goes to work, and finds a job that will allow him to enjoy luxury expenses like pay-per-views? You think he???s going to become a loyal customer of the company that sued him back when he was struggling to buy books? You think he???s going to buy a ticket to see a UFC event when it comes to his city? You think he???s going to buy merchandise or watch free events or patronize the UFC in any way after that experience? Maybe. Or maybe he???ll hold a little bit of a grudge. You know, for the rest of his natural life.
Comment #1 has been removed
March 21, 2012  06:50 PM ET

I think the ufc should allow some pirating because it actually helps the sport grow. They say one day they want to get out of ppv and go to straight tv network. What better way.

March 22, 2012  10:00 PM ET

I think it would have to be seen as shooting yourself in the foot. While I agree with the decision to shut down/sue the sites and site owners, trying to sue thousands of individual users (who were probably too poor to buy the PPV in the first place) is a pipe dream, especially with the state of the bankruptcy courts in the country right now. Let CNN find the 19 yr old college student from your scenario above as he's walking out of a courthouse having just declared Chapter 7 bankruptcy due to not being able to pay the UFC their settlement money. It'd be a PR nightmare and would, in my opinion set the sports growth back years.

 
March 27, 2012  11:20 AM ET

alienating the bulk of your viewers is a bad idea....there is marginal difference between watching a live stream and being one of the many watching at a bar....there is no limit to the number of friends you have over to watch the fights if you buy the PPV....so, sharing via social media isn't much different....the complaint isn't so much about who paid for it, since SOMEONE did, but about where people watch it from....if I am sitting in the living room of the guy streaming the feed, no laws are broken, but if I watch the same feed from my own living room, it's suddenly significantly different?

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