What the "Pirate Party" struggle stands for IMHO is a consumer/customer backlash.
For at least the last 10 years, Digital distribution has been feasible.
For 8 years the Hollywood content producers have been sold on a broken system usually refered to as DRM or Digital Rights Management. The Rights enforced are not yours-the purchasers rights-but what the studios want restricted.
I will refer to it from here on out as "Digital restrictions"
Add on top of that fight, the "broadcasting rights" sales delays that plague Europe.
Hollywood movies and shows are delayed
or outright not released in Europe at a min. of 6 months for the UK and a year for non-English speaking countries.
If you read nothing else, at least read this paragraph:
The "underground" distribution methods (usually referred to as P2P or file-sharing)
are usually fans of shows or series making sure other fans can watch where there is simply NO Legal Distribution method available.
In the last 3 years there have been some shortening of the delay times.
On the other hand, the Consumer-level digital restrictions have been raised to ludicrous-levels.
- Mandated Broadcast-Flag (struck down, Thank God!)
- No-Skip Flag on DVD's (Intended for FBI or equivalent warning, not for previews or the "You wouldn't steal..." video)
- High-Definition Copy Protection over DVI and HDMI (easily defeated via an insert HDCP insert)
- BD+ (wonder why your Blu-ray takes 2 mins. to even show a picture? This is why, Has been regularly broken on each update, considered ineffective)
- Image-Constraint Token (no HDCP? no HD for you, down-scaled to quarter resolution. All major studios agreed to not use until 2010)
- Selectable-Output (turn off analog output on flagged shows/movies, currently being considered by the FCC at MPAA request)
The best analogy I can give tonight (HA!)
The Freebies are to the Pirate party as the make-pot-legal are to the Libertarian party. An embarrassment...
To me, it is not about gimme, gimme, gimme...
It is the fact that distribution costs have dropped for many things. Prices have not.
International issues that previously existed are no more.
Yet distribution agreements are still dealt with the same as the days of VHS but now a broken string of digital restrictions are tacked on.
The customer base is being persecuted for the failure of an industry to forecast and adapt.
The Pirate party is the customer base getting involved in politics since their normal representatives won't represent their interests over a MPAA/RIAA/(insert local variant here) lobbyist.
The Pirate name came from the MPAA and RIAA referring to the group as "Pirates" or thieves.
The end goal is for industries to offer their wares in a consumer-friendly, standard format. It took 5 years to get the RIAA to allow non-DRM audio to be sold on iTunes and Amazon. The MPAA has not done anything close to that yet.
Digital Copy (included in some Blu-ray movies) is a digitally-restricted iTunes and a digitally-restricted Windows Media files. They become "bound" to a device or account.
The device becomes unusable or an account becomes unaccessable? Tough, buy a whole new copy.
The digital restrictions are more about forcing scarcity where the is a lack of scarcity.