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The Honolulu Advertiser
Posted on: Monday, May 13, 2002

Copies of 'Star Wars' sequel online

Associated Press

LOS ANGELES — A week before its scheduled release, illegal copies of "Star Wars: Episode II — Attack of the Clones" are already appearing on the Internet.

University of Washington history student Jacob Kenagy poses with his laptop computer in his dorm room in Seattle on Tuesday, May 7, 2002. The laptop displays one of the many "Star Wars" commercials he posts on his web site. A sci-fi fan, Kenagy is recording a "Star Trek" episode on the same set he uses to record commercials in hopes of finding a new ad for "Star Wars." Elsewhere on the Internet, millions of "Star Wars" fans circulate, discuss and dissect photos, drawings and any othertidbits they could get on "Star Wars: Episode II: Attack of the Clones," which opens May 16.

Associated Press

One copy of the movie making the rounds online appears to have been recorded at a private showing, using a tripod-mounted digital camcorder pointed at the screen, the Los Angeles Times reported Friday. Another copy apparently used a more sophisticated version of the same technique.

Both were distributed via Internet Relay Chat, a computer protocol that allows users to copy files at high speed from other computers on different networks.

Locating the files is difficult for the casual computer user and downloading is extremely time-consuming for most machines. Meanwhile, the poor quality of the bootlegged footage makes it unlikely there will be any impact on the movie's box-office gross when "Clones" debuts Thursday.

Industry observers said movie piracy may hurt videotape and DVD revenues when those more distinct formats become available to duplicators.

Lucasfilm Ltd., which produced the movie, said it was submitting the piracy report to the Motion Picture Association of America for an investigation. If the trade organization identifies whoever is responsible, the company plans to prosecute, Lucasfilm spokeswoman Jeanne Cole said.

"It's an extremely serious threat," said Jean Murrell Adams, head of the litigation department at DreamWorks SKG. "I'm not surprised that it's on the Internet. I talk to pirates because I want to find out why they're doing this. And what I've been told is that they were eagerly anticipating who would be first to do this. It's a challenge for them."

The previous "Star Wars" installment, "Episode I — The Phantom Menace," also was available online before its official release in May 1999. The current blockbuster "Spider-Man" appeared on the Internet a day before its official premiere.