The trailers were a joint effort between the Motion Picture Association of America (now the MPA), seven major film studios, and the National Association of Theatre Owners (now Cinema United).[1][2] It debuted in theaters on July 12, 2004,[3][4] and on home media on July 27. It appeared in theaters internationally from 2004 until 2008, and on many commercial DVDs as an often-unskippable segment preceding the main menu.
The trailer was directed, shot, and edited by the Idea Place, a Warner Bros. in-house advertising agency, but the messaging was collectively agreed on by all participating film studios and the MPA. Shooting took place on the Paramount Pictures studio lot.[1]
Synopsis
The first spot, officially titled Downloader, depicts a teenage girl trying to illegally download a film; the second depicts two women attempting to buy DVDs from a bootlegger on the streets. In both versions, clips are interwoven of a man committing theft of various objects (which include a car, handbag, and DVD in both versions, plus a television or mobile phone depending on the version), and equates these crimes to the unauthorized duplication and distribution of copyrighted materials, such as films. The ad ends with either a message that downloading pirated films is stealing, or buying pirated copies of films is stealing, which is against the law.[5][6] The girl ultimately cancels the download and the couple choose not to purchase any of the bootleg DVDs.
It was reported that the music in the announcement was itself used without permission.[9][10] However, one source disputes this, saying the reporting is the result of conflation regarding a different anti-piracy ad that used stolen music composed in 2006.[11]
The "ransom note" typeface used in the campaign was FF Confidential, designed by the Dutch typographer Just van Rossum. Reports arose in 2025 that the copy of the font used to design the commercial may not have been properly licensed.[12] In April 2025, Sky News reported, via extraction from old campaign PDFs, that the actual font used was Xband-Rough, a widely-distributed pirated version of FF Confidential. Van Rossum was aware of the font Xband-Rough, but unaware that the advert has used the pirated font and described its use as "hilarious.” The Federation responded by saying that everyone involved in the creation of the announcement was no longer at the organization.[13] According to a different investigation by journalists, the pirated font was only in a domestic campaign by the British Federation Against Copyright Theft, who had no involvement in the making of the original PSA.[1]
In popular culture
The advertisement has been parodied in Internet memes, including those using the phrase "You wouldn't download a car."[7][14]
In 2007, The IT Crowd episode "Moss and the German" parodied the advertisement, mirroring its initial points before comparing copyright infringement to increasingly ludicrous crimes and consequences.[8][15] Finlo Rohrer of the BBC considered this version to be "perhaps the best known" of over 100 parodies of the ad that had been created by 2009.[2] In 2021, the old domain name used by the campaign (piracyisacrime.com) was purchased and redirected to a YouTube upload of the parody, possibly inspired by a Reddit discussion.[16]
An advertisement for the 2008 film Futurama: Bender's Game parodied the campaign by having Bender repeatedly interrupt the narrator to say he would do the crimes described. The advertisement was titled "Downloading Often Is Terrible", or "D.O.I.T".[17]
The Greens–European Free Alliance, in association with Rafilm, released their own parody version of the film to oppose the media industry and government views on existing copyright laws, as well as to educate the public on alternative views about intellectual property.[18][19][20][21]
"You wouldn't screenshot an NFT" is a variant of the "You wouldn't steal a car" meme that satirizes non-fungible tokens,[24] based on the idea that the ease of making digital copies of the work of art associated with an NFT undermines the value of purchasing the NFT.
↑ "I wouldn't steal". iwouldntsteal.net. The Greens-European Free Alliance. Archived from the original on December 11, 2008. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
↑ "I wouldn't steal <video>". creativecommons.org. The Greens-European Free Alliance. January 26, 2008. Archived from the original on April 26, 2018. Retrieved April 25, 2018.
David, Matthew; Halbert, Debora, eds. (2014). "'Piracy' or Parody: Moral Panic in an Age of New Media". The SAGE Handbook of Intellectual Property. SAGE. ISBN978-1-4739-0902-1.
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