Monday, December 28, 2015

EL PAQUETE SEMANAL - HOW OFFLINE PIRACY FLOURISHES IN CUBA

EL PAQUETE SEMANAL: HOW OFFLINE PIRACY FLOURISHES IN CUBA
BY ERNESTO ON DECEMBER 26, 2015 C: 38
OPINION

For more than a decade many Cubans have been pirating the latest
entertainment without a proper connection to the Internet. Instead, they
have built their own person-to-person distribution network to share a
weekly package of pirated material: El Paquete Semanal.

For hundreds of millions of people piracy is mostly an online phenomenon.

However, in countries where an open and accessible Internet is rare, the
public turns to other forms of peer-to-peer communication.

Ernesto Oroza, artist, designer and author based in South Florida,
explains in detail how Cubans have shared the latest entertainment
through innovative distribution channels for more than a decade.

The article below appears in The Pirate Book, a collection of articles
and guest contributions covering unique cultural and historical facts
and perspectives on online and offline piracy.

The Pirate Book was edited by Nicolas Maigret & Maria Roszkowska and can
be downloaded for free. Hard-copies are also available on request.

EL PAQUETE SEMANAL
by Ernesto Oroza



Origins And Present Time

It all started maybe 10 or 15 years ago. I remember that my nephew was
the first one in the family doing it. He had a little USB hard drive,
and one day he got a large quantity of films from a neighbor – things
such as National Geographic nature documentaries, music, action films,
and video clips.

Computers were rare in Cuba at the time. You could find maybe one
computer on each block. Some people who had computers started collecting
and selling kits of digital contents; it became a way to earn money. You
could buy one terabyte of contents, connect the hard drive directly to a
television, and watch it without any computer. You just needed to bring
your own hard drive to the seller and transfer the files at his place.

You could even customize the package by asking for a part of it only (to
save money) or for more specific contents (only kung fu movies, TV
shows, games, music, etc.).

Today, El Paquete could include series, films, soap operas (people love
Korean soap operas right now), documentaries, music, video clips,
reality shows, graphic humor, comics and cartoons, software, apps,
antivirus software, language courses, magazines in PDF format,
advertising, and an offline version of Revolico, among other materials.

The contents for each issue of El Paquete are usually collected from
online sources. Some foreigners and people connected to foreign
companies, embassies, or consulates have satellite antennas in their
houses, and some people have illegal satellite antennas too.

Maybe the creators of El Paquete are people working for the government
in official institutions with large digital bandwidth that allows
downloading long videos and music compilations. The fact is that
somebody is recording the materials, transferring them onto hard drives,
and preparing a new compilation every week (El Paquete Semanal, "The
Weekly Package").

There's also extensive clandestine traffic of digital devices between
Cuba and Miami. This includes USB flash drives and hard drives, but some
cultural content for El Paquete is also transported this way.

The cost of a full El Paquete is about 1 CUC (24-25 Cuban pesos), so in
terms of local income, it's expensive given that the average monthly
salary is between 15 and 20 CUC a month. But in Cuba quite often
multiple generations live in the same house: grandparents, parents, and
children. So the expense of a single copy of El Paquete is often shared
among the extended family.

For those who distribute the package, the cost, if acquired directly
from the matrix, varies according to the day on which it was bought
between 10.00 CUC and 3.00 CUC, Sunday being the most expensive. These
dealers cross the city by bike and have dozens of clients who spend 10
CUC weekly.

Now there is new street vendor license available named "Disk Seller and
Buyer," so many people are selling partial contents of El Paquete using
DVDs and CDs, especially series, video clips, and international soap operas.

Anti-Paquete

El Paquete became a big problem in Cuba because the government is
particularly afraid of this mode of content distribution. According to
the authorities, not only is it out of control and promotes
contamination by American culture, its artistic/intellectual level is
also quite low, as it's full of American blockbusters and Mexican soap
operas.

The government claims that Cubans instead need educational material for
young people, something that is good for the new generation, not films
with sex or violence. Nevertheless, I remember that for many years every
Saturday at 9 p.m. you could watch two or three pirated American movies
on national television, blockbusters like Die Hard for example. People
loved it, and it was common to say in a conversation that something was
like "Saturday's film," meaning that it had sex and violence.

But when the phenomena of El Paquete started, the real preoccupation of
the government wasn't the artistic quality Ad from a collector & seller
of pirated movies and other materials in Cuba. This ad was distributed
in El Paquete 8-8-2015. of its content, but politics; they didn't want
it to be used for spreading information against the government.

This USB package was spontaneous, unpredictable, and impossible to
control. Of course it quickly became illegal; if you were caught selling
it, you could go to prison or the government could confiscate your
computer. But some other methods to stop El Paquete were also tested.

One example was the creation of a direct rival: the authorities made
their own Paquete named Maletín or Mochila, which means a "bag" or
"backpack" in English. Inside, instead of US blockbusters, you could
find classical movies and music and educational materials. Actually,
people found it very boring and nobody liked it, so this anti-Paquete
system was a total failure.

And of course it was just as pirated as the clandestine one: the
government did not pay for its contents either; it was all "stolen."

Another attempt involved the creation of anti-Paquete propaganda: I
remember a very dramatic report on the TV news about computer virus
attacks all over the world that showed USB and El Paquete iconography
and claimed that hackers could use these viruses to steal your
information or destroy your computer.

Another faction of the government, mostly intellectuals, are proposing
to contaminate El Paquete with cultural contents, I guess Godard,
Glauber Rocha, and Bergman, but for many this will be an extension of
the indoctrination that Cubans have endured for more than 50 years
through information, education, and cultural systems.

Anyway, before the government proposed it, some cultural producers such
as reggaeton singers, filmmakers, designers and editors, among others,
began using El Paquete for the distribution of their works and
activities. There are even some original materials created specifically
for this distribution channel.

There are many local bands which created video clips especially for El
Paquete: national television does not promote them and YouTube is
banned, so they use El Paquete for distribution and promotion (e.g., La
Diosa "El Paquete with a strong message: "If you're not inside the
Paquete, you don't
exist!").

Web in a Box

Revolico is the Cuban version of Craigslist, a website where people can
directly publish small ads to sell or exchange different kinds of goods
and services: cars, jobs, clothes, animals, electronics, etc. The
problem is that people need to have access to the Internet to use it,
and in Cuba it's mostly
impossible.

People in Cuba love and need Revolico because it's the only way to
exchange materials, information, and goods. So Revolico went inside El
Paquete as a list of small ads. In a recent interview I conducted with
the creators of Revolico, Hiram (a co-founder) explained that they are
now working on a new offline version of this platform that will be ready
soon to take advantage of the El Paquete distribution system.

SNet

Today, in Cuba more and more people have computers and other electronic
devices such as tablets and smartphones, but home Internet and Wi-Fi
access remains forbidden unless you have special permission from the
Ministry of Communications (recently the government opened 35 points
with public Wi-Fi around the country with a cost of 2 CUC per hour, and
service is limited). As a consequence, there is a new phenomenon called
SNet (Street Net), a sort of clandestine network

At the beginning young people started to use telephone cables to connect
computers in the neighborhood in order to play games in a network.
Later, they found a way to connect the computers using Wi-Fi. Today,
this network consists of about 10,000 computers. The police also access
the system to monitor the flux of information.

The government warns that if you share counter-revolutionary material or
other forbidden content, it will break the whole SNet system. Despite
this, SNet has become one of the main avenues for playing collective
games and information distribution.

Besides SNet, there is also a governmental Internet, a very slow and
monitored intranet. Every e-mail that is written in Cuba is tracked by
the political police. There are many systems to monitor key words. Some
government employees or institutions. An advertising for "El Maletín",
governmental anti-paquete have a faster and more direct Internet
connection, with access to Yahoo, Hotmail, etc., but it's still
impossible to access other big international platforms such as YouTube
and Google Maps.

Recently, I collaborated with some SNet administrators to test the
possibilities of the net. We designed a small program and inserted it to
produce a collective poem based in the exquisite corpse method. We got a
poem of 3,000 words in just a week, meaning that many users of SNet were
involved.



Note: Articles and interviews have appeared after the publication of the
The Pirate Book, pointing to Elio Hector Lopez (aka The Transporter) as
one of the main managers of El Paquete Semanal.

Source: El Paquete Semanal: How Offline Piracy Flourishes in Cuba -
TorrentFreak -
https://torrentfreak.com/el-paquete-semanal-how-offline-piracy-flourishes-in-cuba-151226/

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