Sony says 'no' to porn on Blu-ray Disc
We were pleased to learn of this report in InfoWorld, 1/19/07:
Sony said it will not work with the adult film industry to help put their movies on its Blu-ray Disc format, although it will not try to stop them completely.
The company will not allow its disc replicating subsidiary, Sony DADC, to handle adult film titles, it said this week. In markets where it operates around the world the company won't duplicate any movies above a certain rating or that have not been certified by a local motion picture association.
Sony wouldn't disclose exactly where it draws the line, but the rule means that adult movie makers will have to find someone else to reproduce their films in bulk. While other companies offer such services, the adult industry feels it is being cut out of the Blu-ray camp altogether.
The choice of which high-definition disc format to use was "kind of made for us, so everything we are replicating right now is in the HD DVD format," said Robby D, a director at popular adult film maker Digital Playground Inc. "As far as I understand, Sony has said to the replicators that if you replicate adult, you'll lose your license."
We applaud Sony's principled decision. See also Corporate Self-Restraint at Leading Domain-Name Exchange.









it's clear that you do absolutely no research before posting these things.
http://www.highdefdigest.com/news/show/Blu-ray_Refutes_Claims_of_Porn_Ban_Vivid_Plans_First_High-Def_Release/437
Sony has made it clear that they make NO distinction of the content on their media.
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Thank you for this link. Your article is dated earlier than the one we cited. We'll see how it all turns out.
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The "no porn on blu-ray" was originally a misunderstood statement made on the 11th of January, 2007, corrected by Sony on the 12th ( http://arstechnica.com/news.ars/post/20070112-8602.html ). Your source is just as ill-researched and out of date as you are!
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Here is an even more recent article from PC World on the subject. I get the clear impression that Sony is discouraging adult merchants from using its Blu-ray technology, to the extent that it has control. That's good enough for me to give Sony praise. And let's put in a cheer for Disney while we're at it:
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