Knock-off Nigel
Knock-off Nigel was a 2007 television campaign against copyright infringement in the United Kingdom.
The campaign included a series of television advertisements in which the eponymous Nigel was described as having bought unlicensed DVDs, illegally downloaded films, and so on, to the accompaniment of a derisive song: "He's a knock-off Nigel..." As a result of his wrongdoings, Nigel was left lonely and despised by his peers.[1][2]
Further reading
    
- "U.K. Industry Trust Unveils 'Knock-Off' Ad Campaign" by Lars Brandle, Billboard.com (May 15, 2007)
 - The SAGE Handbook of Intellectual Property, ed. Debora Halbert and Matthew David, SAGE Publications (2014)
 - Understanding Copyright: Intellectual Property in the Digital Age by Bethany Klein, Giles Moss, Lee Edwards, SAGE Publications (2015)
 - Transnational Financial Crime by Nikos Passas, Taylor & Francis (2017)
 - Film Piracy, Organized Crime, and Terrorism by Gregory F. Treverton, RAND Corporation (2009)
 
See also
    
- Beware of illegal video cassettes
 - Don't Copy That Floppy
 - Home Recording Rights Coalition
 - Home Taping Is Killing Music
 - Piracy is theft
 - Public information film (PIF)
 - Public service announcement
 - Spin (public relations)
 - Steal This Film
 - Who Makes Movies?
 - You can click, but you can't hide
 - You Wouldn't Steal a Car
 
References
    
- "Getting inside a downloader's head". news.bbc.co.uk. BBC News Magazine. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
 - "Education Is Best Weapon Against Web Piracy, not SOPA". forbes.com. Retrieved 28 March 2022.
 
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