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Though these technologies undeniably have offered new possibilities for filmmaking and profit in Hollywood, they also offer a number of new challenges. Copies of films are available via the Internet while they are still in the theaters, sometimes even before their initial release date, as occurred with Fox's X-Men Origins: Wolverine (2009), a problem heightened by increasing access to broadband and Ethernet connections worldwide. Individual Web sites can broadcast material that studios do not want made public, such as unfinished scripts, pictures of costumes, or entire episodes of a TV series. Viacom's recent lawsuit against Google over the continual uploading of the company's intellectual property onto YouTube is a high-profile manifestation of this conflict. Studios fear that these sites will provide misinformation about their product and will keep them from earning profits that legally belong to them. As digital technologies continue to develop, Hollywood studios face growing difficulties in protecting their products and are threatened particularly by the highly unregulated nature of the Internet. 59ce067264
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Hollywood's digital woes: piracy plagues profits via early leaks and unregulated sharing. Like Moto X3M navigating treacherous tracks, studios struggle to protect intellectual property online. Broadband's proliferation fuels unauthorized distribution of scripts, costumes, and entire episodes, exemplified by Viacom's YouTube lawsuit. Misinformation and lost revenue threaten Hollywood's future in this digital free-for-all.