Cablevision Loses Suit on Network DVRs: Movie Studios Still Don’t Get It

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Last week, a judge ruled against Cablevision in a suit filed by Hollywood studios and broadcasters who claimed that Cablevision’s new network based digital video recording device would have broken copyright laws.

Last year, Cablevision announced plans to network digital video recorders which would have allowed cable customers to be able to record and playback shows through a regular cable box without the need to have a DVR cable box with a hard drive.

In the suit, Twentieth Century Fox, Paramount Pictures, CNN and Turner Broadcasting System claimed that Cablevision’s service would amount to an additional re-broadcast of their programs which they have not given permission for. Cablevision argued that since the the customer was in control of the recording and playback of the programs, and not Cablevision, that the devices were compliant.

Once again, the movie studios refuse to let customers decide how and when they consume content. When are these content companies going to realize that if they don’t give customers control, they won’t grow their business? The major studios keep complaining about the decline of DVD sales, the decline of theater ticket sales and the problem of illegal movie downloads, yet their own greed is keeping them from growing their business since they refuse to listen to what consumers want. Content isn’t king, the customer is king.

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MSNBC.com Video Still Not Supported In Firefox Or Safari For Mac Users

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Why can’t MSNBC.com get it’s video to work for Mac users with the Firefox or Safari browsers? Everyone says that using Flash solves the cross-platform issue but it doesn’t when a site like MSNBC.com who is using Flash, still doesn’t support Mac users. I am trying to watch the briefing on the pet food recall and had to leave the MSNBC.com site to go watch it with CNN’s pipeline service. I like MSNBC.com for getting my news each day but it’s dumb that they make Mac users leave their site and force them to go to a competitors news site to get video.

There is no excuse for MSNBC.com not to be able to support Mac users when the other news sites out there have been supporting them for years. Wake up MSNBC! You are losing eyeballs like mine when I can’t get the news I want from your site. Do I really need to tell you how people are getting news on the web today?

Update: I forgot to mention. In addition to the above, MSNBC makes you sit through a video advertisement BEFORE they tell you that you can’t see the video you are after. So while they know the browser is not supported, they don’t tell you that till after you have watched a video ad, which of course seems to work just fine in the browser.

Limelight Networks Files For IPO, Looking To Raise $201 Million

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Limelight Networks has filed for an IPO on the NASDAQ global market under the ticker symbol LLNW. The filing, which was made public Thursday by the SEC, says Limelight is looking to raise $201 million. According to the filing, Limelight earned $64.3 million for the year ending December 2006 and reported a loss of $3.7 million.

Limelight has been marching towards the IPO since mid last year when it raised a round of $130 million led by Goldman Sachs Capital Partners and brought on a new CEO Jeffrey Lunsford, who led his former company WebSideStory through a successful IPO.

This is good news for all the companies in the content delivery segment of the market as it will bring additional exposure to the services these companies provide. Also, with Limelight now having to put on paper every quarter all the details of it’s business, it will help to give us a better picture of the entire content delivery market.

I’ve put a call into Limelight to see if they will give a date range of when they expect to go public. Waiting to hear back. The company was not able to provide any estimated date range.

NBC Teams Up With News Corp., AOL and Others to Form Video Site To Rival YouTube

NBC Universal and News Corp. announced today that they are joining forces to launch a new video portal this summer enabling them to better control their programming and give YouTube some competition. It’s about time. What’s taken these major content owners so long?

I like this deal for two major reasons. One, this new video portal will have real syndication in place since they are teaming up with Yahoo, Time Warner Inc.’s AOL, Microsoft Corp.’s MSN, and MySpace as their initial distribution partners. In addition, they are going to focus on producing professional looking content as opposed to most of the junk you see on YouTube. Some have said this new video portal can’t be compared to YouTube since YouTube is all about allowing users to upload their own videos and the new NBC Universal and News Corp. portal has not yet defined what roll user generated content will play.

It’s hard to know how much of YouTube’s traffic comes from user generated video or from TV produced content, but we know that a vast majority of traffic comes from TV content. I mean, how many jackass style videos can you really watch each day?

For me, the outstanding questions about this deal are:

  • How will this new NBC Universal and News Corp. portal distribute content? Will they use a firm like Brightcove or try and keep most of the technology in-house? If they don’t have a user generated function, then all they are doing is delivering video which they can easily do. But if they need to have transcoding and other functionality, my guess is they will partner with someone so that they enter the market faster.
  • What will be the role of user generated video in the new portal?
  • How many other content providers will jump on board with NBC Universal and News Corp. to add their content to this new portal? If it is successful when it launches, many other content owners will quickly want to join.

It seems every time there is a big deal announced people always seem to call it a "game changer" even when the new offering has not yet launched. In most cases, I think it’s a bunch of hype and they use the term simply to create drama, but in this case, I think this announcement really does have the potential to change the economics for some content owners.

Agencies Warned: In Digital Media, Change Or Die

Mediapost has a good article on their website today that reviews some of the sessions going on at the OMMA Hollywood conference this week. Specifically, this article talks to how the role of the agency will need to change to keep up with the emerging media planning platforms.

This is not unique to our industry or a media business. This applies to companies in any industry that allow themselves to not embrace change and work with it, instead of against it. The record industry is a great example of an industry that in my opinion has never kept up with or embraced change.

Call For Speakers Now Open For The Streaming Media West Conference

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The call for speakers for the Streaming Media East conference and exhibition taking place Nov. 6-8th in San Jose is now open. I typically receive ten times the number of speaking submissions I have available so I strongly suggest you submit your proposal early, as they are reviewed and possibly confirmed upon receipt. The submission deadline is May 11th.

It should be noted that we are always looking for speakers from the media who cover and track this industry via print, web and blogging. For the East show in May we have speakers from Economist, Business Week, Wall Street Journal, eWeek, ClickZ News, MarketWatch and About.com amongst other media outlets.

If you are interested in moderating your own round-table session at the show and are looking to help organize and participate in the topic and creation of a session, contact me immediately via e-mail with your idea.

As you are all aware, the online video market is hotter than ever and our shows continue to grow each year and continue to attract more and more speakers. The demand continues to grow for speaking spots so I can’t stress enough how important it is to get your submissions in on time.

Industry Leaders Form Consortium to Develop End-to-End Specification for IPTV

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AT&T Inc., Ericsson, France Telecom, Panasonic, Philips, Samsung, Siemens Networks, Sony, and Telecom Italia today announced the founding of the Open IPTV Forum, an industry consortium that will work to define an interoperable end-to-end specification for delivery of IPTV services.

The release says that the forum, which is fully open to participation across the communications and entertainment industries, will focus on development of open standards that could help to streamline and accelerate deployments of IPTV technologies, and help to maximize the benefits of IPTV for consumers, network operators, content providers, service providers, consumer electronics manufacturers and infrastructure providers.

As with any organization or association, I’m skeptical only because we have seen so many of these types of groups launch with big fanfare but they end up having little impact on the industry. Many don’t end up actually doing anything or get so caught up in their own internal politics that they can’t get out of their own way. That being said, I give these companies credit for joining together to try and accomplish something instead of just sitting on the side and doing nothing. I hope to see them succeed.

Other companies in the online video industry should take note. There is no where near enough co-opetition going on amongst vendors in this industry which in many cases is just short sighted thinking. There are way too many important decisions being made about our industry, by those outside our industry.