Saturday, April 21, 2007

Video Killed the Distributor -

Video Killed the Distributor -:
" According to David Del Beccaro, CEO of Music Choice, it would now cost 'between $200 (million) and $500 million' to license all of the major-label video content to supply a site with on-demand music footage. 'There isn't a single player in music videos online today that can get a CPM to offset the variable cost of providing the video,' he said."

Tuesday, April 17, 2007

BBC NEWS | Technology | 'Fatal' blow to web broadcasters

BBC NEWS | Technology | 'Fatal' blow to web broadcasters:
"US webcasters will face sharp rises in royalty fees that could be 'fatal' to the nascent industry, a coalition of web broadcasters has claimed. "

Thursday, March 22, 2007

Can filesharers be made to pay? | Technology | Guardian Unlimited Technology

Can filesharers be made to pay? Technology Guardian Unlimited Technology:
"The music industry is beginning to understand that lawsuits don't deter pirates and that it must find ways to make money from P2P sharing, says Adam Webb "
[...]
Elsewhere, yet-to-be-launched "legal" P2P networks (ie users will be able to swap DRM-encoded tracks) QTrax and Mashboxx have all signed deals with major labels. The former will run on the Gnutella network, while the latter is headed by former Grokster boss Wayne Rosso. BitTorrent, meanwhile, has recently launched a legal download service. Its software will also power the next wave of video platforms in the shape of the BBC's iPlayer. And then there is Joost, whose founders, Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis, developed the technology that powered Kazaa.
"Six years later, the labels have learned the difference between P2P and piracy," says Rosso. "They've learned that P2P is a technology. Ultimately, I think that the content will be free and all ad supported."

Monday, March 12, 2007

Small Internet radio hit by new royalty rates

http://www.reuters.com/article/internetNews/idUSN1225136320070312

Under copyright law, owners of sound recordings must license their music for noninteractive webcasts and simulcasts. Webcasters and broadcasters may negotiate an individual rate directly with copyright owners or they may obtain the statutory compulsory license from government-designated agency SoundExchange at a set rate. SoundExchange must pay 50% of the royalties to the copyright owners (typically labels), 45% to featured artists and 5% to a union fund set up to pay background musicians and singers.

The last time rates were set in 2002 by the Librarian of Congress, broadcasters and the Recording Industry Assn. of America, the lobby group for the major U.S. labels, privately agreed that ad-based commercial services had the option to pay a fraction of a penny per stream or per aggregate tuning hour (the average number of songs played per hour, or ATH), multiplied by the number of users. Noncommercial broadcasters, like National Public Radio (NPR), would pay an annual flat fee between $500 and $2,500.

Meanwhile, Congress enacted the Small Webcasters Settlement Act, which essentially let the little guys pay a percentage of revenue. That law expired in 2005. With the CRB now deciding new rates for 2006-2010, commercial webcast and simulcast rates are $0.0008 per stream (up from about $0.0007), with a minimum of $500 annually per channel or station.
The hardest hit by the decision may be aggregators. SoundExchange reports that Live365 aggregates up to 5,000 stations, which may mean a minimum payment of $500 for each station. Boston-based Loud City, with two full-time employees, offers 500 channels, according to its Web site

Thursday, March 08, 2007

paidContent.org: The Economics of Content - Movie Gallery Acquires Heavily Funded MovieBeam For Less Than $10 Million

paidContent.org: The Economics of Content - Movie Gallery Acquires Heavily Funded MovieBeam For Less Than $10 Million

A little more than a year ago we were writing about the spinoff and recapitalization of on- demand movie service MovieBeam backed with $52.5 million in funding. Today, video rental chain Movie Gallery announced that it had acquired MovieBeam Inc. and would spend less than $10 million on the service in 2007—including the acquisition costs and development expenses. In exchange, Movie Gallery gets the digital platform it needs to compete with Blockbuster, Netflix, Wal-Mart, Amazon and other video rental options. I

t’s a tad anticlimatic for a company that started several years ago as a major Disney project that cost some $70 million before going cold in early 2005 when Disney switched to a shutter-and-sell strategy. Moviebeam emerged again in February 2006 as a separate company touting a subscription service that ran $230 a year. The service is available in 31 cities and required the set-top box co-branded with Cisco’s Linksys, an investor in the spinoff.

MovieBeam needed to sell 500,000 boxes and subscriptions to break even, an exec said at the time. Release. Investors in the spinoff included Mayfield, Norwest Venture Partners, Intel Capital, Cisco, Vantage Point Venture Partners and Disney’s ABC. Without being privvy to the exact details, this bears the marks of a fire sale—a company with more than $120 million behind it all said going for less than $10 million. Will it wind up being worth even that to Movie Gallery?

Gmail - центр по вопросам чтения и комплектования библ

Monday, March 05, 2007

InformationWeek Weblog: WebEx Lets You Access Your PC Through Your Mobile Phone

InformationWeek Weblog: WebEx Lets You Access Your PC Through Your Mobile Phone:
"WebEx and SoonR will allow you to use your mobile phone's browser to get into your PC remotely. Some of the nifty features include transferring files, printing and searching your desktop.
The software, called WebEx PCNow 3.0, claims to be the first remote access solution to support both PC-to-PC and phone-to-PC access."

Wired News: Video Killed the Distributor

Wired News: Video Killed the Distributor:
"According to David Del Beccaro, CEO of Music Choice, it would now cost 'between $200 (million) and $500 million' to license all of the major-label video content to supply a site with on-demand music footage. 'There isn't a single player in music videos online today that can get a CPM to offset the variable cost of providing the video,' he said."

Wired News: Music Labels' Ace in the Hole

Wired News: Music Labels' Ace in the Hole:
"Labels could re-master these albums into a high-res digital file-based format that would blow away the sound quality of the CD (not to mention MP3 and other lousy formats). We'd get better sound -- something we might actually pay for -- and they'd have something not already available on P2P networks."

Sunday, March 04, 2007

The Battle for Hollywood�s Future: Video on Demand and Apple Inc. media dominance » SlideShare

The DOI is coming: tracking digital information - Digital Object Identifier, includes related article Information Outlook - Find Articles

The DOI is coming: tracking digital information - Digital Object Identifier, includes related article Information Outlook - Find Articles:
"The DOI is a unique control number for digital content. It is a permanent, persistent identifier for electronic intellectual property. Its power lies in the standard, centralized database of metadata and the delivery system behind it, combined with an ability to interact with disparate systems. The DOI will always point to the content, wherever the publisher has put it. It has been compared to the standardized UPC (Universal Product Code) that appears on almost every product. "

Publishers OK online book browsing - CNN.com

Publishers OK online book browsing - CNN.com: "Random House, whose writers include Danielle Steel and Norman Mailer, said on Tuesday it will let consumers search and browse through more than 5,000 of its titles on the Internet through a new service called Insight."
[...]
HarperCollins Publishers, whose authors include Michael Crichton, on Monday said it was introducing a browse function that lets consumers embed pages of books onto networking sites such as MySpace. Media mogul Rupert Murdoch's News Corp owns HarperCollins and MySpace.
Random House said the two companies were the only major publishers offering such services so far.