Kazaa And Skype Not Enough: Founders Now Looking At Online TV Distribution
from the so-they-say dept
Apparently the billions of dollars Niklas Zennstrom and Janus Friis picked up when eBay overpaid for Skype isn't enough. Business Week reports that the two are working on a new project that has to do with video sharing for television programming. The two are supposedly still working at Skype. Zennstrom is just contributing money and advice, with Friis spending 20% of his time on the new effort -- which is supposedly trying to partner with just about every TV network they can talk to. Of course, it's worth remembering that the music industry would still like to put the two of these guys in jail for Kazaa -- which has kept them out of the US, despite the eBay buyout. They also face charges from rival Streamcast that Skype actually uses Kazaa code, which Zennstrom (so the lawsuit charges) promised Streamcast it could buy. In other words, despite the success of Skype, there may be some legal baggage associated with any new company they're involved in -- especially for those in the entertainment industry. Also, of course, the video streaming and distribution market is already incredibly crowded -- with players from YouTube to BitTorrent already having plenty of users and name recognition. While it's true that neither Kazaa nor Skype were first to market in their spaces, neither market was nearly as crowded as the online video market is already today.Thank you for reading this Techdirt post. With so many things competing for everyone’s attention these days, we really appreciate you giving us your time. We work hard every day to put quality content out there for our community.
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WTF?
WTF? Since when was BbitTorrent an online media player?
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Re: WTF?
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Re: Re: WTF?
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Re: WTF?
I'm pretty sure that he means "players" as in contenders, not actualy media players
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No FW
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Re: WTF?
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Studios are retards
Clearly, the studios are losing money due to their dated business models and are attempting to stifle technology by means of lawsuits and the threats thereof.
It's like the police trying to stop the use and production of screwdrivers because they can be used to break open locks!
Wake up people! It's not the screwdrivers. The secret is that there are actual people out there designing, implementing, and maintaining illegal operations by means of the technology.
All that is needed is to arrest and punish these criminals by some sort of international consortium of law enforcement officials to actually get these criminals and start sending messages of accountability. Right now it's easier for the criminals to hide than to face the piper. Hence the problem.
Can you imagine a world without screwdrivers just because it was banned by lock manufacturers! It's insanity!
The studios cannot come up with a working model to embrace the technology so they fight it tooth-and-nail to overcome their own shortcomings. It's a losing, rediculous battle where everyone loses but the criminals.
Tell me...what's wrong with this picture?
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Lay Person
I think that the transport program attack is retarded in the fact that I can transport files with FTP and other programs including setting a VPN tunnel up and then doing a freaking windows copy. ANYWAY....
One solution make every file sharing app illeagal EXCEPT and unless they are registered programs like paypal. Make all users have to use a credit card for tracking not payments. So no payments and you can use it totally free forever but we have your registration info. Thus no underage players and overage players will have to have a credit card(thieves not withstanding) At least there would be some accountability. Oh and while I am at it force each program to record and report each file transfered to each IP.
This would detere many allthough I am sure if you make the better lock it isnt anything but the next fun thing to break for hackers. But hey at least this would be one try???
~ pitching in my 2 downloads.
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Skype
Michael Locker MD
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illegalizing P2p
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Maybe contemplation of my own mortality....
So?
Maybe I'm supposed to focus on the idea that any company that does business with these guys is taking on risks that one wouldn't normally expect.
So?
What am I missing?
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Re: Maybe contemplation of my own mortality....
They won't even make an attempt at trying to make the technology work for them but rather stifle anything that may jeopardize the status quo of their own technical ignorance.
These large corporation's motto:
"If you don't understand it, fight it; if it wins, keep fighting it so it cannot progress further."
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bit torrent NOT more efficient protocol than strai
Its only illegal if you use it to share copywriten files. There are plenty of files that are legal to share and much more efficent than a straight download from a website.
no, bit torrent is NOT more efficient - there is quite a big overhead of slicing & dicing files into little chunks.
ISPs particularly hate it as it uses the back-channel, and cable companies have largely built their networks mainly for customers to download
however, it DOES save bandwidth but only for the original seeder, allowing someone on a DSL or cable connection to serve 100's of downloaders but only have to actually perform a small number of parallel uploads.
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YOU'RE LAME.
Your "corporate intelligence" is weak and fluffed.
Mike,
YOU NEED TO FIND A NEW HOBBY.
I'm dropping you from my RSS feeds.
I'll have to tell everyone that I originally recommended your site to that YOU JUMPED THE SHARK.
Anyone else have any other _WORTHWHILE_ independent tech news sites they'd like to recommend?
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Re: Re: Maybe contemplation of my own mortality...
Were you originally responding to Mike's post or someone's comment? I ask because your response to me had nothing at all to do with what I was asking.
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