On Broken Windows, Pointless Patents, Standard Battles And DVDs No One Wants
from the well,-it's-doing-something dept
Many folks are familiar with the so-called broken window fallacy, where people think that breaking something should be considered good for overall productivity, since it creates more work to do. It seems that perhaps we're facing a similar story with the ongoing (and ridiculous boring) next generation DVD standards battle. There are, of course, two main standards fighting it out, and neither side will agree to just create one standard to focus on. That basically slows down everything. Consumers won't buy because they don't want a DVD player that only is going to play a fraction of available movies (or, worse, get stuck with the "losing" side and have nothing to show for it). Studios hate to pick sides for the same reason. Everyone slows down and nothing happens. Sometimes, this can be okay, as the two sides can fight it out for dominance on quality -- and the better solution will win. However, with DVDs, the longer they wait, the more likely it is that both offerings will be obsolete by the time either has established itself. So, now, some folks at Warner Brothers have decided to apply for a patent on a disc that would play both types of DVD standard. However, this seems like a lot of wasted effort, to create a patent for something that shouldn't even be needed in the first place. If a standard had been set earlier, then this wouldn't have been needed, and now an extra cost will be added to the market, just because no standard could be agreed to.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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Suprise!
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Format Wars
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Does anyone claim the Blu-ray/HD-DVD battle does g
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Re: Does anyone claim the Blu-ray/HD-DVD battle do
Well, I think it is, inherently, in the idea that this patent is somehow "good for society." People are talking about how it'll help fix the problem of the broken standards battle... but it shouldn't even be an issue if the standards system had worked.
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future...
on the plus side (froma consumer point of view) it should stop a signle manufacturer making such a device, and then your basically stuck with it.
on a negative side (from a consumer point of view) the content company can add all sorts of 'requirements' to license the patent.
as has been noted though... with the costs of hard drives comming down all the time, i can see a time where you have a small pocket sized removable drive replacing all these discs anyway. take that to blockbuster (etc) and grab a copy of the film, watch as long as you want, copy as much as you want.. the film becomming a vehicle for advertising and merchandising anyway.
essentially the film becomes a loss leader... with the benefit to the studio of practically zero distribution costs.
i'm in the process of specing my next PC, 'bluray' & 'hd-dvd' don't feature, and won't until there is a single standard, *and* it lacks the DRM / region coding rubbish (or it can be cracked to remove it)
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Not sure this is relevent but...
I think it's a great idea that a company out there has patented a dual standard disc. At the very least they can also develope a dual standards player, meaning the early adaptors with get the chance to test both standands, and eventually the market will ween out the loser.
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Re: Not sure this is relevent but...
However there are economists that feel that this is inaccurate, and actually leaves out specific costs that are generated by the entire process.
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Here is to hoping...
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Let Nature Take Its Course
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