Hulu Telling Sites To Stop Embedding So Much
from the this-is-not-how-the-internet-works dept
Once again, we're left wondering how Hulu can survive, given that its ownership has too much interest in restricting what its customers want to do. Following braindead efforts to block specialized browsers, even though they access Hulu content just like regular browsers, combined with blocking anonymous proxies, even those used for perfectly legitimate reasons, Hulu is apparently now cracking down on sites that embed a lot of its videos -- yes, despite having embed functionality specifically allowed.You may recall that one of the key reasons why YouTube became so popular in the first place was a little javascript hack that made it incredibly easy to embed the video directly into any other website (while still hosting the content on YouTube). Suddenly, rather than having to link to the video, it was easy to have video on any other website. Hulu of course recognized the value of that and included embed code functionality as well, but quickly found itself unsure how to deal with the fact that people actually used it. Back when Hulu was still in private beta, requiring invites to access the sites, some other sites quickly decided to just embed all the videos on their own sites, pulling in the traffic that Hulu could have generated for itself. Many sites apparently are still embedding lots of Hulu shows, and Hulu has simply decided to tell those sites to stop. As NewTeeVee notes in the link above, nothing good will come from this policy. It comes across as being rather against how the web works and how people expect the web to work. In the end it just appears like yet another "but we can stop people from doing what they want to do" move that all too often comes from those in legacy industries.
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Hulu demanded that a newly launched video discovery startup called Rippol stop embedding all its shows.
I can sort of understand where Hulu is going here. Embedding is suppose to be something used by, say, a blogger who points to something interesting or someone putting a video up on facebook or whatever. Rippol looks like a company attempting to use ALL of the videos from Hulu to run their own business.
Again, I am surprised Mike that you can't see the difference.
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So, I don't see at all what the problem with embedding these videos (to any degree) is.
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Wait... Google/YouTube may not like that idea.
Nevermind.
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It also doesn't allow Hulu to control the user experience. They can't guide them to preferred videos, or have them become part of the community, or anything else along those lines. Remember the old CwF? Take away the site and just display the videos, and that connection part is gone.
Rippol is trying to build a business model that is based on ripping other sites off, attempting to insert their CwF into the process, while letting the other sites pay the bandwidth.
Sign up for Rippol, go have a look, and you will understand how this can be very disruptive for companies.
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Content companies that are afraid of these types of "competitors" seem to think that their idea (which may be great) is so good that it cannot evolve. If they continue to innovate, they will overtake companies that simply re-display content in short order.
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Control? Really? I don't know about you, but I don't want my experience controlled. If Hulu provides the better experience, they will get used. If they don't, they won't. You have also forgotten the other half of the equation, RtB. If someone else is giving Hulu's customers CwF and/or Rtb, then Hulu needs to step up their game. They have the content, now they need to work on the rest of the equation.
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I think the Hulu business is really close to a good internet business model. They have content partners that are making it a huge problem for them (and could be the source of these issues), but they have combined the content and the ads in a way that someone else embedding it gets both.
Now, a less-intrusive ad model might be nicer, but with the content and the ads being embedded, their business model should be to get as many people to embed their shows as possible. It's like they have billboards that people WANT to stand in their front yards. Sure, you get the guy that decides to stick 1000 billboards on his lawn and charge people to see them, but if your ad is still on the billboard, allowing him to give you more traffic sounds like a good idea.
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In general, I like Hulu a lot and use their service almost every day. I can't imagine Hulu will survive for long, however. They provide too much service with too little hassle. I'll enjoy it while I can and find something else when it's gone.
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It's just bad business to have some technology that people like (they must or would not be using it) and tell them that since you cannot figure out a good way to make it profitable, they simply need to use it in exactly the way the intended.
They should be looking at this from the other direction and trying to figure out how they can take advantage of the way the technology is being used. They are still providing the content. It is still streaming from their site. Another company coming along and using that content is one of two things: 1. a company that cannot come up with anything of their own that is simply copying your business or 2. a company that looked at your business and figured out a way to add additional value.
The first is probably going to have problems since they are not innovators. If Hulu continues to innovate, they should be able to stay ahead of this type of company easily and eventually those companies will be gone.
The second is an opportunity for Hulu to either get their act together and provide more competitive services, or simply another channel through which they need to devise a business model in which they continue to make money. Frankly, they have this business model since the commercials are embedded in the content the other companies are using. If someone can add a service that generates more viewers, they should be thrilled.
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The problem is that Hulu's owners come across as a bit dimwitted about what features they offer, and what they expect people to do with them once they've released the features....waitaminute..,that's probably exactly the problem.
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Hmmph.
The Hulu fellows have root physical access--why don't they just change how the server responds when some goofy a$*hole's page calls for a "large number" of videos' embed frames simultaneously?
Seriously, not a difficult problem. Solved by a little server side code and a twitter which says "You can now only embed one video per IP address per minute." (unless you're a paying member of our "bandwidth club.")
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Re: Hmmph.
They are reducing the value of their own content. Most people want to increase the value.
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If their free service is being abused to the detriment of the company, they need to do something about it. I was simply pitching one possible workaround which leaves full functionality (so far as most users are concerned) but seriously messes with those who want to base a 'business model' off of abusing their free service.
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Hulu needs to protect their (almost workable) business model from attacks.
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Yes, they are attempting some site that is using their content in and unexpected way from doing so to protect their business. This can make perfect sense until their attack on the site takes away functionality that is useful to their audience. I am not saying your play would not work, I am saying that it is very risky because it may send a portion of the audience elsewhere.
And again, it seems like they have content with ads built in that others are sharing. If their business model also depends on driving traffic through their website to view other ads, it seems like their time would be better spent adjusting their revenue stream to get all of their necessary revenue into the content. If they do this, they suddenly make what this and other companies do a BENEFIT to their business rather than some kind of a threat. Adjusting your business model to work with the market makes a lot more sense than trying to adjust the market to meet your business model.
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Time for me to be a little Trollish ....
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Comparison to YouTube
Now, YouTube is beginning to compete with Hulu and YouTube may prove more profitable for all the reasons you mention - being more open, not serving too many conflicting interests, but it's still too early to say.
Criticizing Hulu's stupid policies is fair, but kudos to Hulu for at least trying something different instead of just copying YouTube, because I don't think that's the path to success either.
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Re: Comparison to YouTube
Why do you say that? Google has made strong indications that it is profitable.
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Google has volume and scale of operations which allows them to leverage other businesses they own to provide YouTube with bandwidth at costs nobody else can touch, massive data centers, and other major expenditures that may or may not be part of the bottom line of YouTube. Since they aren't specifically saying "YouTube Made $XXX million last year" you can be sure that any profit is on a very, very, very technical basis and not at all on an overall bottom line operations standpoint.
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Hmm. Google tends to hold such things close to the chest -- especially on things that are massively successful, so I'm not sure why they would change just for that. Gmail has made a ridiculous amount of money for Google, and yet they do not crow about it or break that out separately.
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Then again, this IS Google we're talking about. It's entirely likely that the entire software and integration was gifted to them by a Fairy Godmother.
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Re: Comparison to YouTube
As I recall, commercials are still present in embedded Hulu shows, and those streams are still counted because the embedding is still hosted by Hulu. TV lived for decades on commercials, why is it suddenly different because people use their computers for the same purpose?
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Not one mention of the costs to Hulu
The other company only spends a small fraction of that on bandwidth and leaches off of Hulu. Hulu may embed advertising in the videos, but they also embed the advertising in their HTML as well.
They offer the embedded video options to their END USERS as a courtesy, there is no reason on earth for them to support some other companies business model by subsidizing their bandwidth requirements.
Every time mikee m posts his dribble criticizing Internet companies for not giving their products away for free just because it's "virtual goods" he overlooks the premium companies pay for the bandwidth to send these virtual goods over the Internet.
And I hate to break everyone's hearts, but the bandwidth I pay for at my data centers far exceeds the cost of my broadband at home...
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Re: Not one mention of the costs to Hulu
..and who are these mysterious "end users"? Someone who is allowed to embed but doesn't? Someone without a web page? It seems to me that if they don't want people embedding videos, they shouldn't allow it. If they allow it, they shouldn't complain because someone does.
there is no reason on earth for them to support some other companies business model
Yes, there is. Every pair of eyes that watches those videos also watches the ads. That's how they make money at Hulu. If someone can get 10,000 more people to watch the videos because they allow those users to tweet what they are watching, that's 10,000 more people watching ads. It's a win-win. No one is losing money here. If Hulu was smart, they'd quickly integrate this quite obvious (yet somehow left out??) feature into their page, and presto, there's no reason to visit the other site anymore.
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Re: Not one mention of the costs to Hulu
Your complaint is that Hulu also needs to make money off of the ads they have on their website and that the ad revenue from people watching the stream (which they can still track when it is embedded) is not enough. Why not focus on changing that?
Yes, it sucks that someone took their great content and stuck it on a web page that allows you to (apparently) post to FaceBook about it easily. However, if someone doing that has added enough value to your content to draw away your revenue, you can do one of three things:
1. Add that functionality yourself - apparently, your customers want it.
2. Change your ad revenue streams so the revenue from the HTML on your own site is irrelevant. This is also an opportunity for you to reduce costs - make your website simple and rely on others to add value as this other company has done.
3. Complain about the technology and/or break it so someone cannot do this to you. Unfortunately, this is also likely to reduce the value of your content because people want the feature you do not provide.
Allowing others to add value and serve as a deployment network for your product is something that many companies have embraced. Letting someone make a GPS module for your PDA helps you SELL MORE PDA's. This is particularly good news if you suck at making GPS modules. If Hulu cannot make a better web page for their own ads, they should be thrilled to have a better designer give more people a reason to see their ads.
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Legitimacy has nothing to do with it.
Mike, why is it illegitimate to use a proxy to make it seem as though you are connecting from a different place? What law is this breaking?
I think it is illegitimate to put something on the internet and expect that only people from certain countries should be able to access it. It is the World Wide Web, not a private American network.
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Re: Legitimacy has nothing to do with it.
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oops forgot something
Each of those window making money for the studios.
..."The proxy ban..."
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Re: Legitimacy has nothing to do with it.
This is a moment when you need to learn a very basic concept: you don't have a right to anything you want without restriction.
They didn't "put it on the internet", they make it available via the internet. They are a private company who has the right to refuse service to anyone.
Proxies, VPNs, and other things are all classes of customers that they refuse service to. They are constractually limited to showing the videos only in the US, and that is what they are doing.
You need to grow up and realize that the internet isn't some sort of unlimited free source for everything you want.
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What you are missing is that I'm not claiming some sort of entitlement to services. I'm saying if you don't want the whole world to have access to a service, then don't publish it to the world wide web. More importantly, I'm saying it isn't illegitimate to try to route around these blocks with proxies, no matter the position of Big Content.
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Re: Re: Re: Legitimacy has nothing to do with it.
... and you get upset when I tell you to grow up? I don't think this is a discussion about racism. The internet is colorblind.
The rest is, well, meaningless.
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Re: Re: Re: Re: Legitimacy has nothing to do with it.
I never said this discussion was about racism. I'm not going to respond to you anymore because you're only interested in..I have no idea what you are interested. Nor do I care.
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If it was up to Hulu, they would come to your house, kick you in the groin, and just take your wallet...
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Actually this could save Hulu a penny
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TVGUIDE.COM Embeds
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Embedding Hulu
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