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To: DiViT who wrote (46510)10/25/1999 5:57:00 PM
From: BillyG  Read Replies (2) | Respond to of 50808
 
Studios scramble to prevent Net piracy
news.cnet.com

By John Borland
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 25, 1999, 12:15 p.m. PT

If you thought the fuss over downloading music was big, just wait until
multimillion-dollar Hollywood films make their way onto the Internet.

Hollywood is scrambling to find a way to keep big-budget movies from the fate music has
faced because of the proliferation of MP3--a music download format that allows for the
easy but un-secure distribution of songs on the Net.

The film industry so far has been relatively shielded from online piracy, as the sheer size of
full-length films has kept them from being easily exchanged over typical dial-up Internet
connections. But cable and telephone companies are finally speeding up deployments of
high-speed Internet connections, making online video piracy a looming problem for movie
studios.

"Obviously we can't stop it," said Eva Miranda, senior vice president for strategic
development at Sony Pictures. "It's headed that way. The bigger question is how we best
respond to it."

That is still up in the air, film industry insiders say. The big
studios, along with the Motion Picture Association of
America (MPAA) and a group of high-tech firms, are
exploring ways to make it difficult to copy and distribute
digital films. Some studios, such as Sony Pictures, already
have policies underway aimed at revamping business
practices to allow for e-commerce.

Already the industry has created barriers to copying and
distributing home videos that executives hope can be
translated to digital movies online. Movie executives also
are closely watching how recording companies are
responding to the widespread use of MP3 files, hoping to
learn from any successful strategies.

"I think the lessons of MP3 have helped studios get out
ahead of the issue instead of behind it," said Jonathan
Taplin, cofounder of Intertainer.com, an online distributor of
movies and other Hollywood content.

From Star Wars to MP3
Movie piracy--often films recorded by camcorder in a
theater then distributed on videotape or compact disc--is already a nagging problem for film
companies. Some online distribution does exist, but industry antipiracy forces say it is
minimal, with the number of individuals involved still numbering in the "low thousands."

Yet Hollywood got a wake-up call last summer when an unauthorized copy of Star Wars:
The Phantom Menace showed up online despite unprecedented security measures. The
intense media interest in the film--combined with a target audience similar to the online
demographic--let many people to seek illegal copies online, highlighting the potential of
Net-based distribution.

The Star Wars incident gave the studios a taste of what the record companies have faced
for several years, following the proliferation of MP3.

The MP3 format allows easy copying and distribution of songs across the Net--easy
enough that millions of unauthorized copies of songs have quickly found their way onto the
Web and users' hard drives. Record companies initially fought the technology, but the
widespread use recently has driven some music executives to join the game on the
condition that some protections against illegal copying are created.

The film and video industry hasn't yet faced the same problem. A typical song can be
downloaded in just a few minutes over a dial-up modem--in fact, it was the development of
the 56 kilobit-per-second (kbps) dial-up modem that helped spur MP3's popularity,
analysts say.

By contrast, a short video file can take hours to download over a dial-up connection, and a
full movie could potentially take an entire day to download.

"We're fortunate that [video] file sizes are so much bigger," said Mika Salmi, president of
online film distributor Atom Films. "The studios have the luxury of a little more time. [The
issue] is not going to blindside them."

Broadband video on the horizon
But that technological safeguard is disappearing, as telephone and cable companies
rapidly deploy high-speed Internet connections. The broadband consumer market is
expected to reach more than 11 million households by 2002, according to research firm
Jupiter Communications.

US West and SBC Communications plan to offer their high-speed Internet customers
video-on-demand services--a kind of high-tech pay-per-view--and sources say Bell Atlantic
and BellSouth are also talking to possible on-demand video providers.

At the same time, video compression techniques are improving, decreasing the potential
size of video files. The combination of these trends has prompted studios to find a way to
avoid being blindsided by an explosion of pirated, downloadable videos online.

"It is on our radar screens," said Brad Hunt, chief technical officer for the MPAA.
"We know we need to focus in on developing strategies in that area."

The MPAA, studio executives, and computer and consumer electronic companies
already meet once a month in Los Angeles to address home video piracy. This
working group's recent focus has been blocking video copying through home
networks--a technology that also will play into distribution over the Net, Hunt noted.

The studios are also in the early stages of developing a set of copy protection
standards they hope Internet software and hardware companies will adopt, as has
already happened in the home video business, Hunt said.

Even some big studio insiders privately say these technological fixes are unlikely to
be successful, however. Distribution models will have to change, and studios likely
will have to establish subscription models similar to HBO or America Online or find
ways to win advertising dollars to support online efforts, some insiders predict.

Salmi's Atom Films, for example, allows its videos to be downloaded and distributed
freely, but includes advertisements in the files that must be viewed before seeing
the movie.

"We try to use piracy to our advantage, as a way to make money," Salmi said.
"We're actually using piracy as a distribution model."

As a result of the piracy concerns, studios have been slow to license their products
for distribution online, even though the companies have changed contracts to
include digital distribution rights at about the same time as movies become
available on pay-per-view television, analysts say.

Intertainer, a company aimed at releasing on-demand films over telephone
companies' DSL and through set-top boxes like WebTV, is one of the few
companies that has won distribution rights to Hollywood videos. It uses a streaming
video format that contains strict copy protection. Additionally, the customers' rights
to view any given movie expire after 24 hours.

WebTV and other companies are developing hardware that can hold many hours of
video on a hard drive. But it will be some time before downloadable video will take
advantage of this space, analysts say.

"The studios just aren't going to be comfortable with having lots of copies sitting
around on a hard drive," said Jae Kim, a technology and entertainment analyst with
Paul Kagen Associates.

The studios say they are preparing for a day when a video distribution technology
makes online films as easy, or nearly as easy, to download as an MP3 music file,
however.

"We're moving as quickly as possible," Sony Pictures' Miranda said. "Obviously we
hope that day is much further out. Unfortunately, the market doesn't seem to be
complying with us."



To: DiViT who wrote (46510)10/25/1999 7:14:00 PM
From: John Rieman  Respond to of 50808
 
WebTV wants to do that recording thing..................

news.cnet.com

--------------------------------------------------------------------------------

WebTV expands recording, connection options
By Stephanie Miles
Staff Writer, CNET News.com
October 22, 1999, 12:45 p.m. PT
Microsoft's WebTV, originally conceived as an inexpensive and simple way to access the Internet via the TV, is reinventing itself as the next-generation answer to the VCR.

Upcoming WebTV boxes will feature expanded digital video recording, sources say, similar to what is offered by TiVo and Replay Networks. Digital video recording essentially replaces a VCR's videotape with a hard drive, offering typical VCR functions such as record and playback, as well as newer features such as freezing and playing back television shows while they are being broadcast.

Also in the works are plans to include high-speed digital subscriber line (DSL) access and larger hard drives in WebTV Plus boxes, industry sources said. Those new features should be available early next year, sources said.

A WebTV spokesperson said the company does not comment on unannounced products or rumors.

These upcoming changes are What's next for WebTV
? Digital video recording (DVR), up to 14 hours
? Broadband high-speed Internet access
? MSN Instant Messaging
? Access to fax and voice mail messages from eFax

Source: various
but the latest events in the WebTV tale. When acquired by Microsoft, WebTV was beginning to make a name for itself as a low-cost and simple Internet access device working in conjunction with the TV.

Since the 1997 acquisition, however, the division's focus has been somewhat blurry, as the company has tried to carve a niche in Microsoft's competing online and cable efforts. With PC and Internet service provider (ISP) prices declining, WebTV has seen its low-cost argument erode. Subscribers continue to sign up for the service, but sales have not met expectations. WebTV has less than 1 million subscribers, sources have said.

Other issues, including the use of the Real Audio media player and the departure of cofounder Steve Perlman, have plagued WebTV. (See related story.)

The future now seems to lay in merging new-age TV functions into the device. By the end of this month, WebTV will expand the capabilities of the service offered on Echostar's WebTV Dish set-top box to offer four hours of digital video recording, sources say. (Microsoft provides basic WebTV service, but companies such as Echostar make the actual boxes and some supplemental service.)

"Right now [with the WebTV Dish device], you can only pause for up to 30 minutes," said Marc Lumpkin, an Echostar spokesman. "Next month, we'll offer personal television services which allow you to record, rewind, fast forward, skip, and replay."

Echostar and WebTV will upgrade Dish receivers which have been shipping since mid-July, Lumpkin said.

By early next year, WebTV will begin offering set-top boxes that offer up to 14 hours of video storage and broadband high-speed Internet access, as well, sources said.

The moves reflect Microsoft's Quote Snapshot

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attempts to stratify WebTV's product line with high-end and low-end offerings. For example, at the entry level is the WebTV Classic device for less than $100. At the other end of the spectrum is the upcoming Dish player with a larger hard drive, which is expected to retail at just less than $500.

"They've been shipping Dish players with larger drives, and now they'll turn on that capability," said Richard Doherty, a television and cable industry analyst with Envisioneering Group, adding that WebTV's strategy has been murky since Perlman left the company earlier this year.

At the same time, WebTV's aggressive expansion may indicate it is ceding the market for first-time Internet users to Microsoft's MSN group. More and more, the two online divisions have begun to overlap in terms of target markets and resources, with MSN mulling free or sharply discounted Internet access and WebTV offering MSN branded email and messaging as part of its television server software products.

Other observers believe WebTV's strategy is on target.

"It's a logical upgrade, and I think it's a reasonable strategy," said Greg Blatnick, an analyst with Zona Research, especially as TiVo and Replay ramp up their marketing and retail efforts. "They don't want anyone else horning in on what they think of as their territory, which is the combination of Internet and TV in the home."

Microsoft and WebTV are protecting their turf for another reason: The digital video market is projected to be big, as approximately 300,000 units will ship this year, growing to 10 million shipments in 2004, according to market research firm International Data Corporation.



To: DiViT who wrote (46510)10/25/1999 10:45:00 PM
From: Stoctrash  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 50808
 
...500 channels pal...there better be something on...if not,, surf the web for some shock videos..<GG>

biz.yahoo.com
DISH Network Offers New DISH 500 Systems Free After Rebate
DISH 500 Satellite TV Systems Debut with Open TV's Interactive Capabilities in Models 3822 and 4722
LITTLETON, Colo.--(BUSINESS WIRE)--Oct. 25, 1999-- EchoStar Communications Corp. (NASDAQ: DISH - news, DISHP - news) announced today that DISH Network(TM) is offering its new DISH 500 satellite TV system FREE after rebate.

DISH 500 satellite TV systems with next generation receivers, Model 3822 and Model 4722, have the ability to offer 500 channel choices on a single small dish, including foreign language programming, the new DISH Latino Spanish-language package, more local channels, more DISH-On-Demand pay-per-view channels, plus high-speed data and interactive television services.

EchoStar's Next Generation Interactive Satellite TV Receivers

Equipped with dual amplifiers, DISH 500 is designed to receive signals from satellites located at both 119 degrees West Longitude and 110 degrees W.L., offering customers more channel selection without requiring additional equipment. EchoStar's new Model 3822 (MSRP: $249) and Model 4722 (MSRP: $299) incorporate OpenTV© software that will soon provide interactive services and e-commerce on television. These multiroom-ready models are available with DISH 500 small dish antennas and are offered with DISH Network One-Rate Plan's automatic rebate. These models will provide DISH Network customers with numerous opportunities to access enhanced television services, such as an interactive electronic program guide, as well as a variety of customer care, e-commerce and entertainment services like on-demand weather forecasts and music merchandising, with more features to be added in the future.

(SNIP)