March 25th, 2007
The great challenge of video on the web is how to make it fair for
everyone. Viewers want content that is cheap or free yet retains high
production values. Producers, networks, and movie studios want to be
rewarded by ALL viewings of their works, not just the first one. The ways
we have attempted to resolve these dissonant desires haven’t been very
successful. Viewers sometime illegally copy or share video content.
Producers, networks, and movies studios do all they can to make such sharing and
copying technically difficult and legally perilous. The sad part for the
U.S. is that we have twisted our laws in ways they were never supposed to be
twisted, generally to serve the interests of content creators, which is often
not in service of the public interest as copyright law was intended to be.
Can’t there be a simpler way?
Maybe there is.
Hiro
Media, an Israeli startup, thinks we simply ought to add commercials to TV
shows and movies, thereby changing both the associated business model AND the
balance of power. If shows come with ads attached in such a way that they
can’t be easily removed, then why be opposed to copying and sharing? In
fact copying and sharing should be ENCOURAGED.
The drag, of course, is the ads, which in Hiro’s case are not only difficult to
remove, they are difficult even to skip or fast-forward through, unlike
TiVO. You can fast-forward the show in the Hiro system, but NOT the
commercial. And those commercials change every time the show is
played. If an Internet connection is available at the time of playing, the
ads will even be coordinated with a database and targeted at the interests
of the viewer.
Those who have seen the technology say it is both unique and impressive.
It has been in trials for a year in both Israel and Australia and will shortly
begin trials in the U.S. with NBC on one of their lower profile shows with the
idea of expanding it to their other content. A second test will shortly begin
with Turner Broadcasting, with most of the other major players looking on.
Now if Hiro can only survive the Joost PR blitz.
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Posted by:
Hoqenishy on
April 10th, 2007 6:36 am
Adding commercials to TV shows and movies? Um, ’scuse me, but we’ve already got that. I’m already putting up with 20-minutes-per-hour of commercials, plus all the cheap sellout in-program product placement, plus a host of wrappers and similar show intrusions. Simply put, if you WANTED to make it free, you could with the extreme amount of adver-garbage that currently infests media.
Content providers had their chance. I can’t really say I blame anyone for using something that automatically skips commercials or downloads their shows directly from the internet, because it’s ridiculous to pay $50 a month for cable, only to be subjected to the extreme amount of useless sponsor messages.
Posted by:
Jose Lopez on
February 6th, 2008 5:57 am
I advocate for a free television but how do we pay for the high costs of equipment? For example, myJose.TV provides a free service to the end viewer. We try to keep commercials to almost zero but there is a need to support the station and the staff have to eat.
Posted by:
Bob on
September 11th, 2008 9:21 pm
All advertising should be directed to the user and after watching, the user would get incentives and coupons that come in email or regular mail. They can get one time offers at GREAT deals on stuff THEY WANT. I CHOOSE my commercials based on my interests. When I watch I get a bonus redeemable for stuff from that company. The more I watch the more I get. Don’t just show me stuff - GIVE me stuff!!
If you want me to watch commercials they have to become FOR ME and benefit me and make me HAVE to see them. Positioned the right way and the user given the right incentive, viewers may skip the program to see what STUFF they can get a few points on.
Hello - Am I the first one to think of this???? Come on this is the Internet. You know who I am. Make me happy.
Give me stuff I like and do it now. This will sell stuff. Give the viewer what they WANT in the form of some sort of point/discount system and they will WANT your adds.
There it is now get to work on it.
Bob Ross
Posted by:
Bob on
September 11th, 2008 9:26 pm
Just want to add this: With the system I mentioned Internet TV isn’t free - I get PAID to watch. The benefits have to be that good.
That’s it.
Bob Ross
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