YouTube Coming Soon To Cellphones 78
Krishna Dagli writes to mention a short New York Times article about a deal between Verizon and Google. YouTube will be coming to Verizon's VCast service. There's lots of catches: It's a $15/month fee, and you don't gain access to all of the content YouTube has to offer. Just the same, the article makes Google out to be thinking along these lines; YouTube may start showing up in many different places. From the article: "'Everybody carries a phone with them, but they may not have a computer,' said Steve Chen, chief technology officer and a co-founder of YouTube. People can 'take the phone out of their pocket while waiting for the bus' and watch a video, he added. Verizon Wireless and YouTube said the service would be available early next month. The companies would not discuss the financial terms of their deal but said Verizon would have the exclusive rights to distribute YouTube videos on mobile phones 'for a limited period of time.'"
Verizon and Google ... (Score:1)
CC.
Article should read: Verizon To Censor YouTube (Score:2)
FTA:
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An angel with devil's horns and a taste for not being evil while still overcharging for the service?
Does this mean... (Score:2)
...that Verizon may also be implicated in any potential copyright infringement litigation over videos on YouTube? Or will the deal be structured so that Google shields Verizon in case that occurs? More importantly, is this a way for Google to ensure it's own little bit of "net neutrality," by making Verizon a partner?
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I'm curious to see how YouTube/Google will limit the number of videos available. Will they hand edit the top videos to ensure no copyrighted material is available (in which c
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That is not how I read it. They appear to be charging the consumer $15 a month for a heavily 'filtered internet'. If Verizon wish to remain free from infringement they should be a 'common carrier' and should not be providing restricted content. IANAL, but it appears that if they restrict some content, they are liable for all the content that gets through.
Why don't they just offer 'common carrier' data
"Cell" phones? (Score:4, Funny)
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For once, this is competent marketing (Score:3, Funny)
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Looks like they'll soon be calling it 'HappySlapTube'.
Vcast (Score:3, Informative)
I love Google, but it seems that Youtube is becoming a monkey on their back- they paid a ton of money for it, and now they don't know what to do with it. Cell phones? Not the type of thinking I'm used to seeing with Google, but I'll hold off on a final judgment when I see it.
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EVDO (Score:4, Informative)
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Thats the thing that gets me...I KNOW this type of data transfer does not cost the companies anywhere near this much, yet they continue to keep raising the prices of new services that are still just data being streamed. It is absofuckinglutley ridiculous. And don't even get me started on the fact that SMS costs more than voice chat.
Funny you ask... (Score:1)
nickle and diming (Score:3, Interesting)
Verizon?
If they routinely break phone features like user-mp3 so they can charge money for crappy ringtones, what kind of charge would there be for downloading a whole video? When I got my phone last year, even the little "wallpaper" background images were for-pay, and if you switched from image A to image B to image A, you'd have to buy image A twice! Who in their right minds would pay-per-view for 92x64 bitmaps?
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Your question shows a lack of understanding of their customer base. With their insulting crippling of phones and fear-based advertising Verizon continually aims for the bottom 50% of the population, and that's going to include an awful lot of people not in their "right minds".
You can't even fault them for it -- even idiots end up with money that they want to spend, and Verizon is simply there to collect it. It's capitalism in action.
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Ignorance is funny (Score:1)
I know this is some real fuzzy math. I just think it is humorous that people are so quick to shoot something down when they don't
Why Verizon, Why? (Score:2)
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besides even if it was remotely legal to jam cell phones worst case you get put in jail for having it on during public transit worst case well lets jsut say you wouldn't have to have cuban cigars exported for you to have them.
Old news... (Score:1)
I don't think... (Score:1)
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With a brilliant 320x240 screen and RealPlayer, viewing
mini videos is a treat.
I especially love TinyTube.net for when I'm bored and in a WiFi hotspot.
Now, if only someone will make a generic mash-up like YouTube or Google video
that will transcode CNN, BBC etc. in the same way TinyTube does...
I've disabled 3G on my sim altogether. Don't need it, won't pay for it.
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copyright? (Score:3, Interesting)
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This sounds like fun (Score:4, Funny)
lonelygirl15 with me on the go! (Score:1)
Ugh. (Score:2)
heh, verizon... (Score:2)
Why it will *never* be a success (Score:1)
This alone is enough for doomed failure. Some bonus reasons:
Doesn't sound good. I want the same content I get on my PC. Whatever the mobile industry tells you, video streaming is too darn slow to start up (not to mention the numerous steps you usually have to go through to even get to the video in the first place). I will never use such a service until:
What? (Score:3, Insightful)
*checks his pockets* Sorry, don't seem to have a phone on me. Oh that's right, now I remember, I DON'T HAVE A CELL PHONE MORON!
Why is it that people assume everyone has every worthless gadget out there? I know it's hard to believe but there are those of us who don't have a cell phone, don't need a cell phone and don't want a cell phone.
Just like there are those of us who don't have that insecure Flash product installed on our computers, don't need to have Flash installed and don't want to have Flash installed.
Technology is great and all but this nonsense that people should always have the latest and greatest crap is one of the leading causes for our negative savings rate [bea.gov].
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Erm...I understand not *wanting* a cell -- but I'd hardly call the technology "latest and greatest", seeing as it's over 20 years old, and has been ubiquitous since the late nineties (2+ *billion* in service at the moment). They're only the "latest and greatest" in the sense of the original Nintendo, or the second coming of flannel.
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Why is it that people assume everyone has every worthless utility out there? I know it's hard to believe but there are those of us who don't have electricity, don't need electricity and don't want electricity.
Technology is great and all but this nonsense that people should always have the latest and greatest crap is one of the leading causes for out negative savings rate.
Took the words out of my mouth (Score:1)
fo' real (Score:1)
Yawn (Score:3, Interesting)
How about, instead, I stream my own videos to myself using Orb [orb.com] and along with that, I can hit some online TV broadcasts, some internet radio, and prolly my mp3 collection (haven't tried that yet). And oh yea, one last thing: it's $0.
But yea, this Verizon/Youtube thing is cool too.
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I didn't see much use for it right away. Then, a week or so later, I was on my way home, sitting in an airport with EVDO coverage with an hour to kill. I thought to myself, hey, I left my computer running ORB, as well as uTorrent with automatic RSS downloading. I spent the next hour happily watching the latest episodes of the Daily Show and Colbert report on my p
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Since you are streaming it to yourself, I would be surprised if there are any copyright implications with respect to Orb. uTorrent might be a different story but as far as Orb goes, it's just software that transcodes and streams and there isn't anything in the laws that prevents one from transcoding and streaming their own videos to yourself.
This will work as well as Netscape's paid browser (Score:2)
So... (Score:2)
Also coming censor-free to Nokia phones (Score:2)
YouTube or Flash Works Fine on the Nokia N95 [thenokiablog.com]
No extra charge, just pay for your usual data plan. N95 is a GSM phone. Other Symbian-based phones coming out should have same capability too.
Big Whoop (Score:2)
Boost mobile phone (yo!) hacked blackberry 7520 to work on boost mobile with the sim from the first phone, Nokia 770 and some software installed.
I have unlimited net access 24/7 for $0.35 a day I can view most video content (dont because most is crap) plus get a real interface for web surfing, email, etc that wont cripple my thumbs or make me blind looking at a tiny 1.5 inch screen with low res.
176x144 cell phone video resolution (Score:2)
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Moo (Score:1)
/me cries. It's not that he is ignorant. It's that it got posted on slashdot.
For those who skipped Computer Science, a "computer" in the CS world, is something that has input, uses input to process something, and output. A cell phone is a computer, albeit not a PC. A PC is the "computer" we all know and use. A cell phone is a specialized computer.
It is not amazing that the cell phone can get video from youtube, that has always been possibl
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Quote: "A Cell Phone company who claims to be the best, who have the least amount of dropped calls, (because they wont drop a call, they would rather have you sit through static and have to pay). who likes to rip of customers by telling them one thing and doing another.
http://www.urbandictionary.com/define.php?term=ver izon [urbandictionary.com]
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Are we talking mobiles or yuppie bricks (Score:1)
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Correction (Score:2)
YouTube + Verizon = Peril (Score:2)
This is perilous. Our society has not yet resolved the problem of the internet's long memory. Most of our custom is built upon the now-obsolete idea that memory does not last long or spread very far. And so the birth of the Information Age has brought with it the personal catastrophes such as "Dog S*** Girl" and "Shemale Vids Guy" and that asshat Jason Fortuny. These are all examples of normal, limited outbreaks of personal information that turned into unjustified disasters for the affected persons, sim
Here's how this will work (Score:2)
You pay 15 dollars a month to gain access to a mobile site with the YouTube logo on it. Verizon will give you streaming access to video clips for upcoming movie releases, music videos (but only the first minute), and commercials for television shows.
Any clip you want to keep (for some asinine reason), will cost and additional 2.50.
All these people making money off of your content! (Score:2)
I just looked up how to make my own DRM WMV files. You know what? You have to pay a third party if you want to make your own DRM content.
These DRM people have you coming a
must have a death wish! (Score:1)
This isn't news - Kinoma/PDA = YouTube w/ no fee (Score:1)
This is just the first wave... (Score:1)