CBS Moving To Syndication Across the Internet 71
An anonymous reader writes "The Wall Street Journal takes a look at the new online media strategy being rolled out by CBS. Just over a year ago they rolled out their 'Innertube' service on the CBS website. The streaming video offering allowed viewers to watch sports and reruns directly on the web, but required potential consumers to view the video on CBS.com. That didn't work, even a little bit. So, they've learned their lesson: 'The company plans to pursue a drastically revised strategy that involves syndicating its entertainment, news and sports video to as much of the Web as possible. It represents a stark departure for the TV industry. Most of CBS's major competitors, including Walt Disney Co.'s ABC, General Electric Co.'s NBC Universal and News Corp.'s Fox, are to some degree all betting that they can build their own Internet video portals. Starting this week, an expanded menu of CBS's video content will be available for free to consumers on as many as 10 different Web sites ranging from Time Warner Inc.'s AOL to Joost Inc., a buzzy online video service that is just rolling out. The company calls its new venture the CBS Interactive Audience Network.' This new push is tied into a new advertising strategy, which is covered in-depth in the article."
The last horse crosses the finish line (Score:1)
Re:The last horse crosses the finish line (Score:5, Informative)
Instead of investing potentially millions into creating their own service, they are going to offer programs for syndication to various sites on the web. It sounds to me like they are holding to a traditional idea of selling shows, but instead of selling them to cable networks, they are going to sell them to the internet media channels for distribution through the internet (probably as streaming feeds).
So actually, this is actually a first in a way and not a last. Good job with RTFA.
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Some things come to mind... (Score:5, Insightful)
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Intertubes (Score:1, Funny)
Thanks CBS. Thanks a lot.
Broadcatching (Score:1)
A BAD or Risky name choice (Score:2)
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Oh the fun..
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Or maybe they were trying to make a reference to the outdated technology of Tube (CRT) televisions... Is anyone (in their right mind) buying CRT televisions anymore?
Let the tubes die.
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Your right, and it's a terrible choice to use the word "tube". Just look at how unsuccessful YouTube is.
Thank you! (Score:5, Insightful)
Instead of litigating viewers and websites, it appears CBS may "get it." I hope they follow through with their plan without a team of lawyers getting a hold of it and ruining it entirely. CBS should be congratulated, and we should all vote with our eyes and reward them for recognizing that the Internet has changed entirely the meaning and value of media distribution.
And I must say, it's about time American companies stopped trying to sue their way to success and innovate instead. Real business leadership needs to return to our economy before there's nothing left but corporations suing each other over worthless patents and dead ideas.
Flip side (Score:2, Insightful)
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Download and watch (Score:2)
There is already enough capacity to stream in 15 hours worth of DVD quality TV over the course of one week t
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So? It would still be much, much, much more efficient to multicast a stream at a given time and have your system record it if it's one you want to watch. You may WATCH it at any time, but content is still produced and released to a schedule.
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Elitist and completely untrue. The average US household watches 8 hours of TV per day - that's about five times more than you seem to think. Here's a reference (PDF link) [nielsenmedia.com].
Moreover, there's nothing "quaint" about watching TV
Demographics will play a part (Score:2)
Now, one could argue that economics might play a factor, but it's a small one at most. There's a fair mix of income levels between the two groups. The elder group always finds money to pay for cable/satellite, but the younger group tends not to start subscri
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DVR owners still watch a hell of a lot of live TV. The point of a DVR is not to enable you not to watch shows that are on while you're watching TV; the point of a DVR is to allow you to watch shows when you otherwise couldn't.
Since I bought a TiVo, I barely ever watch live TV. Why would I want to flip through the guide, desperately looking for something to watch, when I've got hundreds of hours of recorded shows I know I like? Why would I even want to remember what time my shows are on when TiVo does it for me? Why would I want to sit through a commercial break with no way to fast-forward?
I think the people who have a DVR but still watch a lot of live TV are mainly either new owners who haven't set up enough series recordings y
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The report you cited is from 2005.
Even if they are home by 8PM, they might not watch what the networks are pushing at 8PM. They might easily watch the previous day's prime time show or a movie from the previous weekend. Channels like BBC, TVland, AMC, TCM run old classics in marathon sessions. "24 hours of Gunsmoke"
TV can't take the radio route (Score:2)
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You've got bigger issues (Score:2)
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$65/mo is what Tivo wants you to believe. For $0 a month I have a ReplayTV (with lifetime activation and commercial skip) and for $9/mo I get basic analog cable*. That's more than enough to fill all my free time with TV that I care to.
* But they give me extended digital cable for free, because they cannot be bothered to filter it out.
Intertube is MS intellectual property (Score:2, Funny)
Youtube? (Score:3, Insightful)
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It's just a gradual step from:
1. Control everything (Portal)
2. Control the advertising but not the distribution (CBS making deals with partners)
3. Let others control advertising and distribution for a kickback (Youtube model, which they are all panicked about)
4. Give it away for promotion
What seems strange to me is that I can't get a torrent of Survivor with advertising, only one without advertising
Joost: We Pwn Your Puter (Score:4, Insightful)
(Alternatively, "In Soviet Russia, Joost watches YOU")
The Joost EULA allows them carte blanche to install whatever they like on your machine, and makes it a contractual violation to interfere with it, its settings or its network traffic. That doesn't seem compatible with anti-virus or firewalls (which I imagine invalidates that aspect of the contract instantly, but IANAL and I digress). They swear that they anonymise all collected viewing habit information before passing it onto advertisers, but then again, they can change the EULA, TOS and PP at will. Again, probably invalid, but IANAL.
They state quite clearly that they will be using your bandwidth to communicate with other computers running their software. Obviously, because it's a P2P app. But this isn't Skype, with a relatively small amount of traffic. This is video, distributed P2P. That's going to eat my bandwidth, and probably be dog slow to boot.
This isn't what I want. I'm not sure this is what anyone wants, at least in their target early-adopter group. Who wants ad-supported content, for which I'm paying a variable, uncontrollable amount? Give me ad-free, DRM-free, fairly priced content that I can download direct, thanks. Too much bandwidth? Well, invest in a content distribution network, or keep poking ISPs in the side until they sort out multicast.
Meh.
Finally! (Score:3, Insightful)
All CBS has to do to make money off this is have advertising in a corner of the screen or just have regular commercial interruptions as usual. Some people will skip the commercials, just like how they do it with VCR tapes, but if the commercials are engaging enough, people will forget. Having a scrolling line of text commercials at the bottom of the screen works as well (remember, since this is not a TV screen, the video can still be 16:9 or 4:3 and still have a small bar at the bottom of the screen with the text commercials without impeding on the video.)
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Right on. thenewsroom [thenewsroom.com] is one of those content distribution sites, and the beauty of it is that you can do things like create a custom feed of Coast Guard videos [blogs.com] and you'll get the latest content both from CBS and from other content providers. The videos are of pretty high quality and the ads aren't too long. Ditto for text content [blogs.com], too, except it's a static ad and thus doesn't take up any time.
Disclaimer: I'm worki
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Outside the US? (Score:2)
Drop the streaming all together and... (Score:1)
Drop the streaming all together and post your current line up and the good shows that you keep replacing with crap reality and game shows at the iTunes store. Yes, I know that you are doing this for some already; just post the rest. Streaming quality is never going to be as good an experience as is watching a show on my TV by way of my iPod. Streaming playback is even worse for those of us without a well equipped computer, and there are a lot of people in my boat.
Also for CBS... I'd l
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But will it run on Linux? (Score:5, Interesting)
So, will CBS's new syndication system run on Linux? If so, great - I'll be there to watch it. If not, too bad; guess I'll have to wait.
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Specifically - CBS - it's been a while; I had a TV this year (my wife wanted it), but I had checked around for the 2006 State of the Union, and none of them offered anything that was watchable under Linux at that time. I believe I have checked since, but not necessarily CBS, and had the same issue arise. Great to hear CBS and NBC using a Flash Video Player. I still stand by my original comment though - just because this gen of tech does, doesn't mean that the next will too
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See here [slashdot.org], though, your comment makes me think that they are may be deciding what to use on a per-show basis...which would just be odd, inefficient, and would still go back to my original comment...can anybody confirm? I'll check tonight when
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I checked some last night and again tonight. I even installed the latest Flash player, but got denied access to FoxNews, NBC, and CBS shows. Oddly, though, they all wanted me to install the latest flash player. Looking at the page source for the FoxNews page, it relied on VBScript to determine the player version (through an active X control) but otherwise used JavaScript. I did not check why CBS's or NBC's site would not run it. So, I am still out from being able
What won't change (Score:1)
CBS is learning what the RIAA/MPAA didn't get (Score:1)
Series of Tubes (Score:2)
etc.
Slashdot Demographics (Score:1)