Showing posts with label Streaming. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Streaming. Show all posts

Sunday, 12 August 2012

Fox sues to shut down Aereo copycat over TV streaming

Broadcasters are in a pitched fight with Aereo over whether the TV-streaming service violates copyright. Now, Fox is suing an Aereo copycat called BarryDriller.com. The cases will help define the laws for how we watch TV in coming years.

Gossip Girl on Aereo on iPad

Broadcasters have been battling for months to shut down Aereo, a service that uses dime-size antennas to stream TV to Apple devices. Now, the fight has taken a strange new twist.

On Friday, Fox Networks filed a new suit against a start-up called BarryDriller.com (a play on the name of TV mogul and Aereo investor Barry Diller).  BarryDriller charges $5.95 a month to supply personal antennas that let subscribers “scan the airwaves and tune the antenna to receive whichever broadcast station signal the subscriber chooses.”

Neither Fox nor Aereo is amused. Fox claims that BarryDriller is infringing the copyright of The Simpsons, Raising Hope and Glee and violating its trademark. The broadcaster adds that the start-ups use of personal antennas is not defense:

“It simply does not matter whether BarryDriller uses one big antenna to receive Plaintiffs’ broadcasts and retransmit them to subscribers, or millions of antennas, “so tiny [one] fits on the tips of your finger,” as Defendants claim it does. No amount of technological gimmickry by Defendants changes the fundamental principle of copyright law ….”

The lawsuit mirrors one that Fox and other broadcasters are pursuing against Aereo. That case also turns on a legal loophole based on whether Aereo’s one-antenna-to-one-person transmission system means it is not broadcasting to the public. In a surprise ruling last month, a New York judge awarded round one to Aereo by refusing to grant the broadcasters a preliminary injunction.

There are a handful of differences between Aereo and BarryDriller:

BarryDriller is targeting the Los Angeles market unlike Aereo which is for now available only in New YorkBarryDriller says it is willing to offer broadcasters a retransmission fee similar to what cable operators payIts website suggests that BarryDriller viewer need an external antenna to receive TV on any device (Aereo transmits directly to Apple products like Safari, the iPad and iPhone)

Aereo’s Barry Diller responded to his rival’s launch last week by telling the Wall Street Journal, “I had hoped that if they steal my name they’d do it for something more provocative.” Aereo executives said they hadn’t heard of the service and added, “It is unfortunate that they appear determined to try to trade on Aereo and its board members’ successes and reputation.”

Here’s Fox’s complaint:

Fox v BarryDriller


View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.

Wednesday, 1 August 2012

Streaming the Olympics: How CNTV and Neulion do it

China’s state television is streaming 5,600 hours of live coverage of the the Olympic Games online — and it’s for the first time ever specifically targeting iPad and mobile users with a premium stream. However, it’s not giving up on P2P video streaming entirely.

neulion cntv

China always wins: What’s true for Olympic disciplines like diving also holds true for the online video coverage of the games — or any other worldwide sporting event, for that matter. Broadcasters like the BBC and NBC may clock record numbers with their live streams of the London Games, but their audience numbers will almost certainly once again be dwarfed by CNTV’s live streams.

The state-owned Chinese sports broadcaster is steaming a record 5,600 hours live from London, including an online re-broadcast of CNTV’s terrestrial feed as well as six to nine online-exclusive live feeds. It’s getting some help with its live streaming from New Jersey-based video platform provider Neulion. Neulion EVP Chris Wagner told me last week that the company is very excited about this unique challenge: “The numbers are staggering,” he said of China’s huge online audience.

And staggering they are: When CNTV streamed the World Cup in 2010, as many as 5.5 million people tuned in simultaneously. That doesn’t just represent the biggest simultaneous audience for a sports live stream ever, it also set a record for P2P live streaming, which CNTV has been using to deal with both bandwidth costs and network reliability issues.

However, for the London Games, CNTV will be augmenting its own P2P live stream with centrally delivered streaming from Neulion to target mobile and tablet viewers as well as desktop users in search of a better-looking HD stream. Neulion is powering an offering called 5+ VIP, which is marketed as a premium take on the Olympics, complete with mobile apps for iOS and Android devices.

“The mobile piece is gonna be pretty significant,” Wagner told me, which is why the company doubled down on that part of the offering. On the iPad, Neulion serves a total of eight different bitrates, up to 2.5 Mbps for its HD stream. iPhone bitrates are ranging from 150kbps to 640kbps, and Android devices will get similar bitrates. On the desktop, Neulion is using Flash to deliver streams with up to 3Mbps.

Neulion’s 5+ VIP offering also comes with DVR-like functionality, the ability to view any scene in slow motion and picture-in-picture features to monitor up to four live feeds at the same time. Neulion built the mobile apps as well as the Flash player experience for CNTV, and it is using its own H.264 encoding software to capture the games. “We’ve got an end-to-end responsibility,” Wagner said about the role his company played in delivering 5+ VIP to consumers.

The question is: Why are Neulion and CNTV investing in this kind of premium offering? First of all, users don’t have to pay for 5+ VIP — yet. Wagner told me that Neulion is using the service to sign up customers, and that it hopes to target these very same customers with future sporting events, which it may eventually charge for. The hope is that as iPad and smartphone ownership grows in China, so does the willingness to pay. “The market is looking for more premium products,” Wagner said.

Also check out our previous coverage:

what is this?

var _comscore = _comscore || []; _comscore.push({ c1: "2", c2: "13557238" }); (function() { var s = document.createElement("script"), el = document.getElementsByTagName("script")[0]; s.async = true; s.src = (document.location.protocol == "https:" ? "https://sb" : "http://b") + ".scorecardresearch.com/beacon.js"; el.parentNode.insertBefore(s, el); })();Click to log in with: Not you? Remember me Submitting comment...
var e = document.createElement('script');e.type = 'text/javascript';e.src = document.location.protocol + '//connect.facebook.net/en_US/all.js';e.async = true;document.getElementById('fb-root').appendChild(e);jQuery(document).ready(function($){ Gravatar.profile_cb = function( h, d ) { WPGroHo.syncProfileData( h, d );}; Gravatar.my_hash = WPGroHo.my_hash; Gravatar.init( 'body', '#wp-admin-bar-my-account' ); });;(function($){$.fn.trackClick = function(e){// track the clicktry {_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'clicked-link', this.parents('[id]:first').get(0).id, (this.text() || this.children('img:first').attr('alt'))]);}catch (err) {}if(this.closest('.widget').length == 0){/*//only reload links with no bound eventsif(this.data('events') || this.get(0).onclick || this.isDefaultPrevented()){e.preventDefault();// wait a moment for the tracking to process, then follow the link//setTimeout('document.location = "' + $(this).attr('href') + '"', 200);} */}else{// track the widget click tootry {_gaq.push(['_trackEvent', 'clicked-widget', $(this).closest('.widget').attr('id')]);}catch (err) {}/*//only reload links with no bound eventsif(this.data('events') || this.get(0).onclick || this.isDefaultPrevented()){e.preventDefault();// wait a moment for the tracking to process, then follow the link//setTimeout('document.location = "' + $(this).attr('href') + '"', 200);}*/}};$(document).delegate('a', 'click', function (e) {$(this).trackClick(e);}); })(jQuery);;(function($){//create the fbAsyncInit function so it will run when the SDK is loadedwindow.fbAsyncInit = function() {FB.init({appId: 180650338636285, status: true, cookie: true, xfbml: true, oauth: true});FB.Event.subscribe('edge.create', function(targetUrl) {_gaq.push(['_trackSocial', 'facebook', 'like', targetUrl, document.location.pathname]);});FB.Event.subscribe('edge.remove', function(targetUrl) {_gaq.push(['_trackSocial', 'facebook', 'unlike', targetUrl, document.location.pathname]);});};$(window).load(function(){twitterBind();});function extractUri(url){if(!url)return;return url.split('url=')[1]; }function twitterBind(){if(!twttr)return;twttr.events.bind('tweet', function(event) {if (event) {var targetUrl;if (event.target && event.target.nodeName == 'IFRAME') {targetUrl = unescape(extractUri(event.target.src));}_gaq.push(['_trackSocial', 'twitter', 'tweet', targetUrl, document.location.pathname]);}});}})(jQuery);function linkedInTracking(targetUrl){_gaq.push(['_trackSocial', 'linkedin', 'share', targetUrl, document.location.pathname]);}

View the original article here


This post was made using the Auto Blogging Software from WebMagnates.org This line will not appear when posts are made after activating the software to full version.