P2P Television? 158
An Anonymous reader submits a link to this "very interesting article on TVP2P," writing: "While the author doesn't really mention "P2P," think of the permutations of having TV's becoming Napster-like file servers. The tech can't be too hard to work out, since CATV systems are now piping Net access into millions of homes (anyone doing this hack yet?). If you thought the RIAA raised hell, wait until the MPAA and the relevant TV lobby groups figure this out. Of course, if history teaches us anything, they won't figure it out until way after the genie is out of the bottle ..."
SonicBlue? (Score:2, Interesting)
It would be nice if the cable companies got off their asses and let us use the infrastructure to the full potential, with network like Kazaa except everything on demand. I don't think the MPAA would go for it though.
Re:SonicBlue? (Score:5, Insightful)
That's not going to fly by the networks. At the very least, the cable companies that offer highspeed access will put a stop to it. They need to get their cut of the telly pie.
Re:SonicBlue? (Score:1)
Hardly. Joe Six-Pack doesn't have the $1 million an episode to produce an hour-long drama, nor the sets, etc. Yes, you might see a few more South Park's out there, but that's it. We've all seen public access TV - does anything think that we need more of it?
On another point, there are some real issues with this proposal, having to do with the nature of the network. Both cable and DSL networks are a heck of a lot more effective at downstream than upstream (nature of the RF). If people start trying to pull data from other endpoints, rather than the network core, it's going to overload the network much faster than if the content is coming from a central site.
Re:SonicBlue? (Score:1)
It would have to have smart forward and load balancing, but that's for us hackers to figure out, not for the BigCo to shove down our throat.
Re:SonicBlue? (Score:2)
With a web page on the other hand, you can put it on the web, and allow word of mouth to build support for it. Not to mention you can appeal beyond the limited geographic range of your local public access.
Thus there are many great totaly noncommercial websites--and perhaps in a p2p tv world, we would see noncommercial tv shows of equally great quality.
Re:SonicBlue? (Score:1)
If this medium (TVP2P) is compared to, say, a webcam, could there be more of a forum for home-movies-gone-broadcast? Then again, there's not much chance to make money doing this either, so perhaps more if it will be free.
this could bring a whole new meaning to (Score:1)
Re:this could bring a whole new meaning to (Score:1, Insightful)
is it just me or does every article have to have a reply with "pr0n" in it,....now if it were funny, thats fine, but sheesh......
Re:this could bring a whole new meaning to (Score:2)
I hope you're not trying to insinuate that computer nerds are obsessed with 'pr0n'? Someone might sue
Incidentally, using gay-ass language such as 'pr0n' marks you out as someone who will always need to use 'pr0n' since w0m3n will never come near your sweaty ass!
Re:this could bring a whole new meaning to (Score:1)
Re: "after the genie is out of the bottle" (Score:1)
Oh great idea (Score:3, Funny)
Errr, no mom it was the worm that downloaded the pr0n, not me
Don't read here much, do you? (Score:2, Interesting)
Your gloating about how dumb the allegedly-don't-get-technology busineses are would be better placed if you at least demonstrated the ability to use a search box or scan an archive list.
Re:Don't read here much, do you? (Score:1)
I'm sure he appreciates the point though. Since you obviously read here a lot.
Re:Don't read here much, do you? (Score:2, Interesting)
Edit, please, editors. This submission had everything but a mention of a Beowulf Cluster, Microsoft, and how the Anonymous Reader wanted a pony.
Re:Don't read here much, do you? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Don't read here much, do you? (Score:2)
I'm not sure how they resolved their issues, but I'm watching a Live TV feed of CNN Live right now.
Rebroadcast TV (Score:1)
Have any advertising companies sued or is it only the TV companies?
Re:Rebroadcast TV (Score:2)
The product company, of course, should be thrilled to have their ad being seen by as many people as possible.
This is just my logical analasys of the situation, though. I'm not involved with the advertising market in any way, and people, especially business people who have lawyers, tend to do really strange, illogical, and self-defeating things.
Re:Rebroadcast TV (Score:2)
One would think that advertising companies would try to keep something like adcritic afloat, but apparently that wasn't the case. Apparently it's been bought by Ad Age, and will be relaunched some time in the future, but why they ever let it go down in the first place is a mystery to me.
duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:4, Insightful)
--tom
Re:duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:2, Insightful)
The second everyone goes to metered service, I go back to dial-up. I was considering going to DSL via AT&T, and then heard they've moving to a metered service. Thanks for the warning, AT&T!
Re:duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:2)
Re:duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:2)
In a climate like that the cable companies are merely putting themselves out of business with these stupid policies. I assume they're thinking they can get away with it in certain areas where they control the markets for the moment, but that won't last as long as bandwidth gets cheaper and people are willing to switch to another company in order to get more of it.
If you don't think bandwidth is getting cheaper, check out Cogent's web page. A thousand bucks a month for 100Mbps, no oversubscription, no limits just internet bandwidth. And that's basically a retail deal. They encourage wireless ISPs to use their services and at those prices you could sell 1Meg up and down connections at cost for ten bucks. At twenty bucks a month to customers you'd be a lot cheaper and faster than cable and still be taking in fifty percent of the revenue. They handle all the peering, do DNS service and give you IPs. Seems pretty straightforward. I don't know any cable that fast and no way is it that cheap.
So, bandwidth isn't an issue except temporarily for some people in some locations but not for most people in most locations.
And as for TV shows, isn't this already going on over Kazaa? The idea of having everybody sell their showz is cute in a vicious sort of way, but luckily it's not the way the internet works. The problem is the net is too efficient. Financial transactions would slow everything down and create non-existing costs in the process. Media rights companies are outdated because their whole existence is based on a much slower exchange model where the fees they rely on were a minor issue in an otherwise costly endeavor of making a purchase.
Preparing to leave the house to buy a product means getting dressed, getting in the car and risking ones life in the process and then interacting with others in the retail world which is sometimes like walking into a jungle. Then you're forced to stand in a line and serve the retail interests as they see fit in the temple that they have built in the all holy retail shopping center. By the time you take place at center stage among your fellow creatures before the cash register, handing over some cash is the least of your concerns.
Contrast that with sitting at home in your drawers in your cozy coccoon selecting a range of a hundred or so media titles and pushing the get button and forgetting about it for a few hours till it starts to trickle in. Where's the motivation to pay there? There's no drama in it. You're not in public, nobody is impatiently standing behind you. There's no cash register making its pavlovian noises.
These media rights companies want to delude themselves that as the process of obtaining information becomes more efficient by orders of magnitude that their earlier business model will do the same, but that's ridiculous and probably schizophrenic by the definition set by the insurance companies who determine which individuals qualify for disability because of mental disorders. These guys should properly be turning to disability payments as they are mentally incapable of facing reality. When a homeless nut job tries to stop you on the street and starts telling you about his psychotic delusions do you suddenly drop everything and try to understand how everything went so wrong for the guy and decide to take on each case yourself as a private charity or do you assume that this is what disability is for?
I'm serious. When these whiners start talking about all the money that people are going to pay them for their collection of dirty booger rags, they should be given the number of an intern therapist and the address for social services and that's it. Do not even think about giving these nuts your money and if they start getting violent, well do what you have to do to protect yourself. Just remember, they've already demonstrated in public that they're totally delusional and out of touch with reality so watch out. If they do start acting out though, it's important that we, the members of the public, collectively make note of these disturbances in order to have these menacing potential offenders institutionalized when they begin causing real problems. If the media rights holders get out of hand, the terrorists have won.
Local networks a partial solution (Score:3, Interesting)
However, local networks (including wireless neighborhood mesh networks) are another matter. They can be very cheap to build and run and very fast because the data doesn't have to be shipped across the country. With a wireless mesh, you just have to setup the antenna and power it, and you're in. Thus a neighborhood can easily share shows, allow people to know what they're watching in a neighborly way, and even actively pool resources for efficient storage without breaking the bank. As long as shows are initially autosaved off the regular broadcasts, it won't put too much stress on the on-demand mechanisms.
This would be enough for popular shows, while less popular and more obscure ones could be piped over the internet individually. A smart filesharing network could handle all of this with a little effort, provided the files are compressed and you aren't living in some super-eclectic neighborhood.
Good article though. Interesting data on 360 hours per day/ million total. Unfortunately, it also raises the spectre of pay-per-view-over-pay-per-get.
Re:duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:2)
Why not run re-runs with this P2P idea? Even with commercials. (if the users fast foward then that is the users fault).
My point is that it doesn't have to be "us vs. them". They could benefit. TVLand branded Get Smart downloads would be fsckin' awsome - I don't care if a company has an interest.
The difference between pirates and non-pirates is the fact that the pirates don't want to be associated with a company and are thrown back by the idea that the establishment is behind anything. (Pirates don't even like each other. Look at history this idea even holds true for people who raided ships... they hated the queen/king and what that meme embodied.)
We can all work together to bad no one will.
Re:duh - cable company bandwidth metering (Score:1)
That said, I believe that TV stations will balk at this due to 'lost revenue.' The TV stations sell advertising seconds based on viewership...basically how many people are expected to be watching at that particular time. In the US, they're known as the Nielson ratings.
Well, with rebroadcast, their numbers are no longer valid, and they can't forcast who will see the commercial. So more people (potentially) will see the commercial, and they can't charge more.
This also seems to relate to some of the other P2P problems, namely the "if people couldn't get this online, would they buy it?" argument.
bandwith?!? (Score:2, Funny)
permutations (Score:1, Funny)
having TV's becoming Napster-like file servers
having TV's becoming Napster-like servers file
having TV's becoming servers Napster-like file
having TV's servers becoming Napster-like file
...
*yawn*
Re:permutations (Score:1)
TV's becomming Napter having file servers
Re:permutations (Score:2)
Uh oh, I dont ever want to think of another anagram of that!
Well... (Score:5, Funny)
Wow, there is never anything to watch on TV, so now there won't ever be anything to download either.
Re:Well... (Score:2)
its pretty easy to do, and quick once you figure out how to
Stuff to download (Score:3, Interesting)
Why does it need to be something that is currently on?
I think it'd be cool to fire up NapTV, search for "greatest american hero with the ghost" episode and let it rip.
Of course, if it is like Napster, it'd probably be the wrong show misnamed and only half of that.
Ahh memories (Score:2)
Ah, I remember "greatest american hero", such great fun - wonder how it would hold up today
I already have file-served tv (Score:4, Informative)
Re:I already have file-served tv (Score:1)
TV People read this! (Score:4, Interesting)
Hmmm maybe I should patent this idea...
Re:TV People read this! (Score:2)
The reason to share the shows isn't so that the ads would be removed, but so that I can actually watch the show!! Duh, why would I buy a Tivo if I was home to watch the shows I want?
Re:TV People read this! (Score:1)
Existing technologies? (Score:1)
We who are about to salute you, die.
Re:Existing technologies? (Score:2)
P2p Reality TV at its finest. Aside from product placement (I like pepsi), it's commercial free too!
Next season I'm selling out, it's going to be a show on the WB.
Ultiamte, Ultimate TV (Score:1)
Napster-like (Score:3, Funny)
Bambi banged by bombay, eh? (Score:1)
Blue (Score:3, Insightful)
It also brings the menu to mind... Right now we have a list of channels to flip through. If you have Digital Cable or Satellite, you have a menu so you can skip to other channels. How will things be done if you have 1,000,000 hours of footage available to watch?
Will it be like Napster or Morpheus or Kazaa? Will you have to be like "Ok content providers, I want the 4th episode of Twilight Zone... any of you have it?"
That's what I want, really... having to rely on them. Imagine if the MPAA and RIAA join up... you "download" it to your TV only to find it was a 30-second looped promo for the new Mariah Caray special...
Plus, the theme of Pay Per View could be expanded dramatically... it's scary.
Re:Blue (Score:2)
Imagine being able to wander over to your PC in the corner and enter in the search and play it via streaming video? Now instead of pure P2P which would serve this audience best, imagine the concept of cable television on an Internet scale:
Imagine a multitude of multicast networks, each with a specific server and/or mirrors (aka repeaters) serving a particular set of content. Instead of only having access to what the local broadcast companies decide to show, you've got access to a worldwide choice of channels.
Add to this the lower cost of entry for indie films, community access TV, etc. and watch the level of content online explode. Sure, large tracts of it will be complete crap, just like the rest of the net. But there will be islands of quality, or special interest material, that rarely makes it to air currently.
I just hope it doesn't end up mirroring the current state of play: hundreds of channels and there's nothing on.
Will we call it "television" anymore? (Score:2)
I believe we are fixated to thinking that TV means receiving a broadcast transmission. Instead in year 2015 we might be watching "something+vision" like "D vision" (and your favorite show will be D vision by zero). Any other suggestions on terms replacing TV in future?
from Merriam-Webster's [m-w.com] thesaurus:
Entry Word: television
Text: a medium of communication involving the transmission and reproduction of images by radio waves
They will be quick to learn (Score:2, Interesting)
UK landmark case (Score:3, Insightful)
Anything else comes to the courts the judge is giong to look at this case and say wrong.
There is a link here [theinquirer.net].
SwapDV (Score:1, Informative)
Now, if only regular people had the bandwidth to share these shows - mpeg2 just isn't compressed enough, you are looking at around 400MB+ for a half-hour show.
Re:SwapDV (Score:1)
SwapDV is designed to archive programs on a PC and allows you to treat that PC as just another Replay unit. For example, on your ReplayTV box, you can view your SwapDV archive(s) and play programs from it. If you have a modern OS, you can also play shows you've archived with SwapDV right on the computer (it's written in Java, so the platofrm really doesn't matter).
In reality, even with gnutella, it is't too practical for sharing. Uploading a 30 minute program on most broadband environments takes 8 hours or so (assuming upstream capped at 128kbs)
Someday, upload bandwidth will become as plentiful as download, but 8 and 16 hour transfers right now make P2P via SwapDV (or likely anything else) a bit impractical right now for most folks.
That said, SwapDV as it stands really does transform the experience of having a PVR (which itself really transforms how you watch TV). It's pretty cool - enough to warrant getting a 4000/4500 unit over something else
You can check out the SwapDV project at http://sourceforge.net/projects/swapdv/
(note - a new version with a ton of new features is due out in the next 24-72 hours)
Gerry
The News (Score:2, Insightful)
Imagine.. (Score:1, Offtopic)
Perhaps when bandwidth is cheap... (Score:2)
...at least not yet for all channels.
I doubt many people are going to be willing to pay thousands, if not millions, per month, so that anyone may see the weather channel in it's pristine glory over the internet - especially when there's much more efficient weather web sites that already exist. Well, that is, unless the weather channel starts hiring supermodels to introduce the weather... with very special forms of weather simulations, etc.
:^)
Ryan Fenton
Re:Perhaps when bandwidth is cheap... (Score:3, Insightful)
The thing that "let the genie out of the bottle" for digital music was:
Now with VCDs we definitely have (4) we may have (1) (2) depending on your definition of easy but we certainly don't have (3) for a 650MB VCD image. ...and the latest news makes the future of broadband certainly look more expensive.
The video P2P genie looks like it's still in the bottle to me.
I already get my tv over the internet... (Score:2)
Re:I already get my tv over the internet... (Score:1)
I don't own a VCR and don't really see the need to buy one and I'm not ready to fork over the money for a tivo-like device yet. I really don't think that I'm stealing these shows because I pay my cable bill, I'm just not home when they air the few shows that really want to watch, so it's really not much different than recording with a VCR.
The worst part is trying to find a copy of episode 12 of Enterprise (Silent Enemy) where the color is not completely screwed up for half of the show.
The fact is that P2P television isn't new. ORGANIZED P2P television, now THAT would be something new.
New Content? (Score:1)
This could be done today... (Score:5, Insightful)
I have a Pentium 2 400 machine in my bedroom. It has a Hauppage WinTV card ($49, $99 for stereo) and the PicVideo Motion JPEG Codec. It can capture at 640 by 480 @ 30 fps without breaking a sweat. I use it as a VCR. The data rate's pretty high, I usually compress it to DivX later if I want to keep the show. I wouldn't put this stuff out on Kazaa, though, with my 256kbps limit.
However, I live in a pretty big complex that is laid out rather nicely for 802.11. I could see a few people taking really old computers, turning them into virtual VCR's, and making the shows available on 802.11.
One guy could be capturing That 70's Show, while the next guy is capturing Enterprise, all at near-broadcast quality!
The reason I'm mentioning this is that I expect one day there'll be a huge 802.11 network built. (Or something like it...) It'll start with an apartment complex sharing an internet connection. Then they'll share their files. Then they'll connect neighboring complexes.... and so on. There won't be any charge for bandwidth other than electricity.
I have a feeling that the way the internet is going, individuals will build something like this so they can break away from the WWW. Maybe I'm just fantasizing, but who knows? Sharing TV shows, like the article describes, could be the killer app that gets this type of thing launched.
Re:This could be done today... (Score:1)
Re:This could be done today... (Score:1)
Hey! Kinda offtopic here, but what OS do you use? I want to get a TV card but I refuse to use win98 or ME... anything that works with win2k or linux would be super.
Re:This could be done today... (Score:2)
I have up-times of about a month or two, usually. Works great!
Re:This could be done today... (Score:2)
Re:This could be done today... (Score:2)
Hmmm, can I have a username/password to your web site? I'm over 18 - I swear.
Re:This could be done today... (Score:2)
I figured that part out, but the problem is that it randomly decides to start capturing on either the even or odd field. The problem is that in order to automate expanding from 30 to 60 fps, it has to know which field to start on, or it'll look really screwy!
Any idea what I can do to enforce it capturing starting on the even fields?
Re:This could be done today... (Score:1)
Oh, boy. Accessing servers 40 hops away, and 30 of those hops are not very dependable. Let's hope that by then, IPv7 can read minds.
Re:This could be done today... (Score:1)
I'm not sure that "quality" is really an appropriate term to describe That 70's Show.
No, that's not it at all. (Score:4, Interesting)
In the P2P systems that we have seen, each node makes "their" data available on the system, and when looking for new data, it will search for it on the distributed system. When it is found, it will take it. It's like one big hard drive where everyone has access to data that is put on it.
But, notice that while the writer mentions the big distributed storage network, he never really mentions the free and unfettered access part of it. In fact, there's very definite references to DRM-like constructs where you'll "order" some media, and have it delivered electronically, perhaps with a "key" that gives you limited viewings. In this vision of distributed storage, if the new episode of Buffy is on your neighbor's TiVo, you can snatch it from there and not have to go to the network's servers to get it, maybe saving you from having it count against your monthly broadband access GB limit.. But you still need to buy a Buffy-viewing license before the device will actually let you view it. And licenses for newer content like first-run movies will expire after a while, and won't be perpetual like a DVD you buy right now (supposedly) is.
This is actually Pay-Per-View taken to an extreme, where your TiVo can get any episode of Star Trek you want automatically, but will prevent you from watching it unless you fork over money to Paramount. Is this really the direction where we want things to go?
Re:No, that's not it at all. (Score:2)
DRM on my computer requires me to run THEIR binaries, THEIR operating systems, and totally trust THEM with the physical object in the world that is most personal to me, my computer.
However, if they start distributing a device that is SOLELY for watching television, I wouldn't mind seeing it managed by content companies so much, since presumably it's pay-per-view model would be more encouraging of new content.
So while I'm not as completely opposed to copy restrictions on p2p tv, there are still some requirements I'd have for it: no infringing on my privacy, and the ability to produce copy-restricted content made available to EVERYONE, not just current broadcast stations and movie studios.
Not P2P (Score:1)
"But if you want to watch the new Lord of the Rings next December, you'll need to reserve a copy from Comcast, which will download it to your living-room hard disk the night it's released with a key that lets you watch it a certain number of times."
Meaning I won't control what is being stored on MY system. Yet, they expect me to pay for what they are using to store it with. No, this is not what I would want as a consumer.
Why does it seem that My wallet is the ONLY reason these people want to give me ANYTHING? And why does it seem I am Supposed to sit back and be the Cash Cow for these outdated indutries?
Re:Not P2P (Score:1)
Why should they GIVE you anything? If you want something, usually, you have to pay for it.
Re:Not P2P (Score:1)
Spongebob and Tom & Jerry (Score:1)
The IT age greets the Salad Shooter @ $19.95 (Score:1)
I 3 Technology (Score:1)
wow--from great minds come great inventions (Score:2, Funny)
I guess necessity is the mother of invention after all. Why there could be thousands of people paying for and downloading Gilligan's Island as we speak! Think of the business oportunities! We could end the dot.com collapse right now!
Gilligan! Put down those coconuts!
Its time (Score:1)
Apparently they already are thinking about it... (Score:1)
the need to restructure the internet (Score:1)
Such a method could also be used for file sharing, but I doubt that'd find quicker acceptance. At least with p2p streaming a/v, big broadcasting corperations wouldn't mind too much. TV and radio stations could only benefit from such a system, they can get their ads out to a wider audience cheaper than using a traditional client/server model.
I think the real question is: is the internet ready to become the standard infastructure for all electronic communications? With a good P2P broadcasting scheme and VoIP phones we could have only two cables running into our homes, data and power (unless of course you want data over power.)
Sometimes it's better to simply start over.
Great (Score:1)
Too late? (Score:1)
Unless they're monitoring
PLAYSTATION TV (Score:1)
no sig required
The industry is well prepared for this. (Score:1)
So in that light there are a lot of projects going on that are similar to this. Even Microsoft is pretty aware. Their 'Freestyle' project is a solution that's:
1. meant to display on the TV screen (either through STB or computer video-out card) and,
2. networks with the HD on your computer (a la works with 3rd party P2P file sharing).
I'm sure there are some Linux equivalents.
Nothing New....Just ask Bill! (Score:1)
Why not pre-emptively begin lobbying (Score:1)
I'm sick and fucking tired of hearing how every bit of data about my life can be sold to some fucking company who can then spam me in any way they see fit (snail mail/e-mail/WHATS NEXT???)
So, instead lets get our shit together and get some laws out there that pertain to this so the companies can't get their grubby little hands on any more of our lives. Keep coorporations out of our homes, out of our credit/phone/TV watching data!!! Hell, keep the fucking coorporations out of my head since they are heading there anyways.
Yhcrana
Making disribution more accessible (Score:1)
Already done (Score:2)
Fer the luv of Ra, WHY? (Score:1)
With TV, if JoeBlow wants the latest episode of Buffy, he can freakin record it himself! It's not like there is only one copy.
P2P is NOT a suitable model for everything. PDA's, PC's, cellphones....what's next, P2P basketballs? Morse code to your buddy as you bounce it?
"...new meaning to Pay-Per View" (Score:1)
As for the new meaning to Pay-Per-View:
Instead of "I need to upgrade my 28.8 kb connection to a 1.5 MB Fiber-optic T1 LAN. Will you be able to provide an IP router capable of supporting my existing Tolken-Ring Ethernet network?"
Homer: "Can I have my money now?"
Now: "I need to download The Matrix tonight so I can watch it at my LAN party. Will you be able to provide a MPEG2 version of it that is both of optimal quality and small file size (i.e. adjust the bitrate down to 6.0 or so)?"
P2P User: "Can I have my money now?"
Re:this (Score:1)
BTW for everyone out there, its a goatse link!
It is url redirection (Score:1)
basically about.com is pulling the content and pushign it back to you
That's a proxy, and this About page is no proxy. On my machine, I have goatse.cx and www.goatse.cx assigned in .../etc/hosts to an Apache server on 127.0.0.1 (otherwise known as localhost), which mirrors pineight.com [pineight.com]. I didn't see the ass [hick.org] but rather the front page of pineight.com, which means that my computer requested the content.
It's URL redirection in a frame.
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:2)
For the stylistically impaired, user submissions are in italics, and slashdot editors' comments are not. Sure, maybe they shouldn't have posted it, but don't put words in their mouths.
S
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:1)
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:2, Insightful)
Practically, it's much different to record a show, drop it onto your machine, and let people make an unlimited number of identical, almost zero-cost copies of it (discounting any forthcoming bandwidth tarrifs) at will. Video tapes and postage aren't free, real-time tape copying takes a long time and is lossy.
All things considered, it's much easier and cheaper to trade via P2P than trade tapes via mail.
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:2)
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:1)
Re:Good lord, what will they think of next?! (Score:1)
Re:MPAASUX (Score:2)
The technology is here, now, yet the legitimate owners of the material aren't even offering a reasonable alternative to the pirates.
Re:MPAASUX (Score:2, Insightful)
You've raised a good point. Here we are, in a day and age when there are hundreds, if not thousands, of geeks out there who would love to build the next home theater component, whether it's for P2P television or some kind of streaming video box or whatnot, and the folks with the content see this as a threat rather than jumping on it as an enormous business opportunity.
When phonograph records were invented, the music industry was horrified that nobody would attend concerts any longer. When film emerged, theaters saw their own end as folks would no longer attend live performances. And when the video tape player became available to the consumer, cinemas worried that nobody would attend the movie theater.
Am I wrong in assuming that these technologies have actually increased the worth of these businesses? For live music and theater productions, just check out Ticket Master! There are hundreds of performances every single day! As for the movie theater, have you seen the lines at the ticket booths lately? Sure, there might be 10 or 100 or 1000 or even 10000 geeks out there who will pass up the "real" performance for some crappy downloaded version played in a little window on their computer with people's heads in the way, but the rest of the world will continue to support theaters and concerts.
I believe the numbers of live theater productions, live concerts and movies in the theater have increased by several orders of magnitude since the invention of recordable media. If only the dull, boring gray-haired old men in management of the RIAA and MPAA would understand that and use MP3, P2P, and every other "obstacle" to their advantage, rather than try to fight an impossible battle against good technologies, causing the government to pass all kinds of laws reminicient of George Orwell's 1984.
The media companies are supposed to think of innovative ways to move content around BEFORE the pirates do it for them! But once again, the ever-important "bottom line" way of thinking among the idiot management crowd causes them to favor some silly numbers over good, solid technical knowledge and decisions, and that is what screws up their bottom line in the first place! Management thinks they don't need to know or get involved in the details. What those dumb-asses don't understand is that try as you might, those details NEED attention, because they are what compose the overall picture. And they need MANAGEMENT'S ATTENTION, just as much as the attention of the lower-level employees who deal with the details first-hand. And management needs to fully comprehend the depths and importance of these details. If they manage a programming company, they should study programming. They don't need to program, that's the programmers' job. But they need to understand, in order to make better decisions. They can't just say, "Well, why isn't it done?" Or, "You say it'll take a month, but you have two weeks to get it done." Well, excuse me, but if it takes a month, it'll be done in a month, and not a moment sooner. Management needs to understand that. And management of the RIAA, MPAA and all the media companies need to understand that the world changes, businesses rise and fall, and their time has come and gone... or, they will choose to understand that those ever-pesky details of their business need to change, and maybe, MAYBE they'll be able to profit from these changes.
Regardless of what happens in the world, it is TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE for companies of ANY type to have laws passed (like DMCA, SSSCA, etc) to protect their alleged right to profits, because they have no such right in any sense of the word. The government provides patents, copyrights and trademarks. With the original limitations, those are quite enough to provide ample protection for any business.