Warner Bros. to Try File Sharing in Germany 209
Carl Bialik writes "The Wall Street Journal reports that Warner Bros. plans to sell TV shows and movies online in Germany via P2P. In2Movies, to launch in March, 'will feature movies dubbed into German, including "Batman Begins" and "Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire," for a fee that Warner says will be similar to the cost of a DVD. It will also offer television shows like "The O.C." and locally made programs and movies. Users, who will have to register for the service, will be able to keep the movie indefinitely. But instead of getting a movie from a central server, pieces of it could come from other people on the network who also bought that movie.' The president of Warner Bros. Home Entertainment Group says, 'Studios can't just turn their backs and hope "P2P" is going to go away tomorrow.'"
Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
I don't understand why anyone would want to sue this over the services that are already out.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
Presumably for lower prices. Bandwidth is cheaper than ever, but is still expensive. Especially when you figure in the number of machines necessary to power a large multimedia network. By marginalizing the cost of the download across many machines, WB is (theoretically) obtaining savings that they can pass on to you, the consumer.
Whether consumers see it that way (or WB passes on the savings!) remains to be seen.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
It doesn't look like they're planning on passing any of the savings on to the real distributors/consumers, that was my point. And as has been stated repeatedly, if the prices are not going to be reduced I'd rather just buy the DVD and save my bandwidth(upload and download) for things that profit me as an individual. They need to pass on some form of secondary gain here and SIGNIFICANLTY cheaper pricing or free movies in exchange for sharing your bandwidth are the first two that come to mind.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:4, Insightful)
Exactly.
I presume that Warner believes they've conditioned consumers into believing that $15-$20 is a fair price for a movie; that would be a good reason to charge the same for an electronic version. However, they're dead wrong in this presumption. Rather, they have conditioned consumers into paying that price for a DVD that contains the movie.
The physicality of the DVD is important to the consumer: the disc has nice silkscreen imaging; the packaging looks good and protects the disc; it looks great on a shelf; etc. There are practical implications, too: except for a few specific illegalities (bootleg copying, exctracting the content without the copy protection, etc.), the consumer can do what he wants with the disc - view it at a friend's house, sell it, etc.
In other words, the physicality is a very serious "value-add" for the DVD consumer. Warner can't strip all of that away, sell just the contents of the disc, and expect the same profit. A file on a hard drive is not as appealing as a DVD slipcover in a media stack. And consumers are savvy enough to fear the restrictions that will inevitably accompany this file: it will be locked to a specific computer, no resale value, etc.
In short: Warner is crazy if it believes that consumers equate a DVD with the bare file contained on the DVD. It's fundamentally mistaking the elements of a DVD that represent worth to the consumer.
- David Stein
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
The movie industry doesn't want this sort of venture to succeed. They're not all stupid and retarded as one poster said. They want this to fail so that they can point and say "see there's no legitimate use for P2P. When we offered a legitimate P2P service people didn't use it. So your honour we should just shut down all the P2P since it's only used by theives!". Of course they won't mention the fact that they'd kept prices high, while forcing the customer to pay twice (once for the movie, once for the bandwidth).
I mean for pity sake if they wanted to distribute the content to the users in a better way, they could just drop the price on the DVDs and make it possible to back them up instead of wasting money on this little venture. Success is not their goal here!
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
If I was to pay for a download, I'd cap my upload at 1k/sec (on my router even, if i had to) and I'd also kill the sharing as soon as it's done downloading.. why waste my upload speeds if it's going to be costing me something?
The only reason Torrents work right now is because people upload as much as they download, if everyone were to do like me in this case (which i think they would), this wont work at all.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
(allowing, of course, for when you have nobody to upload to)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:5, Insightful)
Yeah, people will jump all over that.
it simply reinforces the fact that the movie industry is ran by a large number of retarted people that have zero clue about business let alone how to sell a product.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:3, Funny)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
It's not expensive, it's very cheap. Without even shopping around, at serverbeach [serverbeach.com], 2000 GB of hosted bandwidth starts at $119. Figure 2GB per movie, that's 12 cents per movie. Inconsequential compared to what they will charge.
I think, rather, this is simply an attempt by the studios to "get into" P2P - in other words, to use the buzzword even if it doesn't make a lot of sense from a technical standpoint.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Basically, what you should do is analyze the cost to you, with this use of your bandwidth as part of the cost. If they sell DRMed digital files for the same cost as a DVD, there's not much point getting it. If they sell for much cheaper (or more flexibly, such as ITMS selling recent, individual episodes), then it's a lot more interesting.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:3, Insightful)
First, I don't want the DRM. I'm willing to give up "something" of mine in exchange for a freely usable movie. For example, I'd pay a premium for unprotected DVDs. Ripping is a total hassle, and a big waste of my time. If the extra cost to me is a blank DVD (or a bit of hard drive space) fine.
Second, I don't care about my outgoing bandwidth all the time, just when I'm trying to use it. I'll typically leave Az
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
What the media goons cannot realize is that times have changed. We simply do not need "media" any more. Broadcast over the air and even pay services like cable and satellite still seem to be viable markets. My cable, internet, and phone bill comes to $157 a month
Especially considering the slow uploads... (Score:3, Insightful)
-1000kBit/s down and 128 kBit/s up
-2000kBit/s down and 192 kBit/s up
[...]
-6000kBit/s down and 576 kBit/s up
There are offers with higher upstream bandwidth, but those tend to be more expensive.
So distribution per P2P will usually be hampered by the lack of upstream bandwith. Why should a paying customer accept that (and have his own upstream blocked for hou
Re:Especially considering the slow uploads... (Score:4, Informative)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
They might have better prices, they might have material not available through other commercial channels, they might have more timely releases, etc. In other words, for all the same reasons that people buy from one store instead of another.
There are people who are perfectly willing to pay for licensed entertainment, and having multiple options of where and how to get it is a Good Thing.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
I know this offer is lame, but compared to the US we're used to less choice and higher prices, so it's not a bad idea to pull this stunt in Germany. If anyone thinks that this is not true just visit amazon.de and
Since I've given up buying DVDs in stores (another issue, but I'll spare you a rant), I basically have the choice between goi
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:4, Interesting)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:3, Interesting)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:3, Insightful)
I'll take the 500 real servers.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Movielink and Google don't sell to german customers (geolocation of your IP AND credit card address). The german iTunes store sells only music videos, no TV shows. And CinemaNow only sells some independent movies and older shows, but no content by the majors.
In other words, everything will be better than the current offerings.
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2)
Meanwhile, has it occurred to anyone that studios (music and movie) are generally attempting to impose their original price points on a low-cost distribution medium?
What I mean is, what right do they have to try and charge DVD prices when, if we want to write these to DVD, we'd need to purchase our own media?
They're essentially asking us to pay for our peers' bandwidth. That's annoying. Not illegal mind you, just another transparent attempt to squeeze money out from where it's undeserved.
Rar.
I
Re:Incentive for the user? (Score:2, Funny)
Trial balloon? (Score:3, Interesting)
If this works well for Warner, I am willing to bet they will extend this program to the rest of the world, pronto. At least, I hope so.
Re:Trial balloon? (Score:2)
Re:Trial balloon? (Score:2, Insightful)
Re:Trial balloon? (Score:5, Interesting)
Maybe common sense... (Score:4, Insightful)
They get your money to buy the content and then they don't have to pay for the bandwidth to get it to you? How could they not try it?
They're still not quite getting it (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:5, Insightful)
The execs think "peer to peer" is a buzzword they need on their products but people, NORMAL people, aren't interested in the "peer to peer" part of P2P they're interested in the "free stuff I don't have to pay for" part of P2P.
I applaud efforts to make media online easily for all who want it, that's how people want to get content. But P2P in this case isn't doing anything but showing up in headlines and making executives think they're creating "hip" products.
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:2)
Actually I dont think everyone wants or expects it for free, just at a reasonable price. Charging the same as a DVD for this is a sure way for them to kill it off and say "well, we tried but no one bought anything!".
If they were serious about this they would be charging DVD RENTAL pri
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't necessarily agree. I think iTunes shows that people are willing to pay (for a reasonable price), but that they want the convenience of electronic distribution. The producers sort of get this, but they don't modify their business model to match. It just doesn't seem to occur to them that an electronic copy doesn't have as much intrinsic value as a physical repr
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:2)
Yes, but grandparent is saying that the "peer-to-peer" part of P2P is the least important or wanted for people, not that they don't want electronic distribution.
I'd guess the hierarchy of desirability for methods of electronic distribution would go something like this:
1) Free, dedicated (eg. download-only)
2) Free, shared (eg. peer-to-peer - have to upload as well)
3) Pay
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:2)
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:2)
Sure but again, what does this have to do with P2P? That's entirely my point. P2P is popular because it's free stuff, iTunes is popular because it's a convenient way to get legal stuff. iTunes is not P2P because there's no point.
Re:They're still not quite getting it (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't have to get up go out and buy the movie, I just read a review and click a link.
If they allow users to burn a copy to DVD this will improve the lives of the majority of their clients...
But they know you will steal it and share it (Score:2)
-russ
Re:Having fun with your Jumping to Conclusions boa (Score:3)
did u even read the article??
"for a fee that Warner says will be similar to the cost of a DVD"
that sure sounds like pricing to me...
Sounds like a good idea (Score:5, Insightful)
Re:Sounds like a good idea (Score:2)
If DRM means there is no way to tell if I still will be able to
More DRM... great (Score:5, Interesting)
The article mentions the videos will have security features added to them so they can't be copied. Without more details, it's impossible to say how much of a hassle this will be. What if I have two computers and want to watch the video on the other one? The article is a bit weak on the details...
Re:More DRM... great (Score:2)
Re:More DRM... great (Score:2)
And you call yourself a geek. For shame!
At last (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:At last (Score:5, Interesting)
Nope. They're not beginning to use a new model at all. At most, they are trying to apply their current (old) business model to a new medium. At the very least, they are going to try this "intarweb distribution" thingie and do it so poorly that they can then say, "but we TRIED selling this stuff online, and no one bought it! They're all filthy pirates!"
The old business model is: "We create content. You pay for this content, but you only get to watch it when, where, and how we say so, because of our precious IP. Oh, and we're greedy bastards and have no concept of supply and demand, so our prices are unfairly high and we blame the internet on low sales, not taking the quality of our product into account."
Their new model is: "We create content. You pay for this content online at the same inflated prices as physical media, except that we don't have to pay for printing any physical media, and this is a peer-to-peer system which means the customers are paying for bandwidth costs as well! We don't allow them to alter or burn this content in any way because of the restrictive DRM we place on it. Basically, you only get to watch it when, where, and how we say so, because of our precious IP. Oh, and we're greedy bastards and will blame the failure of this system on the filthy pirates and not on the inherent flaws."
How is this new or innovative, again?
Wow, same price as a DVD? (Score:5, Insightful)
So let's see.... None of the usual DVD extras? One language? No hard copy? SAME PRICE?
Wow that's a bunch of ass.
Re:Wow, same price as a DVD? (Score:2)
Yeah, at least some Germans don't like to watch dubbed movies, and prefer to see them in English with German subtitles. (Like Americans with Anime) Of course hojillions of movies are dubbed every year, of which likely most are watched as dubbed.
Re:Wow, same price as a DVD? (Score:3, Insightful)
Re:Wow, same price as a DVD? (Score:2)
I would take this opinion likely more if I wasn't still learning the finer details of German. For me it's more desirable to listen to a horrible dubbing job and get at least a moderate amount of German study out of it, than to listen to the English with or without subtitles... after all, I speak English natively.
Re:Wow, same price as a DVD? (Score:2)
Not too mention that it is _uber_ convenient and with the price of gas the savings over driving to Best Buy add up.
I still like physical disks for a lot of things.... but sometimes you just want music now....
Plus iTunes DRM is better than most. It allows me to do everything I want to with my music. I can copy it to each of my 4 computers... and to mine and my wife's iPods. I can also burn it to a cd that will play in an
What?! (Score:5, Funny)
Re:What?! (Score:2)
Baywatch [google.com], or at least as good as it gets for free, I suppose.
Is this news? (Score:2)
Oh wait...
Country dependent (Score:4, Informative)
That said, it's a nice change to see some positive developments as far as the ??AA and the internet go, and a very welcome change from banning all innovation, as they tried recently...
Re:Country dependent (Score:2)
Paying DVD retail prices for a DRM'ed movie that is distributed by P2P is not a positive development for consumers.
Paying 1 or 2 US dollars for a DRM'ed movie distributed by P2P would be a positive development.
This makes no sense (Score:5, Insightful)
http://www.commodore69.com/ [commodore69.com]
Re:This makes no sense (Score:2, Interesting)
Flashback (Score:5, Funny)
Flossing is stupid ill! 23 Skidoo!
Re:Flashback (Score:2)
This reminds me of grade school, where an adult against tooth decay or something would try to "speak our language."
Flossing is stupid ill! 23 Skidoo!
Was he wearing an onion on his belt?
Pay as much as a DVD! ugh? no thanks. (Score:5, Insightful)
I can understand people paying a similar amount for a 'premium item' like a just aired TV show or something that is similar to pay-per-view like a sports game. But, expecting people to pay full price for something that comes without the same quality of packaging as a movie that can be bought in a store is rediculous.
And to top it off they're using a Bittorrent style system where their customers are the ones paying for the bandwidth! If I upload your show to another customer for you it comes out of my quota of data from my ISP for the month and costs you nothing! What's in it for me huh?
These outfits really need to figure out that an electronic product should be *LESS* not that same price or more!
Don't forget these movies are likely to be compressed to a lower quality than a regular DVD as well.
It's not the costs, it's the compression... (Score:2)
As you say, the quality is likely to be lower than a DVD for any sensible file sizes, and that by itself should reduce the charge.
On the other hand, this is a test market. If it doesn't sell well at full DVD cost they'll change things.
Re: (Score:2)
Re:It's not the costs, it's the compression... (Score:2)
Yes, it could be set up to fail... that's certainly one possibility. It's not, however, the only one. That's all I'm saying.
Re:It's not the costs, it's the compression... (Score:2)
Re:It's not the costs, it's the compression... (Score:2)
If you're introducing a new product, you don't know what peole are willing to pay, yet, so you have to guess. If you don't actually need to make a profit or grab market share any time soon, you can start off high because it's safer to have low initial sales than to set low expectations.
In the long
Good idea (Score:5, Insightful)
For the cost of a DVD, I'm going to want a DVD. For a file that I could lose in a hard drive crash or through an accidental erasure etc, and that's potentially going to take me a couple of days to download (even if it maxes out my 2Mbps connection) and tie up my connection (if it maxes it out), I'm going to want to spend quite a bit less. That's ignoring the fact that my house can (currently) comfortably store many more DVDs than my hard drive, and somehow I don't see it being quite as simple as just burning it to disc.
Still, that said, this is definitely a step in the right direction.
Is GNAB really P2P? (Score:2)
According to this article, GNAB [p2pnet.net] is not really P2P. Any wagers as to how long it will be until GNAB is cracked?
What's the format (Score:2)
huh? (Score:2)
Oh yeah, great idea. Will definitely be a roaring succes.
Learning from the RIAA's mistakes... (Score:3, Interesting)
What I'm most excited about is Firefly Season 2. From the buzz I've been hearing, they intend on doing something really revolutionary with it: it's going to be a subscription-based show not available on any networks. If the Browncoats can fully support a show the caliber of FireFly, that's going to force the network execs to sit up and take notice.
If it walks like a duck, and quacks like a duck (Score:3, Interesting)
Since I can rent a DVD by mail for 1 unit of currency it difficult to see anything else other than an attempt to say "see tried it, didn't work". The price needs to be around half that of a retail DVD, at most.
Oh, and no intrusive DRM either.
On a related point, has anyone noticed how movie and TV are coming together into a true competitive marketplace? The gap is much smaller than it used to be.
The more you give the same you get (Score:5, Funny)
Malicious note - here's a chance for movie pirates to use the same guerilla tactics as the industry - poisoning commercial P2P seeds! Inject that 1 frame of shlong and make Tyler Durden proud!
Peer Impact to Offer NBC \Universal Movies (Score:2, Informative)
NBC UNIVERSAL AND WURLD MEDIA ANNOUNCE ON DEMAND DEAL FOR MOVIE AND TV EVENT CONTENT ON PEER IMPACT SERVICE
Peer Impact becomes the first legitimate Peer to Peer to offer Video On Demand
Englewood Cliffs, NJ and Saratoga Springs, NY -November 17, 2005 - NBC Universal and Wurld Media, the creator of the legitimate Peer to Peer (P2P) service Peer Impact, today announced an agreement that will make Universal movies and NBC Universal TV events content available to Peer Impact customers on
Step in the right direction... (Score:2)
Charging the same for the movie itself at what is most likely a lower quality and in a locked format won't make anyone use the service over buying a DVD (or continuing to download them for free.) However, it is a step in the right direction, probably spurred by iTunes' vid
Zero Common Sense (Score:2, Insightful)
interesting...
now will it be true P2P (ie will I be helping to spread the file, which probably wouldnt work because of DRM)
basically, they are going to overcharge people for a DRM packed file that isnt as useful as a standard DVD then be shocked when it doesnt work...
thats my prediction.
Good idea, bad implimentation (Score:3, Insightful)
But over all I am happy to see them stepping forward. Most of the above problems, (pricing, amount to upload, burning), would take a little redirection at the corporate level and could be implimented quickly.
We really need a universal streaming format acceptable by DRM standards but open to client implimentations. Something like NTSC over IP. The server can be closed but the client should be universal so that I can get it built into my xbox media center or my windows media extender, etc. I would think that recording this would be no more of a threat than recording to a vhs tape or rca in connection.
Two steps forward, one step back (Score:2, Insightful)
Same price as a DVD? Wake up. Why should I pay the same for something more restricted?
Do content producers think they can do the same thing they did with CD and DVD, and just keep/raise prices with formats? You've got to add something to earn a premium.
I'll just buy the DVD (Score:3, Insightful)
Besides, unless you have a OC-3 fiber cabinet installed in your hall closet, it will take an eternity to download top-quality video via typical ADSL. Forget it if you only have a modem.
Oops, I forgot. We, in the US, have an inferior system of obsolete TELCO's who grudgingly gave us DSL just to protect their obsolete switches from meltdown due to all the modems.
-dh
what if... (Score:5, Interesting)
When you can illegally download nearly anything for free or goto Blockbusters and rent whatever for $5, what would you pay to be able to legally download content using P2P that will be DRMed?
Re:what if... (Score:3, Interesting)
The BEST way to get this to work would be to replace NetFlix. $15 a month to have access to their private P2P network. As long as you pay your monthly fee your P2P
No more than 2 USD for a movie (Score:2)
Re:what if... (Score:2)
They still don't get it, do they? (Score:5, Insightful)
The **AA isn't willing to let go of their precious dollars. And so, they pretend to modernize themselves by offering downloads, but they don't modernize what REALLY keeps them in the jurassic age. The prices.
Dubbed movies (Score:2, Funny)
Why doesn't music get dubbed as well??
(yes, being ironic...)
Re:Dubbed movies (Score:2, Funny)
It does get dubbed, but usually in the same language. The result is called cover version.
Re:Dubbed movies (Score:2)
Thanks, thanks... I'll get my coat...
Why "P2P"??? (Score:3, Informative)
they miss the point (Score:3, Insightful)
1) Eliminate DRM.
2) Price the movies so cheaply that there isn't much point in stealing it. If a song is worth $1, and a TV show is worth $2, a movie shouldn't be worth more than $4 or $5 (US dollars). Make the "special features" a free optional download for people who have purchased the movie (a lot of people, myself included, will usually opt to just download the movie). Note that this could almost completely assume all of the $$$ that rental outfits are making from movies, allowing the studios to pocket profits from the vast majority of people who will just view the movie once and then discard it.
3) Work with the major PVR platforms to make it easier to buy an unencumbered $4 or $5 movie right from the menu than it is to download a pirate torrent and import it into the PVR. Don't just partner with one major commercial interest, get in bed with the OSS platforms also. Billions of dollars are at stake so spending a couple of million to have your product supported on the majority of popular PVR platforms is buying free money.
So can I burn it? (Score:4, Insightful)
Pros:
Available online, no need to get to a store. But if getting to a store is that hard, do they have proper broadband out there in the wilds?
Possibility for instant start (downloading as you go). Much more difficult with torrent-like systems because you need them in order. Can they provide that kind of sustained speeds to most consumers anyway?
Cons:
For a DVD, you can often get it as quickly by retail stores, online sites if you don't have good broadband
You know where you can get it cheaper...
You don't get any of the packaging. Do we even get the DVD extras?
Can you take a back-up?
Can you play it on a regular DVD player?
Can you move it to other machines like you can with a DVD disc?
They want to use your upload bandwidth
Basicly, no burning is a total and complete dealbreaker for me. And I know we can't burn CSS DVDs (consumer burners can't), and we won't be allowed to burn non-CSS DVDs. And if your HDD dies? Either you must a) download countless gigabytes AGAIN, or you must burn back-ups (maybe with some activation scheme). But then there's really no advantage over regular DVDs anyway, except now you need to make your own hardcopy. There's a big difference between having a HTPC and being forced to absolutely, for all future have to use one. Bought a DVD player to have in your cabin/car (great way to make kids STFU)/son's/daughter's room? Sorry.
It's a good start (Score:3, Insightful)
It would make some sense if they at least mailed you the real DVD after you buy the right to download a copy. But that is what I would do and I think I can come up with some innovative ideas time to time.
40$ for a DVD of television is too much (Score:2)
Missing an obvious problem here. (Score:2, Insightful)
On Pricing (Score:5, Interesting)
Now I finally have a way to compute the value of such things as this Warner P2P offering.
We need a little bit more data, though. Specifically, how big is a DVD quality movie? Between 600MB and 1.4GB for an MPEG encoded video of sufficient quality to (subjectively) look good on my big TV. 600MB for an animation, 1.4GB for a feature movie. Lets "split the difference" and call it 1GB.
Which means I can download 60 movies per month for $40. Each movie will cost me 67 cents to download.
But the P2P (Peer to Peer) model only works if I upload the material as well. To one (or more) clients. Note that my cap applies to uploads as well. I am going to assume a 1:1 ratio for down to uploads - which means my data pipe price is doubled. Specifically, to $1.33 per movie.
There is also a cost associated with having material on the hard disk for servicing uploads. I know the cost of on-line storage. My average price is now $2 per gigabyte (for my drives in service), and I replace drives every 2 years. Which means $1 per movie per year. If I assume data retension for a year (got to fill this in with something. and there has to be client retension to make P2P work!), this adds a buck, bringing my cost to $2.33.
Would I spend $2.33 to download a movie? Rental at BlockBuster average $3.50 (ish) per movie. One buck more. Which is then what the content is worth to me. Without DRM, unlimited personal use: the price of the DVD minus the above costs, minus a factor related to the time it takes to actually download/upload (because my Internet connection is tied up... and its a nuisance). I figure a MINIMUM of 5 bucks.
So, "Unencumbered DVD quality downloads using our P2P, at 30% under store DVD price" is the beginning of the play for me.
Ratboy
Idea (Score:3, Interesting)
With discounts for those that are 'seeders' like free downloads and 25% off DVDs or something.
no deal (Score:2)
Call me again when I get unlimited on-demand viewing of Warner movies for maybe $10/month (I'm willing to pay around $40/month for unlimited on-demand viewing of all studios).
Out with the Old? (Score:2, Insightful)