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Television Media The Internet

MTV Takes on P2P by Making South Park Free 206

thefickler writes "MTV Networks, the biggest division of Viacom Inc., has announced plans to make every South Park episode available online for free as part of a plan to make the show available to a larger audience." This is apparently largely because of the success of a similar project where they put every episode of The Daily Show on-line a few months back. This action didn't hurt ratings, and it may have actually helped them.
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MTV Takes on P2P by Making South Park Free

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  • too late (Score:5, Informative)

    by Azeroth48 ( 855550 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:31AM (#21544069) Homepage
    http://www.southparkzone.com/ [southparkzone.com] been there done that Oo
    • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

      by rHBa ( 976986 )
      Or here:

      http://www.mrtwig.net/ [mrtwig.net]
    • Fresh news generates fresh interest and that's what this is about. Traditional broadcasters are having a hard time building new audiences because we've all gone to the greener pastures of the internet. Cable subscription rates will plummet if they don't keep the interest of young audiences. Somehow they have to convince you to pay $60/month for the advertisement saturated shows someone else chooses to broadcast.

      I'm not going to cry for them when they are gone. The businesses involved have been give

  • by Anonymous Coward
    About the fucking blog reporting the story? Link to the free episodes please. For fuck sakes editors.
  • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:34AM (#21544085)
    No, don't be silly. Not the people watching TV.

    I was talking about the various networks around the globe that license Southpark, often first of all having to dub it. That this takes time is a given (it's gotten better in the past years, but it's still about a season difference, give or take).

    When I can watch a show online, why bother waiting for our networks to dub it? Yes, I "have to" watch it in English, but then again, usually that's the better version anyway. Anyone who has ever watched The Simpsons in German will agree.

    So, any response from the networks? I mean, I don't know about the Daily Show (never heard of it, actually, and possibly not as much an export as SP is), but a show like Southpark which is being licensed widely might cause some negative reaction from the networks licensing it.
    • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

      When I can watch a show online, why bother waiting for our networks to dub it? Yes, I "have to" watch it in English, but then again, usually that's the better version anyway. Anyone who has ever watched The Simpsons in German will agree.

      Surely there are Germans who can't speak English that wouldn't agree ?

      I know that I get completely lost when I watch a show in say, Japanese, and I have no idea what the dialogue is saying. While bi/multi-lingual people who also understand English undoubtedly feel the same w
      • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

        by EvanED ( 569694 )
        There are also subtitles, which very well may be being made anyway, for the deaf. Then you "just" need to translate them.

        A lot of people say original language + subtitles is better than dubbing, though I'm not sure I agree.
        • Re: (Score:3, Insightful)

          There are also subtitles, which very well may be being made anyway, for the deaf. Then you "just" need to translate them.

          A lot of people say original language + subtitles is better than dubbing, though I'm not sure I agree.

          That depends on the quality of the dubbing and on whether or not you mind reading your TV shows.
          Some people don't like to read, they would rather watch TV. Some people can't read fast enough to follow the rhythm of the spoken word, and some people can't read at all.

          Personally: "Original language (if understood)" > "original + subtitles in a language I understand" > "dubbed well" > "on mute" > "dubbed badly";

          • "Original language (if understood)" > "original + subtitles in a language I understand" > "dubbed well" > "on mute" > "dubbed badly";
            I forgot one case:

            "Original language (if understood)" > "original + subtitles in a language I understand" > "dubbed well" > "original language (not understood, but you get the tone of the voices)" > "on mute" > "dubbed badly";

            Unless the bad dub is funny, but then that's an ironic approach.
          • Personally: "Original language (if understood)" > "original + subtitles in a language I understand" > "dubbed well" > "on mute" > "dubbed badly";

            I second that.

            Me and a bunch of my friends watch anime and asian movies together (mix of fansubs and rentals) once a month and we always watch with original audio (usually japanese) and english subs... 90% of english dubs miserably fail to carry over any of the character from the original voice acting.
          • by vidarh ( 309115 )
            This might be a problem in countries where people are used to dubbed content, but I find myself often turning subtitles on even when watching movies etc. in languages I understand, because it lets me be lazy and not pay full attention... If you grow up in a country where subtitles are common, you'll quickly learn to read fast enough that a glance on the screen every now and again is enough to get the full dialogue whenever whats happening is boring you and you don't pay full attention (talk to someone else
        • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

          by meringuoid ( 568297 )
          A lot of people say original language + subtitles is better than dubbing, though I'm not sure I agree.

          Dubbing of foreign language shows is definitely the best! Believe it!

          (That... actually did hurt to write.)

        • With a cartoon, of course, the original is 'dubbed'. So the question becomes largely one of which version has the better voice acting. That's still usually the original because of matters of budget, access to the original creators, and because of timing (human languages can take surprisingly different amounts of speech to encode the same information, especially when differences in cultural context are taken into account). But at least in principle one could prefer a second language version. With live action

          • I find that, with South Park, the Spanish voices are better than the original ones, because it's translated with all sort of hilarious Spanish mannerisms
        • A lot of people say original language + subtitles is better than dubbing, though I'm not sure I agree.
          Look up the English versions of some Japanese animé (like Naruto), then put your hands over your ears. Gah, the horrible horrible voice acting, the screeching, it hurts...
      • Generally, everyone under the age of 40 had mandatory English classes during their school time. This means between 6 and 12 years of English courses. I'd say it's sufficient to follow an episode of SP.

        And the age range above 40 is hardly the target group for the show.

        Of course there are people who don't know enough English to follow it, and they will probably have to wait for the dub. Still, I'd guess the group of people who're able to follow the show is sizable enough to cause an outcry amongst the network
      • Surely there are Germans who can't speak English that wouldn't agree ?

        Yes, there'll be plenty, but especially among the South Park target demographic the English language is widespread. Certainly enough for this service to have the potential to make a huge dent in DVD sales.

        • by Karzz1 ( 306015 )
          "Certainly enough for this service to have the potential to make a huge dent in DVD sales."

          I wouldn't think this would have a lot of impact on DVD sales. Generally downloadable content such as this is hugely inferior to a DVD. Granted, South Park may not be the best example of this as the rudimentary animation used to make the show can be shrunk down quite a bit before it is really noticeable. Regardless, I am sure the quality available for download will not translate well to the size of your average TV.
      • My hovercraft! It's full of Eels!
    • Re: (Score:2, Funny)

      by krazytekn0 ( 1069802 )
      But see, as an American run enterprise MTV does not know this will happen since in America it is rare for someone to have a grasp on more than one language.
    • Anyone who has ever watched The Simpsons in German will agree.
      Seconded! The Simpsons dubbed into German is not funny. Most things dubbed into German are not funny. The quality of the actors doing the dubbing varies, but the German networks seem to consistently hire very poor quality translators.
    • by mstahl ( 701501 )

      the Daily Show (never heard of it, actually, and possibly not as much an export as SP is)

      The Daily Show [wikipedia.org] is a parody news program shown on Comedy Central here in the US. Ironically enough, studies have shown [thinkprogress.org] that viewers of The Daily Show are more informed about world events than viewers of Fox News.

      • That's quite logic when you think about it.

        To enjoy political satire, you have to know politics. Else you don't get it and it's just boring. And that it is supposedly entertaining is quite obvious (it's on CC, duh). So only people who know their world events will watch it.

        On the other hand, it doesn't take much of a brain to follow Fox News. They don't require you to think or draw conclusions. That's done for you.

        • I'm actually surprised at myself for not noticing that connection! The viewership of the two are fundamentally different, although believe it or not I have met people who actively view both (not sure how...). Also, since the Daily Show and especially the Colbert Report exist mostly to lampoon our state-sponsored news service (Fox), you can absorb the best of content from the one by viewing the more hilarious alternative.

          On a somewhat related note, I am constantly surprised by people dense enough to think t

          • by Belial6 ( 794905 )
            While I am a fan of the Colbert Report, I have really started to lose interest in the Daily show. I think they have lost their way. They used to be good satire, but recently, they lost the wit, and just started resorting to name calling. The last episode I saw was doing a 'satire' on a Fox news clip, and the only thing they had was making fun of the guys hair. Given how much material there is to do real satire, I can only assume that all of their good writer were moved to the Colbert Report.
          • Actually I tend to read/watch news that conflict with my world view instead of supporting it. It's like getting a "second opinion" on a subject, to test my point of view. The only thing important is that you get some quality paper, because with "I say so and it's right 'cause I say so, here, we even print it" it's hard to argue.
            • by mstahl ( 701501 )
              That's why I read the wall street journal still as well as the Chicago Tribune and the New York times. Its important to keep those critical thinking skills going.
    • by Mex ( 191941 )
      How can you possibly have never heard of The Daily Show? It's the most trustworthy newscast in the USA.

      http://www.thedailyshow.com/ [thedailyshow.com]
  • DVD Sales (Score:5, Insightful)

    by Paralizer ( 792155 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:40AM (#21544133) Homepage
    As far as I know the Daily Show is not available on DVD, whereas South Park is. So if you wanted to watch the Daily Show and you didn't have Comedy Central, your only option was to pirate the episodes; making them available for free online made sense. But with South Park you can buy the DVDs, so making them available for free online would only hurt their DVD sales (unless of course the downloads are of very poor quality).
    • by Opportunist ( 166417 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:44AM (#21544165)
      Yeah, because the artistic quality of Southpark is a definite selling point. Watching that in YouTube quality would certainly hurt the show.
    • by Vellmont ( 569020 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:49AM (#21544607) Homepage

      But with South Park you can buy the DVDs, so making them available for free online would only hurt their DVD sales


      I doubt it, or at best it would affect them only a little. People don't buy the DVDs because they haven't seen the show, those people will just rent it. The people who buy the DVD want to watch it over and over.

      The other thing is, the episodes are still going to contain ads. Ads which you can't easily skip over. Comedy Central is going to make direct profits from those ads. The people who buy DVDs buy them partially because they don't contain ads. Even if it does make a small dent in DVD sales, the profits from selling ads will likely make up for that.
    • As far as I know the Daily Show is not available on DVD, whereas South Park is. So if you wanted to watch the Daily Show and you didn't have Comedy Central, your only option was to pirate the episodes; making them available for free online made sense. But with South Park you can buy the DVDs, so making them available for free online would only hurt their DVD sales (unless of course the downloads are of very poor quality).

      Mm maybe. There's a flip-side, though. I don't catch South Park when it's on anymore. Yet, once in a while, my coworkers talk about something funny they saw. That makes me want to see it, but I'm not buying a season of DVDs or waiting until it comes around again to see it. If I could just go download the episode, I may find it amusing. If that happens, I'm more likely to catch the next one when it airs. In short, what I'm saying is that making them available on-line could increase their fan base. M

  • torrents (Score:2, Interesting)

    i hope they put them on (legal) torrents so they are just as easy to download.

    but more likely, they will just make it an embedded player, so we can't FF through the commercials.
    • by Dunbal ( 464142 )
      Stream decrypted, saved to your hard- drive and commercials removed in 5, 4, 3...

      This is the internet, remember?
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by Secrity ( 742221 )
      The episodes are Flash, I didn't see any advertising, and you can randomly access any part of the video. I didn't try, but I suspect that the files can be downloaded.
  • Incidentally... (Score:5, Insightful)

    by lpangelrob ( 714473 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:52AM (#21544219)
    ...if you were wondering why the Writers Guild of America are still on strike, this is why.

    No advertising, no residual payments... not fair?
    • Re:Incidentally... (Score:4, Insightful)

      by krazytekn0 ( 1069802 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:59AM (#21544277) Homepage Journal
      Well, isn't the issue that the companies ARE making advertising revenue from this, and that's what they tell their stock holders, but they are telling the writers that they aren't making anything so they don't need to be paid for online shows...I'm probably wrong but that's how I understand it
    • Re:Incidentally... (Score:5, Interesting)

      by ShieldW0lf ( 601553 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:08AM (#21544327) Journal
      Isn't it great? My girlfriend started downloading documentaries to make up for the lack, and we've learned about a whole host of different things. It's amazing how little you miss the crap they churn out.

      Did you hear the one about the crack dealer who went on strike? Where all his clients cleaned themselves up and the market disappeared?

      No, me neither. Guess crack dealers are smarter than the Writers Guild.

      • No, me neither. Guess crack dealers are smarter than the Writers Guild.

        I guess you don't consider that the producers have a lot more to lose than the writers guild. The writers can always find some other medium to write for, or if worse comes to worse, become truck drivers, or whatever. If the producers lose the audience, they're quite screwed.
        • You mean they will incurr expenses above and beyond the interest they make off the funds they already have?

          Somehow, I don't hear any boots within which producers are shaking.

      • Re: (Score:2, Informative)

        by ockfener ( 1186525 )
        While I'm usually prone to documentary viewing over TV "fiction" as is, I would like to point out that the folks on strike (writers) aren't solely in charge of content, them, character, etc. Network people (producers, PR people, etc) play a huge role in creating and churning out the crap. If they would pay/promote for quality, the writers would produce it. This is about stopping certain folks from not paying royalties for content as the medium shifts from TV to Internet. A closer look shows that the sta
      • ... less consumer choice!

        Yay! Yay! Yaaaaaaaay!
    • Re:Incidentally... (Score:5, Insightful)

      by SydShamino ( 547793 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:16AM (#21544379)
      I'm an engineer. It takes a lot of skill and creativity to make products work on first revision. Guess what? I don't get residuals for work I did last year, last month, or any time before my last paycheck. I don't need residuals to retire because I, you know, save money.

      Both of my parents were writers and editors at one point, for the newspaper industry. Neither of them got any residuals, either. I don't suppose you continue to write residual checks to the artists that designed your car, or your sofa, or you house, either?

      No advertising, no residual payments... not fair?

      Go on strike and get a better contract. The law allows you to do that. But in no way do most of the working world consider this "unfair" to the special subset of people who feel that they need to be paid for the rest of their life for one momentary spark years ago. And when the time comes around that we can finally change copyright back to 50 years, thereby cutting off residuals for thousands of older writers or their descendants, you won't find me or most other people on Slashdot complaining.
      • Re:Incidentally... (Score:5, Insightful)

        by langelgjm ( 860756 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:48AM (#21544597) Journal

        But in no way do most of the working world consider this "unfair" to the special subset of people who feel that they need to be paid for the rest of their life for one momentary spark years ago.

        I think the issue is that, unlike you, writers aren't paid up front what the distributors believe their work to be worth. To avoid the risk of paying for scripts and shows that bomb, they pay only a small amount, then pay for further showings. That way, if a show does extremely well, the writer is rewarded, and if a show bombs, the distributor didn't waste a lot of money.

        A better analogy to your situation: imagine if you developed a product, but were only paid a small amount, and told that you would be paid well later on if the product sells well. Then, you find out that the distributor is selling your product but not holding up their end of the bargain by giving you payments. I dare say you wouldn't be as sanguine as you are now about the whole thing.

        • Re:Incidentally... (Score:5, Informative)

          by Sparks23 ( 412116 ) * on Saturday December 01, 2007 @12:14PM (#21544801)
          Add to that that, unlike engineers, newspaper reporters/editors, script-writers do not have steady work. Even within writing, a reporter (or an editor) knows that the paper keeps coming out, and thus they are still needed. Many times the reporter is paid a salary, or at least not paid some small per-article fee and told they will get more money if that issue of the paper sells well. And they certainly don't wonder 'will this paper be renewed for next season?' or whatever. They have more permanence to their job.

          Script-writers have a project to work on, then may go 6 months to a year without another project being available; since they do get paid so little to start with (as the parent post notes), many writers do rely on their residuals to still pay rent and so on. Unlike newspaper reporters and editors, they do not have a guaranteed job.

          A better example would be novel writers, I think; if you end up in a 2-3 year dry spell without another novel published, you darn well still want royalty payments on any copies of the last one that are still being sold! If you were a novelist and your publisher somehow decided to sell the book as an eBook and went 'oh, but we're not going to pay you for that,' there would be outcry, dismay and rage. (This is why novel/story rights get laid out pretty clearly in a given contract!)
          • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

            by laird ( 2705 )
            The key issue is who owns the material. Usually in the writing world, the author is not an employee of the publisher, but indepently owns his own work, which he licenses to a publisher in return for the right to publish it, usually paid royalties based on sales. TV show writers used to be paid this way, until years ago the producers changed the rules such that they owned the work (instead of the writers), in return for which they paid negotiated license fees. Now (IMO) they want to retain the ownership of t
          • Your lack of understanding on what people actually get paid for is appalling. We don't live in a communist utopia you seem to refer to.

            I'm at a loss for words. Do you really believe what you wrote? Do you really think that writers' pay structure is a result of some feel-good "oh those poor souls don't have work for six months?"

            And most writers have two jobs: one to pay the bills, one to write. Yes, even WGA writers.

            And I can't believe you got a 5 for that drivel.
        • by ivan256 ( 17499 )
          Your "better" analogy is shit.

          Why? Simple. It's because the writers could be asking for a fair wage up-front. It seems like the logical way to go, since that means the corporation is taking the risk, rather than the individual writers, that a show will be successful.

          But they're not asking for that. They're asking for residuals until the end of time (or until copyright expires, but we all know which will come first).

          • If you had read the GP, you would know that I didn't make the analogy in the first place - I simply tried to make his analogy more appropriate to the situation.

            Furthermore, it's easy for us to say "Why don't they ask for a fair wage up front," but they're not exactly negotiating with the most equitably-minded people. What makes you think they'll be able to wring such a concession from distributors? They're unwilling to pay up front precisely because they don't want to take the risk of a show bombing.

            I als

      • Residuals are part of the income for writers. I am SURE writers would MUCH prefer to get an engineers (you are a proper one and not one of the MSCE's I hope) salary then their own highly complex contracts.

        The entertainment industry just does not work that simple. The "real" salary, is kept very low and entertainers then have to negiotate for a percentages of virtually everything all of it designed to 'officially' keep the costs down in case it is a flop and reward success, but really is there so the studio

      • Re:Incidentally... (Score:4, Insightful)

        by antiMStroll ( 664213 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @02:17PM (#21545841)
        You hit on what so many miss by not thinking past the limited context maintained by media cartels to the larger principles involved. At its base artists and writers feel entitled to a portion of any income that makes use of their works. Sounds reasonable but it begs the question, why just the arts? Truly important works, works which literally changed the face of society beyond recognition, have been created by scientists and engineers for generations. They are infinitely more important to society's health and yet most, Shockley for example, never see returns greater than the most forgettable and transitory media darling. Songwriters would scream blue murder if forced to pay back a percentage of their earnings to Intel, Logitech and Samsung for use of the engineering IP in creating their works yet see no conflict in chasing taxi companies and restaurants for playing a radio. Until they demand to reimburse society for taking from the common weal of sentence structures, forms of literature, words and phrases to lock into their 'IP', it's hypocritical opportunism and an unquestionable corruption of copyright's intent.
      • 1. Did you ever ask for residuals? Did your parents? Do you have a union to help you negotiate?

        Business isn't about getting what you deserve. It's about deserving as much as you can get. Unions help little people get more.

        2. The studios are going to get paid for the rest of the writers lives for that one momentary spark years ago. Copyright protects works for 95 years. If the studios are going to get paid, why shouldn't the writers? The alternative is to come up with an estimate for the total 95-ye
    • Re: (Score:3, Interesting)

      by kithrup ( 778358 )

      Apples and oranges. First, South Park isn't a union show, so the WGA has no impact on it. (The Daily Show and The Colbert Report are, because Jon Stewart was in a superior negotiation position a few years ago, and that was one of his demands.)

      Second, if there's no advertising, and the episode isn't paid for by the viewer... the WGA's current demands would still mean they get nothing in this case. It would be "promoational," and, unlike what the major networks are doing, truly seems to be.

      The problem th

      • South Park isn't a union show, so the WGA has no impact on it. (The Daily Show and The Colbert Report are, because Jon Stewart was in a superior negotiation position a few years ago, and that was one of his demands.)

        Seriously?
        That's interesting, got more on that?
    • This is apparently largely because of the success of a similar project where they put every episode of The Daily Show on-line a few months back. This action didn't hurt ratings, and it may have actually helped them.

      Coincidentally, this site launched the day before the writer's strike. So, I'm amazed the reruns didn't hurt ratings and the website get blamed. Or maybe they are comparing it to other reruns' ratings?

      No advertising, no residual payments... not fair?

      Actually, thedailyshow.com has enourmous n

  • I think I go to Amazon and buy another couple of seasons.
  • Daily Show (Score:5, Insightful)

    by RonnyJ ( 651856 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @10:57AM (#21544259)

    This is apparently largely because of the success of a similar project where they put every episode of The Daily Show on-line a few months back. This action didn't hurt ratings, and it may have actually helped them.
    Two weeks after all the past episodes were put online, The Daily Show had to shut down production due to the writers strike. I doubt those two weeks are really enough to make any solid conclusions from. It's strange though, I'd have expected ratings to drop considerably after that, considering there weren't any new episodes to air (or are the ratings referencing only those two weeks?)

    I'm sure that putting them online wouldn't noticably hurt ratings (or perhaps could even increase them), but I don't think that you can evidence much from those two weeks.

  • I think this is less about MTV and more about Trey Parker and Matt Stone. They've already expressed a pro-P2P stance, and considering the nature of their show, this move fits in quite nicely with their "libertarian" attitude.
    • They've stated that they don't care how people watch their episodes (downloaded or not) as long as they get to see them or something to that extent. That's why South Park episodes are much easier to find online; legal action isn't taken against sites that host South Park content.
    • I didn't know they were that P2P friendly, for sure. It's great to see people getting it, and doing the right thing. Anyway, I there's only one appropriate response to news like this, and that's:

      Shhweeeeet.

  • I'm wondering how the WGA strike factors in. Matt Stone and Trey Parker are obviously two of the important writers on the show, and they stand to make residuals from DVD sales. But now, if all back episodes are available for free on the site, are they going to get a cut of the advertising that goes along with it?

    From the networkhead's perspective, P2P is screwing them over because they aren't getting any money for it. But from a show creator's perspective, having the company put it up for free online (wi
    • Re: (Score:3, Informative)

      by dq5 studios ( 682179 )
      South Park is a non-union, creator owned show. The WGA doesn't factor into it. Consequently MTV could not have done this without Matt & Trey's permission.
  • Wow, I have been downloading SouthPark since the days of SOXMAS.MPG. I regularly downloaded them until our cable provider at the time finally got Comedy Central.

    (SOXMAS.MPG, The Spirit of Christmas was a widely distributed copy of the original 5 minute South Park short, well technically second short)
  • by Jackie_Chan_Fan ( 730745 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:31AM (#21544467)
    Networks have been giving away their shows for free for years on TV. You just had to sit through the commercials. For years people could record the TV shows and do whatever they wanted with them... did this hurt the networks then? No.

    The only thing different now is they sell TV shows on DVD more than they ever sold TV series on VHS. This is mainly because of the storage capacity increases and size factor of the storage... but people watch those shows for free... and even go to the lengths of buying them on DVD. Thats a pretty dam good base of consumers to treat fairly, because they like your shows, and have already seen them for free for which they could easily record themselves... AND they still want to buy them.

    Giving away the shows for free online is not going to hurt them one bit. In a day with so many online distractions, so may cable tv stations... It is better to capture a wider audience anyway possible, rather than try to clamp down on consumers that would rather just go to youtube, or find something else to do. There are just too many options out there... and options have always been a good thing.

  • by surfi ( 1196953 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:31AM (#21544473)
    oh my god! they'r killing the recording industry! You BASTARDS!
  • Idea is Comcastic (Score:5, Interesting)

    by troll -1 ( 956834 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:36AM (#21544525)
    So if Viamcom is going to put shows on the Internet then it would make sense for them to recommend BitTorrent as a distribution method, even though Viacom is also an ISP, the total bandwidth is the same whether downloaded directly from a Viacom site or using a torrent. But using a torrent is the least expensive and most efficient method for the distributor.

    OK, so assuming Viacom, as a content producer and an ISP, prefers BitTorrent, where does that put Comcast? I wonder if this will also encourage competition?
    • I wonder if they're part of, or getting kickbacks from Rapidshare? I'm hit with about 10,000 opportunities to get a premium rapidshare account when I click on the link at southparkzone.com. Could be a reason they aren't using BT...
      • OK, my bad. For some reason, I was convinced that southparkzone.com was the "official" viacom distribution site. Apparently, it is not...

        So we'll see what comes up on the official site, which to the best of my knowledge, isn't up yet.
        • So we'll see what comes up on the official site, which to the best of my knowledge, isn't up yet.

          This excerpt is taken from the

          In August, Comedy Central signed an extension of a deal with South Park creators Matt Stone and Trey Parker, and agreed to create a new joint venture to spread South Park materials across the Web, on mobile phones and video games. So far, the venture, SouthParkStudios.com [southparkstudios.com], features a small collection of video clips from the show.

          I didn't notice anything claiming one way or the

    • No, it'd make sense for them to recommend multicast as a distribution method. If you actually own the infrastructure, there's nothing bittorrent can do that multicast can't do better.
  • by illectro ( 697914 ) on Saturday December 01, 2007 @11:52AM (#21544631)
    So MTV networks appear to get it, but if you're interested in the whole 'free content to beat p2p story' you need to look at imeem.com [imeem.com] and spiralfrog [spiralforg.com] - both are allowing users free access to music. now I can hear the imagined caveats now

    "It'll be low quality" - No - both sites deliver CD quality audio

    "It'll be some crappy indie bands that nobody has heard of" - No both sites have signed deals with most of the major labels - Sony, BMG, Warner, EMI and Universal - this is on top of all the indie labels who sign on

    "It'll be only a few free tracks - everythign else witll cost" - nope it's all free with a few exceptions (like the beatles) imeem even played host to the first legal Led Zeppelin video on the internet

    "It won't be on demand - you won't be able to control what you listen to" - nope it's entirely on demand, I think the only restriction I see is the slow downloads from spiralfrog that force you to watch advertising

    "It'll have tonnes of spyware/DRM/evil" - well no spyware as far as I can tell, imeem.com is streaming only and provides everything via a neat little flash player that works on any flash enabled browser. Spiralfrog however uses and active X control and windows DRM, so that's Windows/IE only

    OK so why is this a bolder move than this story? Well TV shows primary channel is still considered to be broadcast, a TV show has to make money on its TV run otherwise it's not considered viable. However, music revenue has primarily been generated through sales of the media, radio broadcast earns the record labels nothing, in fact it may be costing them to get this free advertising.

    In my mind the celestial jukebox that's offered by imeem is a hugely radical move by the record business, imeem has become the youtube for music that the tech bloggers keep talking about - except nobody in the tech blogging world has noticed it.

    • Spiral Frog only distributes WMA. I'm on Linux. There's a small problem here; can you guess what it is?
      • Yes, it looks like imeem is the place for you, which means you have to confine your listening to about 9082359083920984 tracks.....
  • When I heard about the Daly Show being free, I looked for it. All I could on the show's website was a string of Flash clips, pretty much one per segment of the show. I'm pretty sure I wasn't able to see even close to the whole show.

    Did I find what people are talking about? Because to be honest I found it pretty clunky and unsatisfying.
  • So the real message here is that they've realized they can't stop people from copying it without paying them. And they're going to try to compete by offering content at higher consistent quality, and making money from ad revenue. There is huge demand for downloadable video, and some revenue is better than no revenue.

    Isn't this what the copyfighters have been saying will happen, ever since Napster? And this makes it clear that DMCA and longer copyright protections are not going to help. You can't fight t
  • "One of these things is not like the others. See if you can guess which one."

    MTV Takes On P2P By Making South Park Free Online

    MTV takes on North Korea by Making South Park Free Online

    MTV takes on water and sinks after hitting iceberg by Making South Park Free Online

    MTV Makes South Park Free Online and some blogger happened to mention P2P and said nothing about "taking on" anything, while MTV did not even mention P2P.

    A double layer misstatement by inclusions of /. buzz words. This is becoming all too common.
  • It is funny in fact (Score:3, Interesting)

    by Ilgaz ( 86384 ) * on Sunday December 02, 2007 @01:14AM (#21549905) Homepage
    So, they insist on paying millions of dollars to hosting companies instead of using already established technology such as Bittorrent.

    They could even make money if they licensed the Vuze (Azureus) engine and put couple of animated gifs/flash while downloading with virtually zero cost to them.

    I am sure the hosts, even if they are Akamai will choke and people will end up hitting Pirate bay to download them. See that happened on Radiohead, people downloaded their paid content from P2P.

If all the world's economists were laid end to end, we wouldn't reach a conclusion. -- William Baumol

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