Posts Tagged ‘Providers’

Sky Sports Coming To Internet TV Providers For Less

Saturday, April 17th, 2010

Satellite broadcaster Sky have been told to lower the prices it charges rivals for its premium sports content including premiership games. The ruling made by Industry regulator Ofcom, could well open the way for Sky’s sports streaming to become available on online tv services such as BT Vision.

The move has forced Sky to lower its pricing to providers of sport channels by around a quarter, following a three year long inquiry into the pay TV market. Sky must offer Sky Sports 1 and 2 to rival broadcasters for more competative prices.

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Are Content Providers Slowly Killing Hulu?

Friday, March 5th, 2010

After a period of dominance, the once mighty Hulu is looking fragile. The website is still not making money and is now facing the threat of losing premium content as providers decide to do their own thing. The decision by Viacom to remove two very popular shows from the Hulu schedule shows that the real power is with the networks, and that Hulu on its own is little more than a shop window. The content providers can on a whim take away what makes Hulu great.

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YouTube Video Rentals Service Expanded | More Content Providers Join Google’s Beta

Sunday, February 28th, 2010

YouTube looks to be expanding its video rental service despite only mild success with the experiment with Sundance film festival offerings earlier this year. And it isn’t just films being offered for paid streaming, with anime, travel, craft, and fitness videos added to the mix.

YouTube Video Rentals

YouTube signaled its intent to start charging for some videos last September, with rumors of a movie rental service priced at $3.99-a-film emerging.

The trail then went cold until January of this year when YouTube officially released the first five offerings under the new service. Until then, the service had merely been trialled by Google employees.

Sundance Film Festival Trial

The first offerings were The Cove, Bass Ackwards, One Too Many Mornings, Homewrecker, and Children of Invention, all independent films from the 2010 Sundance Film Festival which would otherwise have struggled to find an audience.

The trial ended when the festival did, and the total revenue brought in by the trial was $10,709.16. This isn’t a huge amount of money, especially for a site as popular as YouTube or a company as big as Google.

But it was a good enough start to justify an expansion of the service, proving that should the right content, and a fair amount of it, be made available that it could prove to be another way of bringing in revenue to YouTube. Which, lest we forget, has yet to turn a profit.

Expanding The Library

NewTeeVee now reports that YouTube has expanded the service to include more videos, more content providers, and a greater variation of genres. Rather than just independent filmmakers, genres such as sport, travel, cooking, and education are now also available.

Not that YouTube is publicizing the service yet. In fact, it’s all being rolled out very quietly and with no fanfare. Then again, the video rentals service is still in beta, and will likely be for some time to come.

Conclusions

YouTube obviously has high hopes that there’s a profitable future in offering video rentals, and not just in the form of movies. And I don’t doubt this is the case.

Although most people will still only use YouTube for the free UGC that is at its core, there is a significant proportion of people happy and willing to pay for content, if that content is what they’re seeking.

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