The Register reports that a Dutch company's cunning plan to deliver DVD movies to customers' TV sets digitally, without having to pay additional performance rights has already run into trouble. DVDStream's partner Homelink - the Danish manufacturer of the Palmbutler 600 set-top box - has gone into receivership and may not be able to deliver the hardware on time. DVDStream was planning to deliver movies through Palmbutler 600, a set-top box that streams digital media to TVs and stereos in the home. The Dutch start-up claimed that by adopting a DVD rental sales model, it wouldn't have to pay for royalties that are imposed on regular streaming video or video-on-demand services. The idea was that customers would purchase a DVD movie digitally and make a copy of it for their personal use (which is apparently legal in the Netherlands). After watching the movie, the customer would sell the movie back to DVDStream. This way, the payments for the movies would have been only temporary deposits, the company claimed, and the service would not have to pay extra royalties. Although experts found it highly doubtful that the service would remain online for long, it may not now happen after all. DVDStream says it is looking for alternatives, including products from Hauppauge or Pinnacle, but none of these have been able to deliver the features the Palmbutler set top-box was able to offer. DVDStream still hopes it can launch in August.
The IPKat is most impressed at the ingenuity of this scheme, the legitimacy of which DVD producers will be sure to test in the courts once it's introduced. Even if copyright is not infringed, there is no guarantee that this scheme would not fall foul of the law of unfair competition.
Video streaming here and here
Videos about streams here, here, here and here
Think that could give you some Search Engine popularity, and traffic???
ReplyDeleteNice site. Check mine out if you can. time share promotion
ReplyDeleteHigh Google and Yahoo link popularity can be yours,
ReplyDelete