28 October, 2016

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Welcome to News Views, CASBAA’s news round-up culled from sources across the industry for the week ending Oct 28th. Curated by CASBAA, News Views keeps you in the loop. We always value your feedback, so tell us what you think!

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Christopher Slaughter

Christopher Slaughter

CEO

So US telco giant AT&T is buying Time Warner.  Which is a good thing.  Unless it’s a bad thing.  And the FCC might not even let the deal happen, anyway.  Unless the FCC can’t stop it, that is.   But if Donald Trump wins, he’ll kill it.  Hillary Clinton would just have it reviewed.  (Bernie Sanders predictably went ape.) If the deal goes through, nothing will change, but everything will change. The whole thing might hinge on access to data.  But then again, it could be undone by non-transferable satellite licences.  Regardless, reactions to the deal have been all over the map.  (Don’t let’s even mention AOL, okay?)

 

Mark Lay

Mark Lay

Vice President, Singapore

Meanwhile, in entirely unrelated news that is in no way a response to the AT&T-Time Warner deal, Verizon is buying Vessel, the online subscription video service founded by former Hulu CEO Jason Kilar.  The service will be shut down at the end of the month, since Verizon is only buying it for its tech.  Meanwhile, in another move that has absolutely nothing to do with any other telco giant’s plans, Verizon is still actively in negotiations to buy Yahoo!, despite that massive hack of its emails.  Divergent views on the future of TV, indeed.

 

John Medeiros

John Medeiros

Chief Policy Officer

The political tensions over Kashmir have taken their toll on India-Pakistan media exchanges.   A series of tit-for-tat retaliations started when India’s film producers announced a ban on use of Pakistani actors.   Pakistan retaliated, first by banning all Bollywood films (which had been allowed in since 2008.)   Hindu nationalists stoked the flames, threatening to bomb cinemas and issuing threats to Pakistani actors in India.  There were pleas for reason, which sadly fell on largely deaf ears.  So last week the Pakistani TV regulators announced a total ban on Indian content.  The ban came into effect last Friday.  Cable operators were raided, and forced to remove Indian channels.  (Note:  in copyright terms, this redistribution was always illegal.)   Only authorized channels were to be broadcast.  (This article has a list of authorized international channels in Pakistan.)   Website blocks against Indian news sites have been rumored.  In addition, there’s now a campaign against Indian DTH dishes in Pakistan (also illegal, but previously tolerated).   The regulators have rejuvenated perennial attempts to get a Pakistani DTH system going, with 16 companies bidding for award of three licenses – now scheduled for next month.   (A good summary of the woes of Pakistan’s TV industry can be found here. )  Smaller countries located next to cultural behemoths often struggle to develop local alternatives (just ask the Canadians, eh Mark?)    But there is a shared culture being lost, and closure, against a background of violence, is not a good thing.

 

 

Kevin Jennings

Kevin Jennings

Vice President, Programme

South Korea’s CJ HelloVision has come out fighting and pledged it intends to survive independently in the fiercely competitive pay TV and cable market. The cable operator has suffered under severe business uncertainties after its merger plan with SK Telecom ended in failure in July. CJHV’s CEO listed a raft of developments to improve competitiveness including expanding devices where consumers can access content, step up delivery of Ultra High-Definition content and offer an improved internet service. CJ HelloVision will also introduce cloud technologies to shift its cable broadcasting network system from hardware to software and launch what it tentatively called “tving Box” to continue its N-Screen service business. N-Screen refers to a service that provides broadcasting content through TVs as well as more diverse devices including smartphones and tablet computers. Notably the company said it does not want to directly compete with Netflix and pooq, which provide domestic terrestrial broadcasting based on the N-Screen platform, but seek coexistence with them.

 

 

Mark Lay

Mark Lay

Vice President, Singapore

The number of players getting into live streaming of the linear bundle in the US, isn’t slowing down.  Youtube is now putting together a package to launch in early 2017.  “These current and would-be live OTT providers can be put into two buckets. One is pay TV companies trying to capture customers who probably weren’t all that likely to subscribe to a traditional cable package in the first place: Dish Network with Sling TV, AT&T with DirecTV Now, Comcast with Stream. The other is purely digital players looking to become more like traditional pay TV companies: Hulu, Google/YouTube with Unplugged, Sony’s PlayStation Vue.”  Parks Associates just released research which shows how the top 10 streamers stacked up at the end of Q3.

 

John Medeiros

John Medeiros

Chief Policy Officer

Interesting back-and-forth between Google and the Thai government on content blocking:  Last week, after a meeting between Google’s regional government relations chief and a Deputy Prime Minister, the government let it be known that Google/YouTube would be screening posts looking for violations of Thailand’s “lèse majesté” laws.  Google then issued a statement saying they were following the same “clear and consistent policies for removal requests” that they get from governments around the world, and “have not changed those policies in Thailand.”   So this week the government said 480 URLs on YouTube were already blocked or in the process of blocking, with additional ones coming at the rate of 30-40 per day.    Whether Google is a) yielding to pressure or b) acting according to their usual procedures is clearly the question; nobody doubts that sensitive videos are being taken down.

 

Christopher Slaughter

Christopher Slaughter

CEO

The lady doth protest too much, methinks: apparently, Donald Trump is NOT interested in launching Trump TV if he loses the election.  That’s despite the fact his campaign has already launched a version of Trump TV on Facebook.  The very well-founded rumours have been circulating since June, and if you’re interested, Reuters has put together a profitability model for such a venture.  And in case you thought his recent denial leaves The Apprentice as The Donald’s only TV aspiration, consider the with-hindsight-now-slightly-creepy pitch for a project called TrumpTown Girls.

 

Kevin Jennings

Kevin Jennings

Vice President, Programme

There has never been a more intellectually interesting time to be in the video content business,” is how Turner CEO John Martin began his recent fireside chat at the Paley Center for Media.  It runs almost an hour, so it’s a pretty big time commitment, but it also reinforces many of the points raised in other stories we’ve shared about Turner recently.  Well worth it to hear him talk about his plans for “…a complete transformation of the entire company.”   (Thanks for the tip, Greg Armshaw!)

 

 

John Medeiros

John Medeiros

Chief Policy Officer

[Warning:  adult content ahead.  Turn down your speakers so as not to offend your co-workers.]

 

“STOP PIRATING MY *****ING MOVIE!”   With those immortal words, the rapper KSI started a Youtube rant on piracy that is well-worth listening to, just to get his full emotional range about a problem that is near to our hearts.  (And as long as you don’t mind liberal use of various expletives.)  Amusingly, it is actually entitled (with uncharacteristic understatement) “We Need To Talk.”  Pay attention to the part about one minute in, where he enumerates the number of places his movie can be bought, legally, and then says “So trust me…..there isn’t a shortage of places to go, to get this *** thing.   So then why the *** are you watching it, without paying for it…..you stealing ***** piece of ****.”  In case you haven’t heard of KSI, he’s a UK-based YouTubing, videogaming, rapper-comedian with 14.8 million channel subscribers. As a result he’s one of the most popular stars on the Internet.  Don’t miss the part, at about 2:15, where he takes off on the arrogant people who download pirate copies and then tweet to him about it.  

 

Christopher Slaughter

Christopher Slaughter

CEO

Apple has unveiled a new app for its Apple TV devices called…. wait for it… TV.   Sigh.  Anyway, two of the biggest features are a unified search platform for the various streaming services available on the device, and a unified log-in that brings together pay TV services and apps, as long as they support single sign-on (SSO) as a feature.  And continuing with this week’s trend of bringing together stories that definitely might not have anything to do with each other, the New York Times has launched an online film and TV recommendation engine that it is provocatively calling Watching, and which uses filters to suggest content.  Of course, it’s entirely US-focused, and assumes that users are subscribing to every pay TV and streaming service in existence… but that’s a feature, not a bug.

 

 

John Medeiros

John Medeiros

Chief Policy Officer

Other tidbits this week:   

– An MPAA-sponsored confab in Brussels resulted in new pledges of international cooperation in the fight against piracy.  

– The UK appointed its first Director General for Digital and Media, to promote making the UK “the safest place to do business and go online.”  Meanwhile, the UK Parliament is considering its Digital Economy Act, and the music industry pressed for putting new provisions in the law to deal with the problem of search engines directing consumers to pirated content.  The music association BPI said the fact they had issued a quarter billion take-down requests to Google showed “there is a major problem with the digital economy” and the current legal framework isn’t adequate.  

– A German court convicted a “card sharing” hacker of DTH signals and sentenced him to a year in jail; a UK court did one better and sentenced a pair of movie uploaders to four-year terms in jail!   

– Meanwhile Artem Vaulin, the founder of Kickass Torrents, defended himself in US court by contending that torrent linking sites don’t host content themselves, and are therefore not copyright violators.  Vaulin himself is still in jail in Poland, awaiting extradition.  Meanwhile, the Polish police seem to have been indulging in rather heavy-handed enforcement on behalf of certain copyright owners.  

– And finally, in the USA Donald Trump has been hit with a copyright infringement claim, having used a copyrighted photograph of a bowl of skittles (a US candy treat) without permission in an anti-refugee ad.   “The unauthorized use of the Photograph is reprehensibly offensive to Plaintiff as he is a refugee of the Republic of Cyprus who was forced to flee his home at the age of six years old,” wrote the statement of claim.   The plaintiff is in good company, as Trump is reprehensibly offensive to a large portion of US population:  “Women have had it with guys like you.”

 

Kevin Jennings

Kevin Jennings

Vice President, Programme

If like me you are having a few sleepless nights amid the excitement ahead of the CASBAA Convention, there’s a new kid on the block called Napflix. Billed as a ‘siesta video platform’the site apes the Netflix logo and houses an archive of seemingly endless and mind-numbingly boring videosthat you can watch that are so dull your brain will switch off and you’ll doze right off. Titles include “The Wonderful World of Tupperware”, “Aquarium Fish Tank” and my personal favourite, “Swiss Chalet’s Rotisserie”.  Content is king, after all, and everything has its place.  Kudos to the guys who came up with the name and the idea. Napflix and chill?

 

 

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