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Subject: [IP] Re: TV Anywhere Gets A Boost: Paging Christine Varney! (and Jon Lebowitz and, eventually, Julius Genachowski)




Begin forwarded message:

From: "Bob Frankston" <Bob19-0501@bobf.frankston.com>
Date: June 24, 2009 9:53:08 PM EDT
Cc: "'Dewayne Hendricks'" <dewayne@warpspeed.com>, "Harold Feld" <hfeld@mediaaccess.org>
Subject: RE: [IP] TV Anywhere Gets A Boost: Paging Christine Varney! (and Jon Lebowitz and, eventually, Julius Genachowski)

Just as my ability to route Verizon VoD through my standard router demonstrates that video in fact works over generic IP, the Web viewing implementations (such as Comcast’s own Fancast) show that we don’t need to tie content to the transport. The very thin thread tying this to the old model is an arbitrary and spurious tie to their old billing engine.
 
Aren’t they admitting that the linkage between their ownership of the transport and their control of content is a blatant restraint on trade? If a guilty plea isn’t enough what will it take to put a lie to their defining premises?
 
Perhaps the reason is that people don’t fully appreciate the tremendous damage done by this collusion. First there are the hundreds of billions of billable events generated by forcing us to pay for services like telephony which we can better to ourselves. I argue that these costs are dwarfed by loss of the ability to create new value and innovate in health and safety.
 
I do understand they are desperately avoiding their dumb pipe fate. The question is the FCC continues to protect them against the market?
 
-----Original Message-----
From: David Farber [mailto:dave@farber.net] 
Sent: Wednesday, June 24, 2009 19:26
To: ip
Subject: [IP] TV Anywhere Gets A Boost: Paging Christine Varney! (and Jon Lebowitz and, eventually, Julius Genachowski)
 
 
 
Begin forwarded message:
 
From: dewayne@warpspeed.com (Dewayne Hendricks)
Date: June 24, 2009 2:47:32 PM EDT
To: Dewayne-Net Technology List <xyzzy@warpspeed.com>
Subject: [Dewayne-Net] TV Anywhere Gets A Boost: Paging Christine 
Varney! (and Jon Lebowitz and, eventually, Julius Genachowski)
 
TV Anywhere Gets A Boost: Paging Christine Varney! (and Jon Lebowitz 
and, eventually, Julius Genachowski)
 
By Harold Feld on June 24, 2009 - 2:10pm
Time Warner and Comcast have announced a new pilot program for their 
TV Anywhere initiative. The 5,000 customers in the pilot will get 
access to cable programming content not otherwise available online — 
as long as they prove they subscribe to a subscription video service — 
or “MVPD” — like cable or FIOS. (MVPD stands for “multichannel video 
programming distributor” and means anything that sells you a whole 
bunch of cable channels. Forgive my jargon but it’s just an easier 
term to fling around for this.)
 
The supporters of this initiative (which the New York Times notes is 
also known in the industry by the more accurate but less friendly 
names as the “Authentication Program” and the “Entitlement Program”) 
point out that its just a bunch of broadband ISPs, who also happen to 
be MVPDs, coming together with the handful of other vertically 
integrated content companies like Viacom and DIRECTV/Liberty Media to 
create a common standard so that everyone who has already paid for 
this content can now also get it online. Ultimately, as long as you 
subscribe to any MVPD, you will get access to the programming through 
any internet provider. How could this possibly be anti-competitive?
 
Some of us old codgers with media regulatory backgrounds have long 
memories. For example, did you know that the FCC first authorized the 
direct broadcast satellite (DBS) service in 1982, and that we used to 
have something called “wireless cable?” Why didn’t DBS manage to get 
going until the mid-1990s and wireless cable died on the vine? Answer: 
Because cable operators used control over programming (either direct 
control by owning the programming outright or indirectly by 
threatening to kick off programmers who sold programming to potential 
competitors) to keep these services from emerging. In 1992, Congress 
created the program access rules and made it illegal for cable 
operators to demand exclusive deals from independent programmers. That 
allowed satellite companies (and overbuilders like RCN and telcos like 
AT&T) to get “must have” video programming to offer competing video 
subscription packages.
 
So while everyone and his brother is fixated about cable operators 
trying to keep customers from “cutting the chord,” and noting how this 
ties in with theefforts to impose metered pricing and capacity caps, 
the anticompetitive impact goes way, waaaayyy beyond locking 
subscribers into obscenely profitable video bundles. As I noted when I 
blogged on this a few months ago, it works to (a) prevent the 
emergence of “virtual cable” competitors such asNetflix, and (b) 
protect the current cable programming network business model (as 
explained by Mark Cuban). It also jeopardizes innovation and further 
fragments internet content, as demonstrated by the Hulu/Boxee.tv dust-
up back in February.
 
 
 
 
 
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