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rjelks
May 17th, 2005, 10:35 AM
The BBC has made an announcement that may change the way we watch TV. They broadcasting company is making their television programs available for download over the Internet.

The BBC is allowing the downloading of television shows as a 3-month trial to begin in September. The company will use its new Interactive Media Player (iMP) to allow programs to be downloaded and viewed.

The trial will allow consumers to download selected TV shows for a period of 7 days after they first aired. In addition to TV, the BBC is streaming radio broadcasts and additonial channels not yet available with the iMP.

The new system will require users to download the new iMP program. The files that are downloaded will include Digital Rights Management (DRM) to delete the programs after a period of 7 days. The included DRM will also prevent sharing the files on unauthorized p2p networks or burning them to discs.

Although the programs can't be shared on popular p2p networks like BitTorrent, the new BBC trial will utilize p2p technology to distribute the media.

BBC director of New Media and Technology Ashley Highfield likened the new service to another popular online success, "iMP could just be the iTunes for the broadcast industry, enabling our audience to access our TV and radio programmes on their terms - anytime, any place, any how - Martini Media."

'We'll see what programmes appeal in this new world and how people search, sort, snack and savour our content in the broadband world,' he said.

It should be interesting to see how the service works out for the BBC. The American MPAA is currently filing legal challenges against TV show swappers.

The new BBC remake of the "Dr. Who" series' pilot leaked onto the p2p networks before it aired. The buzz created by the pre-release bootleg brought a lot of word-of-mouth advertising to the show. Battlestar Gallactica's success is also partially attributed to the early leaks on the Internet.

.:sp00ky:.
May 17th, 2005, 10:46 AM
nagh seems as i pay a licence to watch them i think il just download them off bt WITHOUT your crappy program and WITHOUT your shitty drm.

crackerjacker
May 17th, 2005, 11:32 AM
the thing with this is that over a year or so they said they were going to do that, and they had there staff testing it out for months. the issue is it will only be for uk folks and after 7 days it will be expired.

well other ways to get it via bt, newsgroups, gnutella , dc etc

tomars
May 17th, 2005, 11:43 AM
EDIT: Nevermind hah

Blatantly going to be shit quality as well, like music videos on launch - not worth watching.

mikedoug
May 17th, 2005, 12:21 PM
"The included DRM will also prevent sharing the files on unauthorized p2p networks or burning them to discs."
I'm a little curious how DRM can prevent sharing and burning under an OS that doesn't support DRM.

The BBC have been selling downloads of TV episodes for a while. Presumably when someone strips the DRM, if the quality is OK, this could be a useful service.

ivand67
May 17th, 2005, 12:21 PM
That's right - if people pay for this crap they'll think it actually is a fair way to distribute stuff.

The only fair way is with XviD encoding, high-resolution formats, HDTV rips, NO DRM whatsoever, AC3 audio, etc.

And what is the only source of such kind of entertainment? Of course... the scene.

Digital Bliss
May 18th, 2005, 02:14 AM
A step in the right direction

Zeneris
May 18th, 2005, 04:48 AM
fcuk'ing cheek if you ask me, UK TV license holders ought to be able to type in their License No. and download what _they_ paid for in a sensible format e.g. Xvid with a decent video/audio bit rate and no DRM!

Zeneris
May 18th, 2005, 04:52 AM
I've got nothing against the BBC charging non license holders / subscribers to recoup some of the cost (given they only have ads for the BBC!), even so some stuff is so important it should be shared for free.

Signa
May 18th, 2005, 08:44 AM
at least they are sorta offering ppl what they want instead of sueing them for taking what they want.