Oct 19 2006

Television in the age of bittorrent

  • Written by soulxtc
  • No Comments

Television faces a distribution dilemma. After having had technologies like Tivo chip away at the notion that tv programs should be watched on the network’s schedule, the networks are now facing a major disruption to their business model because of sharing technologies like bittorrent. Using a bittorrent client, internet users from around the globe can find and download their favorite programs, soon after they’ve aired, and watch them on their computers or home entertainment systems, at their convenience, and ad-free.

Based on available data, the download audience for a program like Lost is currently 2-3% of its television audience for a given episode. This is small, but over time, as broadband penetration grows and as the tools for downloading become more sophisticated, it will represent a significant threat to the advertising revenue model of traditional television (I’m resisting the urge to call traditional television ‘television 1.0,’ but maybe it’s appropriate). Rather than signaling the impending demise of television as we know it, I think there’s a huge opportunity for networks to tap into this new global distribution network and actually gain audience share and revenue in the process. All that’s required is for the networks to license the rights to distribute digitized versions of their programs internationally, on a country by country basis that parallels the way they currently license content.

Here’s how this might work: a few hours before the next episode of Lost (as an example) is due to premier in the USA, the ABC distributes a digitized version of the episode to it’s ‘torrent affiliates’ around the globe. The digitized version is ad-free, and is accompanied by a timed transcript of the program for non-english speaking countries. Torrent affiliates take the episode, watermark it, insert advertisements for local goods and services, and add subtitles if the local language is not english. They then make this new version of the episode available for free public download over bittorrent. In the USA, the ABC airs the program as normal, then releases it’s own local bittorrent of the episode, complete with ads.

This scenario almost entirely removes the impetus for individuals to take the time to record, edit, transcode and upload programs which have just appeared on free-to-air television. There would be almost no point in doing so, because torrents of the program will already be available for download by the time a program has finished airing, and better still, they will be available in multiple languages, and they’ll be continuously seeded by the torrent distributors. People who currently download Lost via bittorrent will download the new versions provided by the torrent affiliates, because they will be of higher quality, and they will be available before anything else; I don’t think the fact that they will contain advertisements will be a significant inhibitor. The downloaded media file is essentially no different to an episode that has aired on free-to-air television and been recorded by PVR.

Related Posts

  1. iTunes to Stop Selling NBC Television Shows
  2. Peer Impact Announces Major Studio Motion Pictures and Television Shows Now Available
  3. Warner Bros. & Apple Bring Television Favorites to the iTunes Music Store
  4. Stargate Atlantis Screener Episode Hits BitTorrent
  5. Ares Gets BitTorrent
Zeropaid on Facebook
Trackbacks url:

Leave a Comment...

  • Advertisement

    Giganews Newsgroups

1 Star2 Stars3 Stars4 Stars5 Stars Loading ... Loading ...

  • Sophieanne and Lilli: I wish their was more music....
  • ralphie: OH looky, it still doesn't work on dual screens. Adobe sucks....
  • odball: hej jag är en leged user och nu kommer jag inte in på sidan kan ni vara snälla och undersöka varför mvh G.P...
  • mpsharp.com Blog » Watching NFL games online: [...] show you a number of streams to choose from for each game.  All the streams require some sort of StreamTorrent pl...
  • ejonesss: no it is not going to completely stop piracy because while it will stop those whose reason for piracy is quality it is n...
  • file sharing anonymously - P2Pfreak.com: [...] and Trusty Files) just google any one of them and you will get some great info. also here IP filtering with uTorr...
  • soulxtc: Wasn't aware people were guaranteed jobs...
  • mountain_rage: BTW Youtube is supposed to go 1080P soon :D....
  • sdsd