By Kevin Spidel, Patriot Strategies.
The race to get quality content directly to your HDTV has been building for a few years. TiVo now includes podcast aggregation ability, AppleTV includes the ability to watch movies, independent films are distributed via iTunes directly to your TV, and Boxee now aggregates and scrapes the social web for online video that your social network is watching and allows you to broadcast directly to your home theater.
Consumer electronic devices have gone from component HDTV connections to HDMI and optical inputs for quality HDTV viewing.
Hollywood would like to break your TV and revert your viewing experience back a few years. Never mind the evolution of media distribution created by an open market. The large corporate trade associates want to control distribution abilities directly by breaking your TV.
The MPAA (Motion Pictures Association of America) has been trying to increase movie distribution while maintaining full control of their content. Throughout the years they have joined forces with the RIAA (Recording Industry Association of America) to take on media related websites, bit torrent technology, and various file sharing programs in an effort to crack down on illegal piracy.
Enter Selectable Output Control (aka The Cable Kill Swith).
“Selectable Output Control” (”SOC”) is the remote signaling of home devices by content providers or distributors, to turn off consumer home interfaces on a program-by-program basis. The interface in question would simply not operate for the particular program. It would mean that a consumer who has purchased an HDTV display, and pays for a set-top box or other device with an HDTV output, still might not receive all of the HDTV programs he or she has paid for — because the interface between the set-top box and the HDTV display has been turned off by remote control. In the long term, imposition of SOC could have the effect of driving from the market any home interface that supports home recording. HRRC has opposed imposition of SOC by law or in any context subject to regulation.
SOC is activated by data “triggers” that ride along with program information when it is sent to the home. FCC Encoding Rules currently ban SOC use, but the FCC has left the door open to its use in the future. – Home Recording Rights Coalition
Here is a video about this technology: (more…)
Yesterday Jennifer wrote about Intellectual Property laws, specifically US patent laws, as they relate to emerging and traditional media in the world of news. It spurred discussion in the comments section below, Facebook, and Twitter.
Today, Jeffrey Neuburger posted a great article titled, “Changing the Law to Save Newspapers: Some Modest Proposals,” on the PBS MediaShift blog. The article is from traditional media’s point of view, not surprisingly, some of these proposals infringe on emerging news distribution technologies such as SEO regulations for online news.
After reading this article I was struck by the question, “what is newsworthy content?”
We encourage you to read the below article and post your thoughts.
Traditional and digital media collide once again in the form of news dissemination. Ever heard of the phrase “history repeats itself?” This saying is demonstrated in Associated Press v. All Headline News Corp., No. 08-cv-323 (Memorandum and Order, Feb 17, 2009) where the court held that the “hot news” doctrine created by the US Supreme Court in 1918 may be applied to digital news distribution.
In Associated Press v. All Headline News Corp., AP brought a copyright infringement suit against All Headline News Corp., a website that redistributes news articles. AP alleged AHN was redistributing AP articles in their entirety and passing them off as AHN articles. In addition to copyright infringement, the AP brought a number of other claims, including misappropriation under the “hot news” doctrine, a New York common law doctrine. The Supreme Court of the United States upheld the “hot news” doctrine in the famous 1918 case International News Service v. Associated Press, 248 U.S. 215 (1918).
On face, this case may appear to simply be a copyright infringement issue…after all we are all taught in grade school that copying another person’s work and passing it off as your own is wrong (in college we find out its illegal). The impact of this case’s outcome is that IP rights will either be assigned to AP’s reporting when in digital format or they will not. Digital format can mean any online content distribution from the daily blogger to large websites like AHN. This does NOT mean that the content can no longer be placed online by third parties, but under AP’s official policy, everyone from bloggers (like me) to Drudge himself will need permission from AP before posting their content. Permission usually also means that the person posting content must pay AP for the content.
Those of us in the news industry know that AP does not usually enforce their “official policy” but they do require that AP receives credit/acknowledgement when their articles are posted by third parties.
So now that we understand how a case like this can impact our use and consumption of online materials…how was the case decided? It settled! However, before the parties settled, the court found in favor of AP on AHN’s motion to dismiss stating that AP had a claim under the “hot news” doctrine following the Second Circuit’s holding in National Basketball Ass’n v. Motorola, Inc., 105 F.3d 841 (2d Cir. 1997), that a valid claim for misappropriation under the “hot news doctrine” lies where a plaintiff pleads the following: (more…)