Hacp
Lifer
- Jun 8, 2005
- 13,923
- 2
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So my TIVO is legal because it's in my home and therefore not transmitting or "performing" the signal to me.
So a TIVO outside your home is illegal?
So my TIVO is legal because it's in my home and therefore not transmitting or "performing" the signal to me.
A top rated show can cost the network $1,000,000.00 per episode. How do you propose they recover that and make a profit?
So my TIVO is legal because it's in my home and therefore not transmitting or "performing" the signal to me.
This isn't the distribution model to fight for.
It's going to be a pyhrric victory anway. Just like Napster, shutting down the service won't do away with customer demand to receive content via a different distribution model than what the current incumbents are comfortable with. Instead of all rallying around an evolving standard (Aereo) they could have helped mold to their liking, this ruling will just fracture the market into smaller, harder to control slivers. The OTA broadcast television company is a dead man walking with its current business model.
Agreed. The answer is to get off the teet of mass consumer media and get onboard with alternative distribution platforms and their content.
The OTA model died when the government forced a switchover to digital. It is so much harder for people to get a clear digital signal that often getting cable is their only option.
Add in the fact that those who watched OTA channels without cable were the lowest form of scum from an advertising standpoint, and the writing for "free tv" is on the wall and has been.
This CERTAINLY wasn't a pyrrhic victory though. You forget that for OTA tv the "customer" isn't the watcher, it is the advertiser. The product is your eyeballs. So it doesn't matter if the watcher wants a more convenient distribution platform, what they will get is what they are willing to pay for or advertisers are willing to pay for.
Everyone just needs to look in the mirror and realize it doesn't matter how easily you can imagine a Spotify for TV and movies, it is not going to happen anytime soon. And when it does happen it will be the same $100 a month the cable company charged, oh except now you will have to jump through hoops of logins and access.
The only way for cord cutters to "win" is to reject mainstream content.
It's not the ruling it's the Law.
From the link in the OP.
No. 13–461. Argued April 22, 2014—Decided June 25, 2014
The Copyright Act of 1976 gives a copyright owner the “exclusive righ[t]” to “perform the copyrighted work publicly.” 17 U. S. C. §106(4). The Act’s Transmit Clause defines that exclusive right to include the right to “transmit or otherwise communicate a performance . . . of the [copyrighted] work . . . to the public, by means of any deviceor process, whether the members of the public capable of receiving the performance . . . receive it in the same place or in separate places and at the same time or at different times.” §101.
They can make this argument because the law does not limit it to specific technology or devices (nor should it).
http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/text/17/106
Subject to sections 107 through 122, the owner of copyright under this title has the exclusive rights to do and to authorize any of the following:
(1) to reproduce the copyrighted work in copies or phonorecords;
(2) to prepare derivative works based upon the copyrighted work;
(3) to distribute copies or phonorecords of the copyrighted work to the public by sale or other transfer of ownership, or by rental, lease, or lending;
(4) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and motion pictures and other audiovisual works, to perform the copyrighted work publicly;
(5) in the case of literary, musical, dramatic, and choreographic works, pantomimes, and pictorial, graphic, or sculptural works, including the individual images of a motion picture or other audiovisual work, to display the copyrighted work publicly; and
(6) in the case of sound recordings, to perform the copyrighted work publicly by means of a digital audio transmission.
Hell, I'm surprised the word digital even made it in the text.
Moreover, the subscribers to whom Aereo transmits television programs constitute “the public.” Aereo communicates the same contemporaneously perceptible images and sounds to a large number of people who are unrelated and unknown to each other. This matters because, although the Act does not define “the public,” it specifies that an entity performs publicly when it performs at “any place where a substantial number of persons outside of a normal circle of a family and its social acquaintances is gathered.” The Act thereby suggests that “the public” consists of a large group of people outside of a family and friends.
Of course a Spotify for TV isn't going to happen. The music industry was caught with their pants down and is paying for it. TV Networks are in a far better position and will adapt to their advantage when forced.
Don't most of your local networks that broadcast content OTA stream shows over the internet free on their website?
If you are talking about platforms like Hulu or the network websites often they purposely limit the content to just be enough to get a "taste" so that people are motivated to buy into normal distribution channels.
I agree 100%. Sports distribution platforms will hold out even longer, heck some networks have just STARTED milking the cable model with targeted college sports channels.
We are talking 20-25 years before there is anything close to the cord-cutting dream of just subscribing directly to your favorite channels.
If you are talking about platforms like Hulu or the network websites often they purposely limit the content to just be enough to get a "taste" so that people are motivated to buy into normal distribution channels.
Sports will be the key. Once the NFL discovers they can just charge people a base $250 per season or something and give them an app to watch whatever, they win. Why bother with cable and satellite? They get 100% of the ad revenue, which isn't going anywhere, and they get total control of the content.
I expect it would be illegal because you don't have rights to the local broadcast. Might also nail you on the rental thing, that's a service not a product.So if I rent someone else's computer remotely and use their TV turner, it is considered illegal as well?
They have advertising when you watch online and a few weeks ago one of the networks had me log into some deal with the local station.Don't most of your local networks that broadcast content OTA stream shows over the internet free on their website?
Aereo never was able to show to a satisfactory level that its technology worked like it claimed.
The law is about PUBLIC performance. The whole point of Aereo's technology was to make it so it WASN'T a public performance.
Therefore ignoring the technology element which is what was designed to make it a non-public performance means they ignored the whole thing that was meant to keep it compliant with the law. They changed the definition of public to suit their needs, and that's what has everyone shitting themselves.
I expect it would be illegal because you don't have rights to the local broadcast.
Might also nail you on the rental thing, that's a service not a product.
These local broadcast stations shouldn't be allowed to extort per-subscriber fees from cable and satellite companies as they now do. It's just sick. They don't seem to understand that they are not the same as a a cable network.
You keep saying that, but that's not what the decision says.
If you own the equipment, and only you have access to it, it's private. Because of this you should have rights to the local broadcast. You can save it, and view it remotely. You are not distributing it.So if I had a computer somewhere with a local tv tuner and logged in remotely, I would be illegally streaming the local broadcast?
What do you mean? Renting is renting. You borrow and use it.
That's the point - soon they will be. OTA is going away eventually. This ruling just delays the inevitable.