Not sure if this is still valid, I remember this site from a few years
back...
 
http://bbc.co.uk/syndication/
 
Section 4 of the terms and conditions are about advertising appearing on
pages with BBC content.
 
/t

________________________________

From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Alex
Mace
Sent: 16 July 2009 09:35
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: [backstage-developer] 'All-in-one' UK VOD Service..


The BBC themselves do just that when you look at BBC News from outside
the UK. As long as it's just a link to the relevant page where the
content is then I can't see it being a problem, though I am not a lawyer
and The Pirate Bay was just a directory/search engine. Though TPB was
also linking copyright infringing material... 

On 16 Jul 2009, at 09:30, Tom Maslen wrote:


        Documentation on how to Glow can be found here...
         
        http://www.bbc.co.uk/glow/
         
        Great idea for a website.  Not sure what the legal implications
are about putting adverts right next to BBC content though?
         
        /t

________________________________

        From: [email protected]
[mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of Brian
Butterworth
        Sent: 16 July 2009 06:51
        To: [email protected]
        Subject: Re: [backstage-developer] 'All-in-one' UK VOD Service..
        
        
        Jordan, 

        Why didn't you just call this "Project Kangaroo" and have done
with it?

        Looks good - perhaps you could use the BBC Glow toolkit to use
some sliders, as this would allow you to get more choices on a single
page?

        2009/7/15 Jordan <[email protected]>
        

                Firstly, sorry if this isn't the right place to discuss
this.  I'm a
                graphic design student and in the past few months, as a
side project,
                I've been working on a kind of all-in-one service for UK
users that
                acts as a directory of all the content available across
the major
                video-on-demand services.  I built it because as far as
I was aware,
                such a service didn't exist (though I think there are a
few cropping
                up now) and It was something I really wanted to use
myself.
                
                The site pulls data from the iPlayer RSS feeds for each
channel and
                organises them alongside data from other services so you
can browse by
                name or date across networks.
                
                The service is currently in beta and I'm still working
on
                improvements.  In the long run I'd like to add radio
support and
                perhaps a members area so users can select their
favourite shows and
                be alerted when new episodes come online.
                
                Have a look and I'd be interested in knowing your
opinions:
                
                http://www.teev.co.uk
                
                Thanks,
                
                Jordan
                -
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group.  To unsubscribe, please send an email to
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