Rogers launches Hulu clone

http://www.cbc.ca/arts/story/2009/11/30/rogers-online-video-hulu.html


Rogers is taking a page from Hulu, the popular U.S. video portal, with
the launch of its own — albeit limited — online hub for television and
movies.

The cable and wireless company on Monday opened up to the public the
beta version of its Rogers On Demand Online website, which lets users
watch full episodes of television shows, movies and other short clips.
The site launched with 1,500 videos from 15 partners including
Teletoon and Super Channel, and plans to add new partners and content
frequently.

The site has the look and feel of Hulu, a U.S. website jointly
operated by several American broadcasters, but which is blocked to
Canadians because of geographic licensing restrictions. Both websites
organize shows, movies and other videos in searchable catalogues that
viewers can then stream through a Flash player. Both also feature
advertisements embedded in the videos.

The Rogers website has limited functionality compared with its U.S.
counterpart. Anyone can visit and use Hulu, but only Rogers customers
who sign up to the site can access the Rogers online service. Any
Rogers customer, including Fido subscribers, can use the basic portion
of the site, but "premium" programming can only be accessed by the
company's cable subscribers.

David Purdy, Rogers vice-president of video products, said the
intention behind the site is to keep customers from cutting their
cable by letting them watch programming whenever they want. The
service, which requires users to authenticate who they are with their
Rogers account number, is geared toward combating free downloading
from file-sharing services and encouraging content providers to make
their programming available, Purdy said.

"If you're building on this choice, convenience and control model and
you're adding value, the likelihood of people disconnecting from their
subscription television service is quite low," he said. "This linking
of people's access back to being a subscriber of the actual channel
will free up many thousands of hours of content that will now be put
up online in a way that really benefits the consumer but doesn't
necessarily undermine the subscription television model."

The Rogers website also currently has a dearth of content, with no
major Canadian or U.S. networks aside from the Rogers-owned Citytv on
board as of yet. Its featured TV shows, for example, are episodes of
The West Wing and Crash, while spotlighted movies include National
Lampoon's Vegas Vacation and Danny Deckchair.

The site also has no high-definition content, which Hulu offers,
although the company plans to raise the rate at which it streams
throughout next year to eventually offer "internet HD."

Rogers is also planning to make its website viewable on mobile phones
in the first half of 2010, Purdy said.

The company's effort is not the first time a Canadian internet
provider has tried to provide online video content. In 2007, Bell
Canada opened a beta video store that allowed users to download movies
and television shows for a fee. The service proved to be a flop and
was shut down this past summer.

Bell recently replaced the service with Bell TV Online, an online
portal that currently offers content from TMN, Family Channel and
Playhouse Disney to the company's customers.

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