Heh, perhaps some producers go the other way 'round. Rights managed properties compete with commodity, designers pay a modest price to use your video via an aggregation site, the "higher quality" producers get left behind.
<http://www.stockphototalk.com/phototalk/2004/08/istockphotocom_.html> For example, someone needs a clip of a snowboarder. She finds a (aggregator?) site with a licensing scheme that says any 10 seconds for 50 bucks, we don't care how you're using it. Maybe a search capability (to the aggregator site) is built into video editing software. A shopping cart let's you purchase the clips in a single purchase from the different clip vendors. Could it happen? -- cheers r Deconstructing the status quo, collaboratively My Vlog: http://r.24x7.com A Good Deal: http://foo.24x7.com On Feb 2, 2006, at 1:21 PM, andrew michael baron wrote: > I'm not expecting anything - nothing - but one of many possibilities > that could evolve, beyond any hype, would be a place to go to (a) > show your intent or desire to consider advertisement or sponsorship > for your content where your terms are laid out and clear (because you > know what would work best) and (b) a place for advertisers to find a > place to put their ad; a directory, really - a market place that is > already set up with contracts, money, security, international > audience, a name, and a relatively cheap percentage for brokering an > original contract for each deal (3%?) > .... > Maybe the advertiser could put their ads up on e-Bay and offer a cpm > for the ad. That would be crazy wouldnt it? Anyone could select an > ad they liked and then pay the flat-fee CPM and a bit of code to > track some data. > > Who knows?! > Yahoo! Groups Links <*> To visit your group on the web, go to: http://groups.yahoo.com/group/videoblogging/ <*> To unsubscribe from this group, send an email to: [EMAIL PROTECTED] <*> Your use of Yahoo! Groups is subject to: http://docs.yahoo.com/info/terms/
