Good work. Would it be fairer to all parties to require an opt-in for every distribution service? A lot of people would choose to opt- in, and it's not fair to assume that people wouldn't know how, given the simplicity of the Blip interface. Or would that just annoy the aggregators and make your negotiations too hard?
On 26 Jan 2007, at 10:18, Jan McLaughlin wrote: Thanks, Mike: Vlogosphere Secretary of State. Jan On 1/25/07, Mike Hudack <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > Hey guys, > > I just wanted to give everyone an update on where we stand with MyHeavy > and Magnify, since I've met with the CEOs both companies in the last > three days. Both of the meetings were for the same purpose -- they took > place because people on this list complained about the way the companies > were aggregating their videos. The meeting agenda was simple: to work > with these companies to allow them to meet their business goals without > infringing on the copy or other rights of original content creators. > > Both meetings went well. MyHeavy removed aggregated video content from > its site immediately after we spoke on the phone. This was an easy > thing for them to do, since for them aggregation is a feature of a > larger business. In the case of Magnify it's much more difficult to do > this because their entire business is based on aggregation. > > MyHeavy is planning to bring aggregation back, but to do so in a way > that conforms with the best practices that have been (I believe) largely > agreed upon and endorsed by this group. Specifically, they will not > include advertising in the playback experience without express > permission from original content creators; they will not watermark the > video; they will give credit by prominently noting the original source > of the video in the form of a link to the original content creator's Web > site; and they will allow content creators to control aggregation > through support for the MediaRSS restriction standard (whch will be > controllable through a MyHeavy aggregation control panel in the blip.tv > Dashboard). > > Magnify continues to aggregate blip.tv video to their destination sites, > and they are currently including Google AdSense advertisements on pages > that include video players from other sources, including blip.tv. We > are currently working with Magnify's CEO to determine how best to > address this issue, since Magnify's entire business model is based on > the ability to monetize aggregators through advertising. Either way, > Magnify has agreed to support the MediaRSS restriction standard in the > same way as MyHeavy and others. You will be able to control aggregation > to Magnify through a control panel in the blip.tv Dashboard. Because of > Magnify's current position on advertising we are considering the > possibility of making the default position for Magnify "opt-out" rather > than opt-in (unlike providers who adhere closely to all points of the > best practices). Content creators who are okay with player-adjacent > AdSense advertisements because they want the extra traffic that Magnify > may generate will easily be able to opt in. > > Please let me know if these are acceptable outcomes for you, and we'll > proceed with implementation with both companies. > > ------- > Mike Hudack > CEO, blip.tv > > Office: 917-546-6989 > AIM: mikehudack > > Read the blip.tv blog: http://blog.blip.tv/ > > > > [Non-text portions of this message have been removed] > > > > > Yahoo! Groups Links > > > > -- The Faux Press - better than real http://fauxpress.blogspot.com [Non-text portions of this message have been removed]
