- From: Marques Johansson <marques@displague.com>
- Date: Tue, 6 Jul 2010 10:01:48 -0400
On Mon, Jul 5, 2010 at 7:53 PM, Bjartur Thorlacius <svartman95 at gmail.com>wrote: > On Mon, 5 Jul 2010, Marques Johansson <marques at displague.com> wrote: > > The company I work for, VOD.com (sfw) (aka Hotmovies .com and clips .com > - > > nsfw (spaces added)), offer video on demand services to thousands of > If I understand correctly, you are content distributors and video encoders. > Yes. > > Customers can watch movies by purchasing packages of time or paying for > DRM > > protected rentals or for some of our sites and videos they can pay for > > unprotected video. The protected content (rentals) comes in the form of > WMV > > or DivX files using either DivX's service of Windows Media Server. > So you sell copies for money and a promise to delete the copy after > it's use. That's like selling a book, printing "Burn after reading" > on it and calling yourself a library. Also the book shall not be used > for "unauthorized uses", e.g. put under a table foot, lent to a friend > or read repeatedly. The latter two cases may be solved by going to the > "library" and buying another copy, other can't. > > Many people see DRM as an hybrid between a lock and a automagical fire > lighter. > Yes, let's get Amazon MP3 and the Itunes store closed down immediately. I'm not lobbying for DRM inclusion into HTML5 - I'm looking for server side HTML or HTTP ways to limit transfer sizes. Once a user has bought a copy, the copy has been bought and how > (often) he uses said copy isn't your probem. You've successfully > distributed and charged for the content. Job's done. A technical user > will probably be able to copy the video to permanent storage whatever > you do. Multi-pricing can also be achieved by other means, such as by > resolution crippling. Watermarking to aid with tracking down grand scale > pirates seems to be an OK thing to do. > I know that a technical user will have the ability to do this. They will have at least paid for one copy. > Server load can also be reduced by e.g. P2P, though users may want the > price to drop in proportion to their uploads. > I am using a standard video format and standard HTTP/HTML to distribute video. You don't see many P2P HTTP solutions around these days. Bandwidth isn't the issue in my case, but I would rather have the user disconnect from the server and play the video they've got before requesting more. The less open / throttled connections the server has to deal with the better it performs. -------------- next part -------------- An HTML attachment was scrubbed... URL: <http://lists.whatwg.org/pipermail/whatwg-whatwg.org/attachments/20100706/1851c74d/attachment.htm>
Received on Tuesday, 6 July 2010 07:01:48 UTC