Fawlty Towers will soon be available to download legally. Yay!
The BBC is teaming up with Bit-Torrent client,
Azureus, to make hundreds of television shows available to people worldwide.
This means that users will be able to download popular shows like: Little Britain, Red Dwarf, League of Gentleman, Doctor Who and Fawlty Towers no matter where they are for a small fee. What’s most impressive is that the BBC isn’t going to just dip its toes into this project but is instead going to offer hundreds of shows from the very start. This gives the service a much better chance of taking off and becoming successful.
The move by the BBC is a response to the huge increase in websites that offer free downloadable TV series. Currently, by using video-share websites like YouTube, you can easily watch BBC shows like Match of the Day for free. A quick search on Google will find other sites which offer downloadable BBC television on demand for free. By enlisting the help of established Bit-Torrent software creator Azureus, which already has over 130 million downloads of its bit-torrent client, the BBC hope to distribute high quality video in a completely legal manner.
How exactly the content will be secured is unclear at the moment and the biggest fear for both the BBC and Azureus must be that the high quality downloads will end up being available on the illegal file sharing networks. If the BBC is to secure the files with something similar to the Windows Media Player DRM they could be making a big mistake. As soon as someone hacks it, they will be able to rip all of the content and then make it available on the net for free. Brave or stupid BBC?
Currently there has been no announcement on the pricing system. Expect a similar price list as to what Apple uses for distributing television. A couple of pounds for a TV show or something similar. The BBC will actually be distributing the shows through
Zudeo, a spin-off program powered by Azureus.
Will you use this service to download BBC classics? Which show would you most like to see on this service? Let us know in the
forums.
but sounds interesting.
I have moved out of the U.K. over 8 months ago and no longer pay the licence fee (although I didn't have to pay it in Ireland and we still got it?). there are a number of shows that I miss.
TopGear
The Snooker Coverage
Ideal (bbc3 - Jonny Vegas)
The news / Panarama
I would have no problem paying some sort of internet licence fee to access some of these shows, especially the comedies.
Suppose I shouldn't really ask, but does anyone know how I can fake to look like I am in England (instead of Austria) so that I can get my TV stories :D
I have tried using a anonymous proxy, but failed cos I didn't know what I was doing.
Clarify Qos/Availability - this is important re: who's bandwidth and machine resources are being used to support the service. If it's the user-community ponying up their bandwidth and timeslices, you shouldn't expect them to pay per-item when it's economically impractical for them to individually purchase a [Digitally Restricted Medium] copy of each episode of each show they have an interest in.
News/Public Domain material - will this/would this ever be freely available?
How will this relate to the TV license fees for UK residents and for those outside the UK? Where are the lines drawn between public service, generating revenue and the global benefit of the Flying Circus?
Are there any current services available to British higher-level education institutions via JANET which offer access to the BBC digital archives for research?
Irregardless, good show Beeb.
Not sure how much I would use it, a quick flick through Sky at any one moment can find you pretty much all of the BBC back catalogue playing anyway.
If its DRM free this would be the first major TV channel/network in the western world (i beleive but dont qoute me) maybe the world to sell DRM free tv shows it actually owns which is a HUGE+ (well i think the itunes vids aint drm'd for tech reasons but their crap quality so who cares)
Finnally a way for expats to watch UK TV legally (this includes me YAY) tho not alowing audio streaming of the world cup was a big let down :( cause US commentators SUCK
Yet another company seeing that torrent isnt evil in nature YAY :D
and now for the negative (or the could be negative if they do it poorley)
If its DRM'd there is no point at all to this in the slightest since you can already obtain shows from public trackers and an even WIDER selection from private ones (not that i would know of any such places *cough*) old and new even upped after being capped withing mins
Slow download speed due to poor seeder support. I know of people *cough* who can max out at 600kB a sec from certain private trackers. If i pay for it i really have no incentive at all to seed which can easily lead to lack of bandwidth from the source.
Which leads me to pricing. Heres where i give an idea scrap the whole pay per download idea its flawed and dosent really work unless its somone whos paranoid about getting sued so goes legal no matter how bad a deal it is. i say go the monthly fee route (for outside UK inside should be free tbh no matter what). heres the intresting part to solve the above issue. Take a tip from private trackers reward those who seed by either making it really cheap for them say $15 a month fee would be reduced to $5 for those that keep a ratio of 1.0 or 1.5. Should be reasonably easy to implement (especially since they are getting a customized client) and would more or less end the bandwidth headache.
File formats. Now if they go the WMV route or the low res route again this sucks DIVX is king we all know it hell mpeg would be better than wmv
thats it expect one more thing
BBC America is run by discovery channel (god knows who owns them tho) So yes the BBC does make money from it but so does ITV (they have footballers wives on god only knows why its CRAP) and i beleive ive seen 1 or 2 sky shows too kenny vs spenny? and defo HEX. I cant blame them for that id rather they increased the show quality by selling it overseas than doubling or trippling the license fee. Just imagine how much cash sky 1 gets from having adverts AND monthly fees.
[rant/]
what us license payers are getting is the BBC iPlayer, formally known as IMP
check out wikipedia or the bbc iplayer website for more information
this will be free and will let us watch any programs that have been on TV in the last 7 days but will have DRM so after the 7 days have past they'll be deleted
What do you think would happen if they released these without DRM for a small fee?
Say, £1 per episode?
I think the service would take off tbh.
I'd be happy to pay a very small fee to cover bandwidth costs (which they offset anyway since they're using torrents) and other overheads.
As they say, there's no such thing as a free lunch but a very cheap lunch is always nice... :D
I understand people get annoyed at paying for something twice, but the BBC is a non-profit making organisation so the money just goes back into making quality entertainment - if they stopped selling DVDs and BBC America the BBC would probably have to either shut up shop or put a huge amount extra on the license fee.
fini
I alerady have too much doctor who but I'd be well up for the Red Dwarf.
I used to watch red dwarf, and frankly have been looking for it on the web. (as it's not available outside the UK)
Well, the content is there...BUT:
-It's illegal (okay, most user's don't care)
-It's bad quality. (appears not the DVD's got ripped, but the earlier VHS-copies)
-It's incomplete.
So yes, for a (moderate) fee, I'd happily purchase them complete and in high quality, as well as different content really.
However, the article seems to refer to older, back catalog, programs. One would assume that we will not be excluded from that. To be fair, I'd pay a certain amount to get my hands on even DRM'd old Dr Who, at least partly because just finding the DVD's is damn hard, and I'd also hope this was a fair bit cheaper than them.