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BBC's iPlayer's Prospects Looking Bleak

An anonymous reader writes "The future of iPlayer, the BBC's new online on-demand system for delivering content, is continuing to look bleaker. With ISPs threatening to throttle the content delivered through the iPlayer, consumers petitioning the UK government and the BBC to drop the DRM and Microsoft-only technology, and threatened legal action from the OSC, the last thing the BBC wanted to see today was street protests at their office and at the BBC Media Complex accompanied by a report issued by DefectiveByDesign about their association with Microsoft."

369 comments

  1. Damn. by cromar · · Score: 0, Redundant

    They're really getting it taken to them. Damn.

  2. blah blah blah by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    why anyone would use anything other than an older version of dc++ with iqlord's fakemaker (which is essentially a brilliant automated use of 'fsutil hardlink create') ill never know.

  3. Huh? by toleraen · · Score: 1, Interesting

    Now I'm just confused. My understanding of the situation is that a corporation wants to release content free (as in beer) for people to view, but people are actually taking to the streets in protest that the delivery system isn't free (as in speech). Or is this something that everyone is paying for, or is the content somehow regulated by the UK government? It just sounds like a company wants to release a product that only works on Windows, and I'm pretty sure that's been done before.

    Feel free to blast me for being ignorant of the situation, but I couldn't find any decent info on why this situation warrants protests and such hype. If it pushes OSS, I'm all for it, it just seems a little over the top. The only bad thing I could find was it's delivery system, which would push the net neutrality debate...

    1. Re:Huh? by Omeger · · Score: 1

      Personally I wouldn't care how much DRM is on something if it's free as in beer. I'm not sure why it would have DRM though if it's free though. Probably because the people who make the shows wanted it to be distributed through the iPlayer and not any other system.

    2. Re:Huh? by Shabbs · · Score: 4, Interesting

      The uproar from the public is that this new offering goes against what the BBC stands for at it's very core. By choosing a closed, proprietary format they've narrowed the scope of who can take advantage of this offering. The linked article goes into some nice detail

      Here it is: http://defectivebydesign.org/blog/BBCcorrupted

      The article goes as far as to suggest the BBC has been corrupted by Microsoft. I'm not sure it goes that far, but I think the BBC had all good intentions but failed on the delivery. I hope they won't abandon the effort but simply update it to ensure it's available cross-platform, DRM free using FOSS etc...

      Would be a great showcase for FOSS if they did.

      Cheers.

      --
      Mark
    3. Re:Huh? by zlogic · · Score: 2, Informative

      If you live in the UK and own a television you have to pay a special tax, some part of which goes to the BBC. So most people DO pay for BBC programs and have the right to actually watch them on a non-windows computer.

    4. Re:Huh? by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      The content is subsidized tax dollars, so is only free for some people - the tax payers don't seem to have a problem with this. However the BBC, is attempting to take this content which is supposed to be broadcast freely and lick it into some MS format.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    5. Re:Huh? by niceone · · Score: 1

      Or is this something that everyone is paying for, or is the content somehow regulated by the UK government?

      The BBC is paid for by a license fee which everyone who has a TV (or radio etc) has to pay. So, yes!

    6. Re:Huh? by AndersOSU · · Score: 1
      I'm confused, because according to the Ars article:

      because the BBC's offering is expected to be so popular, ISPs are now concerned that iPlayer traffic will degrade the experience for all users of their networks.

      Doesn't sound as doom and gloom as the summary makes it out to be.
      Sounds like someone rallying support for their pet cause.

      But hey, we might get a good illustration of net nuetrality in action. Also according to Ars:

      UK ISPs, which banded together to tell the BBC that the ISPs would start to throttle the Corporation's new iPlayer service because it could overwhelm their networks. Unless the BBC pays up, of course.... If the iPlayer really takes off, consumers accessing the Internet will get very slow service and call their ISPs to complain."
      And if the BBC doesn't pay up, and the iPlayer service is abysmal, then who do you think the consumers are going to call? If there were any doubt, the BBC could insert 15 second clips into their programs telling the consumers that any poor quality was the result of an administrative decision by the ISPs to not allow their product to work as intended.
    7. Re:Huh? by Kap'n+Koflach · · Score: 2, Insightful
      It just sounds like a company wants to release a product that only works on Windows, and I'm pretty sure that's been done before.

      The difference is that UK citizens are required to pay a licence fee to receive BBC content. It is so difficult for ordinary citizens to get out of paying the licence fee that it is in effect a universal tax. If the BBC then decides to release an MS-only product I (as a UK citizen) am in effect being taxed by the Government to support MS. Regardless of my views on MS, the BBC, etc, this is pretty unacceptable. This is like the BBC releasing content that only works on Sony (for example) televisions.

    8. Re:Huh? by growse · · Score: 1

      Right, except for the bit about radio. There is no license requirement in the UK for owning and operating a normal receiving radio.

      --
      There is nothing interesting going on at my blog
    9. Re:Huh? by toleraen · · Score: 1

      Devil's advocate, but it seems to me that the law would apply to televisions only. You still have the right to view it on your television, correct? If you wanted, could you still put a CATV capture card into your computer to view television on your computer? So you're still receiving 100% of the benefits of paying that special tax, right? Or is the iPlayer going to hinder the use of your television? Which part of the law would actually apply to program distribution over the Internet?

    10. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Or is this something that everyone is paying for

      Everyone in the UK who has a device, television or otherwise that is capable or recieving television broadcasts is required to pay for a tv liscense where the money goes to the BBC and other broadcasters. If they stream their media with DRM over a format that will work windows only, then they are effectively denying content to linux or mac users, who still pay for the content, but are not able to view it.

      that is what the uproar is about....

    11. Re:Huh? by toleraen · · Score: 1

      Are they taking it off the air, and moving it to Internet distribution only though? It seems that they're merely adding a second distribution channel, and that it is still broadcast freely over the traditional channel.

    12. Re:Huh? by pembo13 · · Score: 1

      The internet portion was/is already there using Real player... currently works cross platform. What they want to do seems like a downgrade, to me at least.

      --
      "Thanks for all the money you paid to us. We've used it to buy off ISO among other things" -Microsoft
    13. Re:Huh? by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 3, Insightful

      But it is not free as in beer. You pay the TV license fee to watch BBC programing in the UK. Its already been paid for by the users that are being denied access to the programming.

      --
      Evil people are out to get you.
    14. Re:Huh? by farmerj · · Score: 4, Informative
      The BBC is relatively unique as broadcasters go. Unlike most broadcasters its market is not selling air time to advertisers but as a public service broadcaster. There are no outside adverts on the BBC network (though they do advertise their own programmes, similar to other broadcasters).

      All funding for the BBC comes from the UK tv licence and the sales of programming and other commercial activity (e.g. selling Dr. Who and publishing magazines such as the Radio Times)

      The BBC is controlled by the BBC Trust (formally the BBC governors) and according to its charter is "free from both political and commercial influence and answers only to its viewers and listeners"

      The BBC added free to air distribution of its programming over satellite in order to provide maximum access to its services to its viewers. One of the side effects of this is that the BBC channels can be received with standard DVB-S equipment across most of western Europe.

      This is the reason that people are angry with the iplayer situation. It artificially restricts the service to Windows users and prevents full access by all of the licence paying population of the UK. This is completely the opposite of the satellite case where reception is open to others extremely outside the borders of the UK to ensure that UK licence payers have access to the service (note it is possible to receive this as far away as Bulgaria and beyond, so we are not talking about a small over-spread here!

      --
      Independence? That's middle-class blasphemy. We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth. G.B Shaw
    15. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Stop asking such smart questions! This is Slashdot. I have a right to do whatever I want to do and anything that prevents me from doing what I want to do (watch television online), when I want to do it (at my convenience and as many times thereafter as I would like) and how I want to do it (on Linux, and possibly on my iPhone) is evil incarnate!

    16. Re:Huh? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      That's a pretty silly argument. Is the BBC obligated to buy equal amounts of film from Kodak and Fuji? What about pencils? Paper? Computer hardware? I doubt it.

    17. Re:Huh? by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      Yes, you still receive the benefits, but that's not the point (good question though). The BBC isn't a private company offering a service for a fee. It's a national institution that exists to serve the British public. It has a responsibility to offer all of its services to everyone on an equal footing.

      Those who do not wish to pay Microsoft money should be entitled to receive the same service as those who do. There is a possibility that as a result of this protest, the whole idea will be dropped, but most people consider this outcome unlikely. We hope that the BBC will drop the DRM concept entirely, and rely on the fact that several million households pay an annual fee to keep it afloat.

    18. Re:Huh? by JamesRose · · Score: 1

      The BBC is run on the money raised by a television license paid by any person in the UK who has a television in their home, as such you are subsidising it whether you use it or not if you have a television- so it stands to reason it should not be made available only to microsoft customers- these people aren't complaining because they are getting this free, they are complaining because they are subsidising a system being created to be a feather in the cap of microsoft.

    19. Re:Huh? by Anonymous+Cowpat · · Score: 1

      you have to pay for a license if you operate any device which can recieve a TV signal: a TV, a VCR, a cable box, a TV card in a computer, etc.,.

      --
      FGD 135
    20. Re:Huh? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      I am not a resident or citizen of the UK but I think I know some of the reasons.
      1. The BBC is funded by a licenses fee. I know it sounds weird but you have to pay every year just to have a TV that can pick up broadcasts! They have vans that drive around that can detect TVs and such. I saw it many many years ago on an episode of the Young Ones. The concept is totally alien to people in the US but that is how BBC is funded.
      2. The BBC is sort of like PBS in the US but much better funded. It is an independent government agency. I am guessing that it is run by the government for the benefit of the people of the UK however it's content is not under government control. The government doesn't decide what news stories are covered or what shows are allowed. This allows the BBC to report things that would embarrass the government without fear of reprisal. This allows the BBC to have it's well deserved reputation for integrity.
      3. This new system will not work on the Apple Mac or Linux. So to view this content online you must have a PC running Windows and IE. This probably rubs a lot of people in the UK the wrong way. I can understand why. Let's imagine that somebody want to make a "slingbox" type device in the UK for viewing BBC content. A company in the UK would have to pay an US company to make a device to sell in the UK to watch BBC content.
      4. DRM. Just annoying because it prevents people in the UK from downloading a show and putting in on their iPod, notebook, and or Zune.

      And the big one.
      I don't have to understand. I am not a citizen of the UK so I have no say in this matter. I hope that they choose well and get a system that they like. If it is FOSS and DRM free then I will be pleased because I feel that technically it is a better way to go but in the end it isn't any of my business.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    21. Re:Huh? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      This article has a full description of the OSC's complaints. A copy of this article was presented to the BBC Trust by the OSC as background material prior to their meeting.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    22. Re:Huh? by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      The licence fee doesn't cover "TV only", the BBC makes almost all of it's money from the licence fee* and funds many TV and radio stations from it, as well as their web site. As A licence fee payer, if I've paid for it, I should have a right to use it.

      *The BBC doesn't carry adverts, it makes some money from DVD sales, and sales of rights, but even the latter is limited, as most of it's shows are shown by BBC worldwide, not other companies.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    23. Re:Huh? by jedidiah · · Score: 1

      At least 35mm film is a standard. At least there is a POSSIBILITY of acquiring materials from another supplier.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    24. Re:Huh? by Omeger · · Score: 1

      It's free as in beer in that you don't have to pay additional fees in order to watch it. You have to pay your cable provider to watch cable TV channels and they don't give out free programming to you.

    25. Re:Huh? by TheRaven64 · · Score: 1

      When discussing laws, it's important to read the wording of the original, not some random Slashdot comments. The TV License is required for anyone who owns a 'device capable of receiving broadcast TV signals.' This was more recently clarified to include a computer used to receive simulcast web streams.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    26. Re:Huh? by DaveCar · · Score: 1


      I am no friend of Microsoft, I've been Linux/BSD only for 10 years and dual booted before that, but that said I do wish the FSF would STFU on this one.

      The software is in beta. BETA!

      The beeb have said that they will support other platforms, and I'm sure they will, but let them finish their testing before beating up on them for christ's sake.

      They have got all sorts of pressures from content owners and probably Equity for repeat fees so they can't just make the thing "open" because you could just bypass the controls.

      The thing only allows you to catch up on the last 7 days anyway - if you are geeky enough to run Linux you can get a DVB-T tuner for under 20 quid and run MythTV and get better quality than iPlayer will probably give you.

      A Microsoft solution lets them get to 90 of the audience - they can *really* test the networking side of stuff with a known configuration and not have to worry about a handful of crazy Linux users running disparate distros.

      Who's to say they are not talking to Microsoft to get the WMV DLLs shipped with a Linux version and link into them? Mplayer seems to do it happily. The BBC are probably one of the few organisations who could get Microsoft to go along with this kind of thing.

      For fucks sake I wish people would just shut up and let them get on with their testing. When the full service is running and a few months have gone by and there's still nothing else supported then, fair enough, complain then. But let them finish the beta program at least you petulant bastards.

    27. Re:Huh? by Elliot_Lin · · Score: 1

      IANAL, but as I understand it you pay to receive the broadcast signal (how I understand it) - for example you do not need a TV license technically to watch something you recorded with a valid TV license elsewhere. The issue really is whether transmitting the program over the internet is broadcasting (and therefore covered by the law) or just making available (in which case it is not). Either way the UK public has paid for the content and if the BBC is making it available in a new form it would be reasonable to expect that the BBC would make it available for everyone who paid.

    28. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      So does a computer qualify as a broadcast-receiving device? If so, then I can better understand the uproar- as you shouldn't be forced into a specific type of computer. If not, then it comes across as sour grapes to me. And perhaps the uproar is more about how the license tax is assessed. If I understand correctly, it is a flat tax so whether I have one TV or five TVs I am still assessed the same tax. Are you upset that you have one broadcast-receiving device (one TV) and your neighbor has two (either two TVs or a TV and a laptop with Windows)?

      Personally I enjoy BBC so I hope that any restrictions are removed so that I can also cash in.

    29. Re:Huh? by whoever57 · · Score: 1

      they have vans that drive around that can detect TVs and such. I saw it many many years ago on an episode of the Young Ones. The concept is totally alien to people in the US but that is how BBC is funded.
      I don't know what ithe situation is today, but they only ever had a tiny number of vans. Mostly they compare a database of all known addresses with addresses of license holders and send someone round to peer in the windows for evidence of a TV at any address that does not have a license
      --
      The real "Libtards" are the Libertarians!
    30. Re:Huh? by mikael · · Score: 1

      If you purchase a CATV capture card in the UK, they will send your purchase details to the TV licensing board.

      --
      Vintage computer adverts: http://www.vintageadbrowser.com/computers-and-software-ads
    31. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But it is not free as in beer. You pay the TV license fee to watch BBC programing in the UK. Its already been paid for by the users that are being denied access to the programming.

      Free as in taxes! Just like those healthcare systems, right?
    32. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      There was, certainly.

      A similar licence, mandated by the 1904 Wireless Telegraphy Act, used to exist for radios, but was abolished in 1971. These licences were originally issued by the General Post Office (GPO), which was then the regulator of public communications within the UK.

    33. Re:Huh? by dyefade · · Score: 1

      So you don't consider buying the Microsoft products you need to view the content additional fees?

      I certainly do.

    34. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      You think the FSF will be happy with Microsoft WMV DLLs? I can tell you now, we won't be. (I'm not employed by the FSF, but I run gnu.org, and I was leading one of these protests.

      The facts are:- It's in beta, and it's proprietary. Will the beta fix either of these?

    35. Re:Huh? by multisync · · Score: 1

      It just sounds like a company wants to release a product that only works on Windows, and I'm pretty sure that's been done before.


      The company you refer to and all of its assets are owned by the British taxpayer. Also, everyone in the UK who owns a television apparently pays a license fee specifically to support the BBC. If you are a British citizen, the "product" already belongs to you. So you shouldn't have to pay any additional costs (ie a Windows license) to access your property.

      It's pretty much the same scenario as the push for governments to use open formats. The documents belong to the citizenry, and should be stored in a format that is accessible to all.
      --
      I don't care why you're posting AC
    36. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      I believe the vans are largely false anyway. It seems to work on the basis that everyone has a TV, and therefore, if you've not got a license, you're probably lying.

      Sadly, in reality, you can't eat the telly, either.

    37. Re:Huh? by LWATCDR · · Score: 1

      Well I am just going by what I heard so thanks for the extra information. Still kind of freaky from an US citizens point of view. The idea that the government would keep track of who as a TV or not is just count to our culture and ideas on freedom. I do understand why they do it in the UK but it is just not part of our culture here. But if it works for you guys it is none of my business.

      --
      See my blog http://ilovecookes.blogspot.com/ for light hearted technical information.
    38. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Who put the fucking FSF in charge of everything?

      There is absolutely no regulatory requirement for the software to be open/free. If you have a problem with that then don't use it.

      The facts are:- It's in beta, and it's proprietary. Will the beta fix either of these?

      Well, going out of beta will fix it being in beta, but no, it won't "fix" it being proprietary, but then that's not a requirement anyway.

    39. Re:Huh? by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      It doesn't warrant protests or hype. This is a massive own-goal for the open source movement in the UK, and I speak as a British card carrying Linux user. I don't live there any more but I did used to pay the license fee. Of course it will be annoying to Mac and Linux users that iPlayer doesn't work for them, however, it's also not the BBCs problem - they have a set of fairly sensible requirements that can be met by 95%+ of the computer using population.

      It makes no sense at all for the remaining few percent to try and get the BBC in trouble for this. The worst case scenario is that the iPlayer program is cancelled because of some legal challenge. Then nobody has it, and the vast majority of people will get their first experience of Linux as "the thing used by those whiny bastards that ruined the party for everything". Who wants that?

      The anti-DRM zealots have no good alternative answer that doesn't involve giving away high-quality expensive TV and radio shows to the entire world, for free. Somebody suggested RealPlayer or Flash - RealPlayer for Linux doesn't have any DRM support and Flash doesn't even try, it's trivial to download the underlying video file from a SWF player. The BBC isn't just funded by the license fee, but also gets a significant chunk of its budget from selling/syndicating its shows overseas, so it's really not an option for them without making the license fee a lot more expensive which is hardly fair. As there is no other "open" (haha) DRM platform other than the one provided by Microsoft, right now it appears to be the only way forward. Complaining won't change that economic reality.

    40. Re:Huh? by aslate · · Score: 1

      The facts are:- It's in beta, and it's proprietary. Will the beta fix either of these?

      The beta is testing the network capacity, software and scalability of the project, along with the Peer-to-peer distribution that they are using. To use the MS DRM is probably the most trivial part of the whole system. How hard do you think it would be to change that at a later date?

      By trialling with currently-existing and tested video DRM they are limiting the variables in the beta that could go wrong. That and the program owners (as the BBC doesn't own the complete rights to a good chunk of their programming) require DRM, you can't just remove it. What's needed is a proper, tested multi-format DRM system. Saying that, DRM directly conflicts with the interests of the Linux community, catch 22...

      These protests are uncalled for so early in the development stage. If it doesn't get past this round do you think they'll try it again? Doubt it.

    41. Re:Huh? by Alioth · · Score: 1

      I pay for the BBC with my TV license, as do millions of others.

      The BBC using a proprietary, secret format for the iPlayer is exactly the same as if they made their TV broadcasts viewable on (say) only Sony televisions and only recordable with Sony video recorders. The BBC should be using an open standard implementable by anybody for internet based TV, just as any PAL TV can be used to watch over-the-air TV.

    42. Re:Huh? by plague3106 · · Score: 1

      You miss the point; should the OP complain if the just didn't like Kodak?

    43. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      FYI, that would be tax Pounds (£/GBP).

    44. Re:Huh? by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      So..wait. I thought you said it was open to anyone with standard DVB-S equipment across most of western europe? Now I'm easily confused, but how exactly does what the BBC is doing further restrict this access? Seems to me, and again - I'm quaint and old fashioned, that they are expanding service above and beyond what's in their charter.

    45. Re:Huh? by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 1

      Haven't heard anything from them yet... of course, the TV card is still in the sealed bag it came in, which would make it hard to show how I've been using it without paying the fee :)

    46. Re:Huh? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      As a Linux-using licence-payer, I demand that they release their content in a format I can view. Either that, or they refund my licence fee and exist on the free market like all their rivals have to.

    47. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      except that you can watch *everything* with a tv/tuner made by *any vendor you choose* via broadcast and *any media player you like*. iplayer is just a little extra service they are trialing (it's still in beta for fucks sake) - it is not *the whole of the bbc*

      so please just shut the fuck up and let them trial the fucking thing with one initial platform so that they can get all the networking related problems sorted out before they have to deal with whining asshole linux users like you. (note: not all linux users are whining assholes - just this freetard).

    48. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      This is true, but your talking to a bunch of FLOSS toss pots
      A free player to use on the OS which came with yours & 99.9% of everyone elses laptop is less free than a DVB-S system + cracked decrypt card...?

    49. Re:Huh? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      A more accurate analogy would be needing a Sony TV to watch BBC1.

    50. Re:Huh? by fnord_uk · · Score: 1


      Who's to say they are not talking to Microsoft to get the WMV DLLs shipped with a Linux version and link into them?
      That'll help on my Nokia Internet Tablet won't it? Don't just think x86 binaries for Linux are going to be good enough.
      --
      In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they're not.
    51. Re:Huh? by farmerj · · Score: 1
      I'm sorry if I didn't make myself clear.

      The satellite service is not the main method which the BBC broadcasts its channels to the public. The UK is moving from analogue to digital broadcasting at the moment and the digital service (which uses DVB-T) is called freeview. From the freeview link you'll see that as of December 2006 just over 50% of televisions received their signal from analogue terrestrial, and just over 25% by digital terrestrial, which adds up to over 75% of the total televisions in the UK. Digital satellite covers nearly 17%, this is BSkyB and freesat. The BSkyB equipment receives the standard DVB-S as well BSkyB's encrypted broadcasts.

      The satellite service is seen as an extension of coverage of the freeview service, at maximum coverage the freeview digital service is expected to cover 90% of the population and before the analogue signal is turned off this is down to 73% of households*.

      It's also important to note that before the BBC (and ITV) went free to air on digital satellite that they were available on BSkyB encrypted. In order to go free to air significant rights issues for programming for both the BBC and ITV had to be overcome. This was so that people were not forced to use a specific pay service (BSkyB) in order to receive the programming.

      From the freeview page you can see that only 1.4% of televisions are receiving programming using the free to air digital satellite transmission. When the freesat brand is launched in 2008 this figure should increase, however it does show the BBC's determination to extend their service to as much of the UK population as posable. It's also interesting to note that this 1.4% figure is smaller than the percentage of people using alternative operating systems which can not use the iplayer.

      Finally they are expanding their service, but in doing so it should be available to as many of their views as possible, with the least restrictions on what equipment and contracts are required to receive it. See the above BSkyB example above where they have done this before.

      *I know I'm using two different measurements of coverage/usage, the number of televisions and the percentage of households.

      --
      Independence? That's middle-class blasphemy. We are all dependent on one another, every soul of us on earth. G.B Shaw
    52. Re:Huh? by fnord_uk · · Score: 1

      Doesn't that mean I can't watch the BBC on my BBC Model B computer? How's that for backwards compatibility?

      --
      In theory, theory and practice are the same. In practice, they're not.
    53. Re:Huh? by paving-slab · · Score: 1

      I think it is you that has missed the point.

      It is not a question of what the BBC themselves use, it is what I and others would have to use to view the content.

      Even if the BBC use Sony cameras exclusively you can watch their TV programmes on any suitable television from any manufacturer. This is how it should be with their online content. They may use Microsoft software exclusively to produce it, but it should not be necessary for the audience to pay Microsoft to view it.

    54. Re:Huh? by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      Did you know? In order to watch any BBC television in the late 1930's, you had to use a Marconi EMI television? It's true. The BBC dropped John Baird's 240-line system in 1936, and Marconi EMI was the only manufacturer that could make the 405 line system used.

      My point is that while these analogies are appropriate, they ignore the BBC's history. They chose a better standard for broadcast television in 1936. But there aren't even competing standards at play here. Windows DRM is the only standard for DRM at play. Like Apple before it (with regards to the iTMS), the BBC has responsibilities to the content producers, and unless those are fulfilled, the BBC cannot distribute the shows. Perhaps it's time for an open source DRM solution to be created.

      I realize how objectionable this sounds to some. To them, I would suggest that the freedom to place your works under any license you chose comes the responsibility to respect other peoples' licensing decisions and thus the terms under which a work is licensed to you. Fair use is always an issue, but it was my understanding that you would be able to download the BBC's content as often as you wanted if you had a valid player. Backups, an oft cited reason for rejecting DRM, is a non-issue if you can just get the content again, for free, from the source. And open source player would also allow porting to nearly any device.

      In short, if you don't play ball, you've already lost the game.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    55. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, they have a responsibility to the rights holders so they can't give you the source.

      Ergo, tough fucking titty.

      I personally think they would love to make it all [Fr]ree, but they have to exist in the real world. Unlike yourself.

    56. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      They don't need DRM.

      If the BBC said 'We are not prepared to include DRM. You can either have your programme without DRM, or not at all' - some would go for it, some wouldn't.

      As for being uncalled for this early, we've got the attention of the people working on this now. The BBC is being forced to think twice about this.

    57. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      Who said the FSF was in charge?

      We're arguing the point of the free software community. From the point of view of the free software community, software should be free, and we provide reasons and arguments for that.

      Others are welcome to have their own protests :)

    58. Re:Huh? by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

      "You think the FSF will be happy with Microsoft WMV DLLs?"

      Who gives a shit?
      RMS != GOD.

      --
      -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    59. Re:Huh? by Omeger · · Score: 1

      Almost all computers come with Windows, so no, it's not an additional fee. Besides, you can pirate Windows anyway to view the content.

    60. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Way to tell the BBC what their job is. I think they know and also would rather not have to use DRM. Why must you act like an obstreperous child?

      You do realise that you can already get all of this stuff in free/open formats anyway? You probably do, but just want to argue the toss to point where even everybody that agrees with you anyway has to concede that yes, you are even more right, even though we agreed with you in the first place, but you have laboured some tiny detail of the point, because you are such a fucking sociopath, that we will just say "yes, yes, of course" so that you will shut up and we can move on and talk about something more interesting.

      argh. i'm glad they chose microsoft now, just so that it annoys you as much as your tedious nitpicking has annoyed me.

      i hope they don't port it to linux now. i wouldn't use it anyway, but hopefully it will make you choke on your own bile if they don't.

    61. Re:Huh? by isorox · · Score: 1

      1) There is no legal requirement to have a TV license to own a TV, or a capture card, only to use them to receive Broadcast TV signals. Capturing from your DVD/VCR/DV camera is fine.
      2) Last time I bought a TV I gave my postcode as SW1A 2AA

    62. Re:Huh? by isorox · · Score: 1

      The TV License is required for anyone who owns a 'device capable of receiving broadcast TV signals.' This was more recently clarified to include a computer used to receive simulcast web streams.

      Only when used (or intended to be used) to such an effect.

      "television receiver" means any apparatus installed or used for the purpose of receiving (whether by means of wireless telegraphy or otherwise) any television programme service, whether or not it is installed or used for any other purpose.

      Installed for the purpose of receiving a tv programme
      Used for the purpose of....

      You can install or use for any other purpose with no need for a license.

    63. Re:Huh? by Jerry+Smith · · Score: 1

      You miss the point; should the OP complain if the just didn't like Kodak? No, because the OP is completely able to process data provided by means of Kodak. Even more, the OP would not even notice it, no-one would. Everyone (every customer) would get the same service provided by the BBC. In the case of the Iplayer that would not be the case. Hence the complaint.
      --
      All those moments will be lost in time, like tears in rain. Time to die.
    64. Re:Huh? by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      Devil's Advocate: So, you don't consider buying the computer hardware you need to view the content additional fees? I certainly do.

      Having said that (and as a Mac user), I'm disappointed that a Mac version of the iPlayer seems to be a higher priority for the BBC than a Linux version. People are complaining that the BBC are releasing the iPlayer for a proprietary platform, and they're turning round and saying, "Actually, we really want to release it for two proprietary platforms!"

      Because the problem with my Devil's Advocate statement there is that, while lots of companies make computing hardware, only one makes Windows. Similarly, what we really want is a version for a non-proprietary, (practically) free-as-in-beer platform, i.e. Linux, that in theory anybody can download and install.

    65. Re:Huh? by BridgeGarth · · Score: 1

      You won't have to pay the licence fee. It isn't installed.

    66. Re:Huh? by aslate · · Score: 1

      I'm pretty sure the BBC wouldn't be allowed to release their stuff DRM free.

      The BBC had to delay the release of the iPlayer to allow the commercial channels (ITV / C4) to get their own service up and running. If they were to release their programming for free it would skew the market unacceptably and the BBC would be prevented from releasing their programming for free at all. This is because the BBC are in the special position of having funding no matter what and the commercial channels aren't.

      The BBC can't then try and match ITV and C4 at their own game and release a pay-per-view style online download system (with or without DRM) because they are not allowed to charge license payers for BBC content.

      So lets ignore all the arguments about how the BBC don't own their content 100%, can't ship their programs DRM free as it will destroy their foreign commercial market and ability to sell their programming, they wouldn't be allowed to release a free, DRM free and unlimited download system.

    67. Re:Huh? by dyefade · · Score: 1

      Devil's Advocate: So, you don't consider buying the computer hardware you need to view the content additional fees? I certainly do.
      Yes, good point, but...

      Because the problem with my Devil's Advocate statement there is that, while lots of companies make computing hardware, only one makes Windows.
      Yes exactly. While buying PC hardware is also at cost, there are far more options for this, which means the price isn't set by a single (foreign, not that it's relevant really) entity.

    68. Re:Huh? by hawkinspeter · · Score: 1

      Surely the BBC have used STANDARDS in the past. Even though Marconi EMI was the only manufacturer at one time, other manufacturers could at least implement the standard (and they did - there now exist plenty of choices). Windows DRM is NOT a standard - no-one else can implement it unless they allowed to by Microsoft. This is quite clearly a case of the BBC getting into bed with Microsoft and ignoring the use of standards. This isn't about playing ball - this is about the BBC insisting that everyone use Microsoft's ball.

      --
      You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
    69. Re:Huh? by Yahweh+Doesn't+Exist · · Score: 1

      >So you're still receiving 100% of the benefits of paying that special tax, right?

      obviously not.

      your argument would only be true if:
      1. the BBC didn't have a charter
      2. the BBC didn't already deliver online content to non-Windows users
      3. development and implementation of the iPlayer costs nothing

    70. Re:Huh? by teh+kurisu · · Score: 1

      Having thought about this a bit more...

      While the price of Windows is set by a single entity, the price that the consumer pays is not necessarily uniform. You'll pay a lot for a retail copy. You'll pay less for an OEM copy from Dabs, bought with hardware. You'll pay even less when you buy it as part of a package from Dell. Given that most consumer* copies of Windows are in the latter category, you have to take into account the fact that system builders are free to charge whatever they want for those copies, and may either subsidise them, pass the cost on to the consumer or even make a little profit on them, depending on the pricing of their package as a whole. So to say that the market for Windows operating systems is uncompetitive isn't strictly true.

      *ignoring business purchases, not really the iPlayer target market.

    71. Re:Huh? by byolinux · · Score: 1

      Who gives a shit?

      Anyone who values software freedom? It's interesting to see that your only comeback is that RMS isn't God. Firstly, I hate to tell you this, but God doesn't exist. Secondly, RMS does exist. Thirdly, the FSF is a lot more people than Richard Stallman.

    72. Re:Huh? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      Almost all computers come with Windows, so no, it's not an additional fee. Besides, you can pirate Windows anyway to view the content.

      So the BBC, and Windows, are free as in beer, because they come with what you pay for anyway, or because you can get them illegally without paying?

      You have an odd definition of free-as-in-beer.

    73. Re:Huh? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Is the BBC obligated to buy equal amounts of film from Kodak and Fuji?
      Way to totally miss the point. I don't care what suppliers the BBC uses. I don't care if they choose to use Windows exclusively themselves; I don't care if their website runs on Windows servers or not. As far as their own usage goes, I want them to make the most cost-effective choice possible, and if that means Microsoft then so be it.

      I start caring when they start trying to force ME to use Microsoft products to ACCESS the TV I have paid for.

      See the difference? It doesn't make the slightest impact on me whether they use Kodak film or Fuji film, but when they tell license-fee-payers who do not use Microsoft Windows that we will not be able to access the TV we have paid for, we are justifiably annoyed.
    74. Re:Huh? by poopdeville · · Score: 1

      You make no sense. First, Marconi EMI's standard could not be implemented without their permission either, due to patents. Second, Microsoft's DRM is clearly the defacto standard for DRM, as it is available for use on 90% of personal computers. It is also well understood by anyone who wants to know how it works. Third, there is no competing cross-platform DRM solution the BBC can use. Until the third issue is addressed, there is little scope for complaining about the BBC using an already existing product to serve the majority of its customers.

      --
      After all, I am strangely colored.
    75. Re:Huh? by hawkinspeter · · Score: 1

      The point is that the transmission system that the BBC used was capable of being received by multiple receivers at the time (see http://sydenham.org.uk/john_logie_baird_00.html). In 1936, there were two competing transmission methods (Baird and Marconi-EMI), but there were seven different receivers available (if you were rich) - see http://www.tvhistory.tv/1935-1941.htm for a selection of manufacturers. This completely contrasts with current situation where the transmission method is heavily encumbered and is wholly owned by a convicted monopolist. I don't see how Microsoft's DRM is considered the standard for DRM when it isn't even clearly documented - it cannot be a standard when only one company can implement it. Looking to the future, I don't see how I will be able to receive iPlayer broadcasts on a variety of devices (PSP, mobile phones, watches etc) if it's controlled by Microsoft, however I can easily use RealPlayer on a variety of devices. I agree that there isn't a decent cross-platform DRM solution, but surely that's because DRM is a doomed idea. As a British citizen, I want my BBC license fee to be used for the creation of culture, not the locking down of it.

      --
      You're a temporary arrangement of matter sliding towards oblivion in a cold, uncaring universe
    76. Re:Huh? by Ajehals · · Score: 1

      Just like those healthcare systems, right? Free as in free at the point of delivery, as in you wont go bankrupt or have to sell your house if you break your next or catch cancer. Its affordable, you don't pay more in taxes than you can afford (you may pay more than you would like but that is the same everywhere) and at least you will always have sufficient money to survive and live (and even access to housing, healthcare and legal services) regardless of what you do or what happens to you, it wont be nice, but you wont starve either, and as long as you have enough money for food, somewhere to live, your health, legal and employment advice you should be able to work (or find work if, that is the problem)) and survive.
    77. Re:Huh? by Dan+Hayes · · Score: 1

      That was my point :)

  4. Encryption by neoform · · Score: 1

    I'm still not totally clear on how ISP's can throttle your bandwidth if you encrypt what you're sending..

    --
    MABASPLOOM!
    1. Re:Encryption by MenTaLguY · · Score: 1

      In this case, it's a simple matter of giving preferential (or anti-preferential) treatment to traffic from particular IP ranges based on what their owners are willing to pay.

      --

      DNA just wants to be free...
    2. Re:Encryption by nukem996 · · Score: 1

      Basically if consumer A is trying to access files from the BBC make the connection really slow until the BBC pays up. Its why Internet Neutrality is needed.

    3. Re:Encryption by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1, Informative

      Then I guess you've never used tools like "Ethereal" or whatever it's called now.

      Run iPlayer. Watch what it talks to in Ethereal.

      Download restricted media a bunch of times. Note what servers you download from.

      Now on router, throttle all machines that iPlayer talks to down to 3 KB/s.

      I dont care about encrypted crap and all. If you use regular IP with TCP (yah, no tunnel blocking and all), I can see your to/from information. I dont care about payload.

      Filter it all and let the sysadmin sort it out.

      --
    4. Re:Encryption by click2005 · · Score: 1

      They would probably throttle everything from the BBC assuming they couldn't get the IP addresses of the actual iPlayer servers.
      Failing that, they'll just throttle everything thats encrypted (as some ISPs are starting to do to combat P2P) and hope most people
      wont notice an encrypted web page being a few secs slower.

      --
      I am a free slashdotter. I will not be modded, blogged, DRM'd, patented, podcasted or RFID'd. My life is my own.
    5. Re:Encryption by rsborg · · Score: 1

      I'm still not totally clear on how ISP's can throttle your bandwidth if you encrypt what you're sending..
      Port-based traffic shaping will work if the target (say P2P) uses specific ports. You're right if you're talking standards based communications using a common port. But this iPlayer may sadly use a non-standard port, which then clearly identifies their traffic, which can be shaped/throttled.
      --
      Make sure everyone's vote counts: Verified Voting
    6. Re:Encryption by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      To hell with blocking/filtering ports. Just go after their class b/c block.

      The whole blocking ports garbage just doesnt work in the real world. I'd just write a program to change local and remote ports and use standard servers to query "locked-in" hosts. Yeah, just like what Kazaa and Skype does.

      --
    7. Re:Encryption by FinchWorld · · Score: 1
      I'm still not totally clear on how ISP's can throttle your bandwidth if you encrypt what you're sending..

      In the case they could just throttle all traffic from the BBC, encryption or no.

      --
      "I may be full of crap about this game, and I may be wrong, and that's fine." -Jack Thompson
    8. Re:Encryption by sumdumass · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I'm not either. Both the consumer and whoever they are downloading from paid for their connection and paid for an expected speed. It would appear to me that if either of the ISPs did anything to not deliver that expected speed then the consumer if getting hosed.

      I don't care about them stopping it from being faster, that isn't the point. When I have a 3 meg download speed and the BBC has a three meg upload, any actions outside built in limitations(and not manipulated by the ISP) of the hardware or software being used that restricts it to a slower speed is ripping me off as well as ripping the BBC off.

      Doesn't consumer protection laws already cover companies selling stuff and then not delivering on purpose?. It seems to me this should already be illegal. Maybe we need to make some accusations of the limiting and then look at what recourse the laws provide. I bet it is enough that it would be more then what each customer pays in a month. If every customer complained and file for action, It wold turn around.

    9. Re:Encryption by PopeRatzo · · Score: 1

      With ISPs threatening to throttle the content delivered through the iPlayer..
      Does anyone still need to be convinced that we need to have Net Neutrality laws?
      --
      You are welcome on my lawn.
    10. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Combine the encryption with a bittorrent-like protocol, and it will become a practical impossibility for ISPs to do this.

    11. Re:Encryption by biscon · · Score: 1

      Because you still have to have some sort of protocol. It is only the content the protocol is "carrying" you can encrypt, thus you can still detect the protocol. For example: when you shop on the internet and pay with your credit card, you're using an SSL encrypted HTTP connection. ISP's can still detect that you're talking HTTP, it just doesn't what you are talking about.

    12. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      IPSEC encrypts everything above the IP layer, so a 3rd party wouldn't even be able to tell whether it's UDP or TCP, let alone HTTP or FTP.

    13. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      The whole blocking ports garbage just doesnt work in the real world.

      I guess you missed this post there, Braniac.

    14. Re:Encryption by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 1

      The whole blocking ports garbage just doesn't work in the real world Traffic shaping works rather well for the ISPs, unfortunately. You can pick any port you like, and unless you pick a port identified with "priority" traffic and whatever you send to/from that port is identifiable via packet inspection as "priority" traffic it will get put in the slow lane.

      Doing anything based on IP address ("go after their class b/c block") isn't going to be straightforward with p2p, either.
    15. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      that is by far the dumbest comment I have ever read on Slashdot. Why on earth is it modded up? You think encrypting data magically bypasses throttling? Jeez.

    16. Re:Encryption by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Rogers (a Canadian ISP) is rumoured to be throttling tunneled traffic on its cable Internet service.

      http://www.michaelgeist.ca/content/view/1859/?a=1

      Really, it's getting to the point that if you use your high-speed Internet for anything beyond simple web surfing and email, you're the enemy.

  5. DRM is the problem by gilesjuk · · Score: 3, Interesting

    There's no DRM solution that works for Linux, Windows and Mac. Or at least no solution that has been proven?

    The annoying thing is the DRM just enforces an expiry time, it doesn't stop people without a TV licence (mandatory in UK) from viewing such content.

    1. Re:DRM is the problem by toleraen · · Score: 1

      I realize that there's no cross platform DRM, but is there some UK law stating that a company's product must work across platforms?

      Also, according to one of the links, people are demanding no DRM be used whatsoever.

    2. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

      Well, there's no law saying stuff has to be cross-platform, but (almost) all Brits pay a TV tax, and this covers the online content as well. So, people object to paying a tax and then being told "Oh, you don't use Windows, so this online content is useless to you."

                Plus, last I checked, Realplayer was cross-platform and supported rights restrictions, along with flash. Of course they can and have all been cracked, but so has Windows' rights restriction system. And, yes, as a practical matter, people want this DRM-free; the current content on TV can be tape (Tivo, etc.) recorded and watched whenever, so having the computerized version have additional restrictions placed on it is a step backwards, removes far use rights, and is something noone but the big media is interested in.

    3. Re:DRM is the problem by Shrubbman · · Score: 4, Informative

      The BBC receives its funding from people in the UK paying an annual license fee mandatory for anyone with a TV. It's programming is funded by the people, for the people, so I think you can see the problem people are having when access to that content through a new channel places proprietary restrictions on access to said content. So yes, the whole furor is that this is NOT just a private TV company, it's a public institution.

    4. Re:DRM is the problem by johnw · · Score: 5, Insightful

      is there some UK law stating that a company's product must work across platforms? The point is that the BBC is not just "a company". It's a public-service broadcaster, funded by a compulsory licence fee. It has a charter and obligations to fulfil.

      You could probably make a case for the BBC restricting access to their content to licence-payers only (although I wouldn't), but instead they've gone with a completely inappropriate restriction of "Microsoft-users only".

      The current iPlayer implementation really stinks - it stinks of pushy salesmen and weak-minded decision takers. It flies in the face of many decades of the BBC standing on principles and doing The Right Thing(TM), resisting commercial pressure. Now they've gone to the opposite extreme and the outrage is perfectly justified.

      HTH
    5. Re:DRM is the problem by i.r.id10t · · Score: 1

      Out of curiosity, I wonder how much of the BBC's money comes from stations/organizations buying rights to broadcast/re-broadcast in other countries? For example, I found Dr. Who, et al. via the BBC via public TV broadcasts here in the states...

      --
      Don't blame me, I voted for Kodos
    6. Re:DRM is the problem by toleraen · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that I'm for this decision at all (I'd be SOL as well since I run Fedora at home...) but does that TV tax actually cover television programs distributed over the Internet? I'm trying to figure out if the government could actually do something about this, or if the petitions are going to fall on deaf ears.

    7. Re:DRM is the problem by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      The BBC owns channels in much of the english speaking world, so it doesn't need to sell the rights, it just lets BBC America (for example) broadcast BBC made programmes when it wants. How much comes from the rest of the world, I don't know.

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    8. Re:DRM is the problem by VJ42 · · Score: 4, Informative

      but does that TV tax actually cover television programs distributed over the Internet? Yes, infact, if I didn't have a TV, but was to watch a BBC programme live on the web (note the live, if it's not broadcast simultaneously, it doesn't matter), I would technically be in breech of the law if I didn't have a TV licence.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    9. Re:DRM is the problem by Kadin2048 · · Score: 1

      I'm not saying that I'm for this decision at all (I'd be SOL as well since I run Fedora at home...) but does that TV tax actually cover television programs distributed over the Internet? I'm not sure, and I think the answer probably depends a lot on how the BBC handles its finances internally and how much firewalling there is between divisions in terms of funding sources, but I also don't think it's totally relevant.

      The cost of distributing the content has to be a small fraction of the cost of actually creating it, and I'm nearly positive that the TV tax monies do assist with that. So arguing that "well, the internet distribution isn't funded by tax dollars" as a justification for putting DRM on the content is pretty thin.

      Anyway, that's only one of the problems with iPlayer; the other, and probably more significant one, is that the iPlayer they're using (the crummy Windows-only, DRMed one) uses P2P in order to distribute the content. Consumer broadband ISPs aren't really thrilled with this, and see it as basically a way of making them bear the BBCs bandwidth costs.*

      * For the record I think this is a bullshit argument, but that's what they're saying. Of course, what they hate to talk about is that they're rampantly overselling their capacity, and this is the real source of the problems.
      --
      "Ladies and gentlemen, my killbot features Lotus Notes and a machine gun. It is the finest available."
    10. Re:DRM is the problem by byolinux · · Score: 2, Insightful

      RealPlayer and Flash are both proprietary. Gnash can play Flash video, but will not support Adobe DRM.

      The goals of the protest were about DRM and proprietary software.

    11. Re:DRM is the problem by TechyImmigrant · · Score: 1

      BBC America doesn't just show BBC made programs. I've seen ITV stuff on there too.

      What BBC America doesn't show is anything good enough that they can sell it to other networks in the US.

      That is why BBC America's programming is a joke.

      --
      Evil people are out to get you.
    12. Re:DRM is the problem by quark+Monkey · · Score: 1

      sounds to me like silverlight 1.1 may be an ideal soution (at least on windows & mac)! and i need to check how the **nux vertion by the mono guys (Moonlight) is comming

    13. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hahahaha.

    14. Re:DRM is the problem by rootofevil · · Score: 1

      would you then be legally culotteable for your actions?

      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    15. Re:DRM is the problem by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      The BBC owns channels in much of the english speaking world, so it doesn't need to sell the rights, it just lets BBC America (for example) broadcast BBC made programmes when it wants. How much comes from the rest of the world, I don't know.

      I talked to the guys at BBC America over email shortly after they first started up.

      They have to run as an independent business entity. The only thing they really share in common with the BBC is the name branding, and a certain amount of culture. But they have to buy licenses to show programming, sell advertising, etc, just like every other cable channel.

      (They're part of BBC Enterprises, which is the BBC's Commercial arm, which does not - and legally cannot - take funding from the BBC's license-fee driven departments).

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    16. Re:DRM is the problem by Malc · · Score: 1

      Where's the iPlayer that they made earlier (c), that works?

    17. Re:DRM is the problem by Bert64 · · Score: 1

      Proven?
      The only thing proven about DRM, is that all of them have been broken one way or another.

      --
      http://spamdecoy.net - free throwaway anonymous email - avoid spam!
    18. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      Realplayer is shit and should be banned. Its bad enough the BBC use it for streaming radio content.

    19. Re:DRM is the problem by ShieldW0lf · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The people protesting feel the purpose of the BBC is to spread culture and knowledge as far and wide as can be. The money and related mechanisms are meant to serve that purpose, and not the other way around. They feel that the BBC should fail and disappear if need be before abandoning this important purpose which it was created to fulfill.

      DRM is not compatable with this purpose. Particularly when it is beyond the reach of law.

      There are others who have differing opinions about what purpose the BBC should be put to, and they are driving the DRM.

      This isn't a debate, it's a contest between small groups who have an opinion on the subject.

      --
      -1 Uncomfortable Truth
    20. Re:DRM is the problem by Stormx2 · · Score: 1

      Not doubting, but do you have a citation on that? I've never come across that before.

    21. Re:DRM is the problem by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      You're right, IIRC they're part of BBC worldwide, which is a self funding commercial entity. However, although the BBC can't fund them with our taxes, they don't have to licence BBC programmes, as they are a wholly owned subsidiary of the BBC. Am I making sense?

      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    22. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "There's no DRM solution that works for Linux, Windows and Mac."

      Nor any which works for terrestrial analog TV broadcasts, but that hasn't made the BBC go out of business any time in the last 75 years...

      Oh, 1922... was that before they invented restrictions on what computers you're allowed to use?

    23. Re:DRM is the problem by VJ42 · · Score: 2, Informative
      Here you go

      You need a TV Licence to use any television receiving equipment such as a TV set, set-top boxes, video or DVD recorders, computers or mobile phones to watch or record TV programmes as they are being shown on TV. Bold is mine
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    24. Re:DRM is the problem by higashi · · Score: 1

      The BBC iPlayer is not fully released to the general public yet - it's still in beta and the intention is to make it cross platform (though I don't know if this is guaranteed prior to full public release). This is really no different to the roll out of digital TV. I constantly see adverts for digital channels which I am paying for but can't receive in the area in which I live (unless I pay for cable or satellite). Unfortunately, I'll have to wait a few years before being able to receive them. As for ISPs complaining - I was in the original test group for the player a couple of years ago. The opportunity to join the test group was via an email from my ISP - NTL (now Virgin)!

    25. Re:DRM is the problem by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      However, although the BBC can't fund them with our taxes, they don't have to licence BBC programmes, as they are a wholly owned subsidiary of the BBC. Am I making sense?

      Sure, I get ya.

      Thing is - according to the people I talked to at BBC America - they hace to license the BBC programs, the same way that the SciFi channel or PBS might. They don't get any special consideration, or special rates on the programming.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
    26. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Hi Microsoft employee #45,125! I understand what you are saying because MS Media player is just great and work cross platfo... opps it doesn't.

      Realplayer under MS windows may or may not suck (I haven't used it under MS Windows for a long time), however the version under Mac OS X is actually very nice with no crap stunts involved. The Linux player is decent too, though I think the OS X version is more polished.

      If I go to a site with some crappy MS only video, I can't watch it. If I go to a site with RealPlayer content, I can watch it on all three major OSes. The same cannot be said for MS DRM video.

    27. Re:DRM is the problem by Starayo · · Score: 1

      Nah, realplayer sucks.

      I use VLC in tandem with others for music.

      --
      Ezekiel 23:20
    28. Re:DRM is the problem by LuYu · · Score: 1

      That does not change the fact that RealPlayer is a) proprietary and b) bloatware. RealPlayer haters are not limited to MS sympathisers. Yes, it is more cross platform than WMP, but it sucks about as much. It is slow. It hogs memory -- on a desktop. On mobile devices, it is worse. In fact, it is the only real drawback to my mobile phone.

      Why does the BBC not just standardise on a some format that everybody can use with any A/V player? Why should one company's product control all of the BBC content?

      --
      All data is speech. All speech is Free.
    29. Re:DRM is the problem by Petra_von_Kant · · Score: 1
      You would be legally pantsed? What does culotteable mean?


      The weird certainly have turned pro .........



      "You've got a chart filling a whole wall with interlocking pathways
      and reactions to shock and the researcher says "If I can just control
      this one molecule/enzyme/compound I'll stop the whole negative
      physiologic cascade of post haemorrhagic shock." Yeah, right."

    30. Re:DRM is the problem by Strepsil · · Score: 1

      Just for the record ... I laughed, even if nobody else got it.

    31. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Why does the BBC not just standardise on a some format that everybody can use with any A/V player?

      Because they either a) Don't exist or b) Have a shitty streaming mechanism. Everyone loves to make [Buffering] jokes about RealPlayer, but MP3 "streamed" from an overloaded Shoutcast server is ten times worse. At least RealPlayer has the ability to downgrade the bitstream if it detects congestion: Shoutcast servers offer no such niceties. The stream will just stop.

    32. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Insightful

      I constantly see adverts for digital channels which I am paying for but can't receive in the area in which I live

      The difference is that those broadcasts are being done using an open standard (DVD-T). You can buy a digibox from any company and receive those broadcasts. iPlayer is as if the BBC decided to broadcast it's digital channels using a special Sony-only (Or whoever) standard for which only Sony could produce receivers. Do you think, if the BBC had done this, that people may have been a bit pissed off?

    33. Re:DRM is the problem by rootofevil · · Score: 1
      parent of my post used the word 'breech' instead of 'breach'

      culottes are another form of pants, somewhat similar to breeches.

      The weird certainly have turned pro ......... i aim to please.
      --
      turn up the jukebox and tell me a lie
    34. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I know WMP is bad, but RealPlayer definitely sucks FAR WORSE. I wouldn't want to watch anything with this crapware.
      Isn't VLC able to play those wmv (or real) files on linux?

    35. Re:DRM is the problem by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The BBC is partially funded by a compulsory licence fee. In addition to this, they have other revenue sources, not the least of which is selling programmes on to foreign markets and CD/DVD releases, etc. Putting unrestricted versions of such content out there themselves will kill off these revenue streams. Putting time (and possibly geographically) restricted versions out will not. While you can argue that this content is going to end up online and unprotected anyway, this is a world away from the BBC providing it in this form themselves. If you would like unrestricted access to their programmes over the Internet, be prepared for a hike in the licence fee to cover the revenue they will lose by doing so.

      Additionally, not all of the output of the BBC is fully owned by them. They have a licence to show programmes produced by third parties, from which the actual producers receive fees based on the number of times it is shown, etc. How much do you pay a third party producer for a programme that will be given away, all over the world, with no way of tracking how many times it will be viewed? Will they even be allowed to do so under the terms of the original contract for content that have already got? If you want unprotected content, expect only a portion of what the BBC provides to be available and expect to pay more in licence fees to cover the higher costs of buying programmes that can be distributed like this.

      Given the concerns above, the BBC Trust has decided that the BBC will not be allowed to do certain things, one of which is to produce non-DRM programmes for the iPlayer. The Trust tell the Corporation what they can and cannot do, so they should be the recipients of any complaints.

      Finally, to complain that their choice of platform is not universal is silly. For several years, the BBC has been producing content such as BBC3/4 which is not universally available to all licence payers - You have to go out and buy a freeview/cable/etc. box. Should they not have launched these channels, knowing that not all the licence payers will be able to receive it? This is no different to the choice of platform they have made this time round - They chose the desktop OS that was most deployed, and went for that. If you choose not to own a copy of this OS, then that is your right - But not their problem. Until the BBC Trust can be convinced that DRM is not necessary, Linux users will not be invited to the party. This won't happen any time soon, given the financial situation at the BBC.

    36. Re:DRM is the problem by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      The BBC is partially funded by a compulsory licence fee. In addition to this, they have other revenue sources, not the least of which is selling programmes on to foreign markets and CD/DVD releases, etc. Putting unrestricted versions of such content out there themselves will kill off these revenue streams. Putting time (and possibly geographically) restricted versions out will not. ... If you would like unrestricted access to their programmes over the Internet, be prepared for a hike in the licence fee to cover the revenue they will lose by doing so.

      Firstly, no one here is objecting to geographical restrictions such as IP checking. The argument is about Microsoft-only DRM.

      Secondly, how do you explain that before the BBC was able to increase its revenue by selling DVDs, the licence fee didn't have to be higher back then?

      I think the BBC is a good thing. But that doesn't mean the BBC has a right to make as much money as it can, by also taking money from me. If it can make more money by selling DVDs, great, but it's purpose first and foremost should be producing content accessable to all citizens. There's no need for the BBC to be making as much money as possible, that's why we have the public-funded BBC instead of relying on private companies.

      A similar argument could be made for advertising - perhaps the BBC should have adverts, to make yet more money? But the whole point of making the BBC public-funded is to avoid the sorts of problems that a private company would do, whether it's adverts or DRM! If the BBC wants to be like a private company, then fine. I'll expect a refund of my licence fee in return.

    37. Re:DRM is the problem by Ponyegg · · Score: 1

      Does being 'technically' in breech of the law differ from some sort of non-technical breech? :-)

  6. Nice! by saibot834 · · Score: 1

    Well done everyone who participated in the fight against Digital Restrictions Management. Looks like there is really much protest and I hope the BBC will change to free formats. :)

    1. Re:Nice! by CopaceticOpus · · Score: 1

      Agreed. Over and over I've seen the argument on /. that the common consumer can't understand or doesn't care about DRM issues. But here we see an example that the message is actually getting through and the debate is becoming mainstream.

    2. Re:Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this is a case where we don't want a free format. The UK does not want this content being used by non-UK people, we paid for it and it's our content not yours.

      Ideally, the iPlayer should work on Linux, OS X as well as Windows, but the UK public does not care too much about this, although this case will bring it to light.

      The issue has been confused by the non-DRM folk. The BBC, quite rightly, want to restrict the content to UK only, basically they should give up the iPlayer and internet and make the iPlayer technology work with Freeview digital interactive and with the Cable companies instead. That would obviate the need for DRM & web technologies.

    3. Re:Nice! by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      Offering non-DRM would just make the bandwidth problem even worse, which is already a problem with the ISPs.

      Ultimately there is a cost benefit decision to me made, and they also have to take in account all the people paying the license fee who would rather their money be spent somewhere else to begin with.

    4. Re:Nice! by sumdumass · · Score: 1

      Well, all it would take is MS's own operating systems to show the general public what it is about and how it is bad.

      I just reloaded a viris infested laptop that had about 300 different albums on ripped to it from WMP. After everything was back up and running, I restored backups and none of the songs would play because the license files (from the WMP's protect your content tab) had been updated before the problems and the backup file was the wrong one.

      Now here is a 19 year old girl going off to college with tons of music she cannot play unless she deletes and starts over. I know she isn't the first one to get bit like this and she won't be the last. MS's buggyness and ability to attract pests is a big incentive against DRM in itself. They are shooting themselves in their own foot with it. It only takes once and people are wise about it.

      I wonder how many protesters that showed up were people Bitten like this too and the experience woke them up?

    5. Re:Nice! by pipatron · · Score: 1
      The BBC don't want to restrict it - the content owners do. They tried the same thing with the digital satellite transfer, but then, the BBC actually followed their charter. According to Wikipedia, this is what the current BBC trust says:

      The BBC Trust works on behalf of licence fee payers: it ensures the BBC provides high quality output and good value for all UK citizens and it protects the independence of the BBC. Note the part that says on behalf of licence fee payers . Not on behalf of content providers. Note also the part about protects the independence of the BBC.
      --
      c++; /* this makes c bigger but returns the old value */
    6. Re:Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Are you being sarcastic? this isn't some big street movement. Ther may have been half a dozen unemployed hippies whineing a=outside a BBC office, but the article paints a hilariously distorted view of peoples attitude to the iplayer. 90% of the UK public will not have heard of it. of the 10% who have, 1% will know its windows only. of them 0.1% will give a damn.
      I'm a uk tax payer, I'm quite happy with them not spending my taxes to support the two dozen linux users in the UK.

    7. Re:Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, public opinion is that MS's OS are the best, otherwise they'd vote with their wallets and buy something else. But as they don't, we must assume that they consider the OS as (at least) acceptable for its purpose.

      The BBC has a problem with content that doesn't entirely belong to them, perhaps the FSF thinks is acceptable to broadcast other people's work, and that copyright shoudl be scrapped completely, but the world isn;t like that and they should work towards fairer or better laws governing ownership of content. Until then, the BBC has little choice but to restrict access in some way, and DRM is, unfortuately, the only system we have at present.

      Besides, what the fuck does it have to do with them, the US-based group doesn't pay the licence fee, and has no involvement in anything the BBC does. Just another example of how the arrogant USA thinks it rules the world.

    8. Re:Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But this is a case where we don't want a free format. The UK does not want this content being used by non-UK people, we paid for it and it's our content not yours.

      Who is this "we" who made you their spokesman? Personally, as a license paying UK resident I'd be perfectly happy if the BBC content was available free to the entire world. I would consider it our gift.

      If you think I'm nuts then fine, but don't discount the advantage cultural exports can give to a country. Think of how US television has shaped peoples perceptions of the US in the past 50 years, for example. Or how the BBC World Service is highly regarded in certain parts of the world.

    9. Re:Nice! by Anonymous+Brave+Guy · · Score: 1

      Who is this "we" who made you their spokesman? Personally, as a license paying UK resident I'd be perfectly happy if the BBC content was available free to the entire world. I would consider it our gift.

      Do you appreciate what that would do to the licence fee?

      The BBC makes a substantial chunk of its income from selling on its commissioned content to other countries, just as commercial providers do. That income helps to pay for commissioning new content, or for buying in content from other sources, which would otherwise have to be funded in other ways. Take a look at the figures, particularly the relative importance of licence fees and commercial revenues in the Beeb's accounts, and I don't think it's surprising that many licence fee payers aren't as willing as you to give these "gifts" to the rest of the world.

      When the US studios start to supply Lost, 24, The West Wing, Heroes and the like for less than a six-figure sum per episode to the BBC, or to give an example closer to the hearts of many /. posters, don't do things like producing webisodes for BSG and then restricting them to US-only, then perhaps they can have the BBC's material for a low cost in return. Otherwise, you're just playing a fool's game.

      --
      If you disagree, post your argument. (-1, Overrated) isn't your personal censorship tool for views you don't like.
    10. Re:Nice! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      basically they should give up the iPlayer and internet and make the iPlayer technology work with Freeview digital interactive

      Freeview just doesn't have the bandwidth to make an iPlayer like service work. Actually the technology does exist and is commonly known as a DVR, but providing everybody with a DVR that will do the job of the iPlayer is not economical or practical.

  7. A bit OTT by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It is all a bit OTT. This is the same organisation that has created, freely licensed, and is working on Dirac - and when doing news pieces on technology actually have the courtesy to mention non-MS products such as Firefox, Linux, Openoffice etc - we hardly have some corporation that is part of a MS love in.

    They have said they are working to make non windows versions - it is simply a case that the windows version is there first (because the technology is all off the shelf).

    ISP's moaning - oh well there's a surprise - this is a group of people who want to charge as much as possible for their customers to use their product as little as possible.

    As for the DRM - if their was a guarantee that the content wouldn't spread beyond the UK I don't think it would be there. BBC world the commercial arm wants to make money from international sales. If that one can be solved then the DRM would likely disappear. I do object to DRM - I don't object to its use if that means folks in the UK are paying £140 a year to fund TV that others in the rest of the world are watching at full SD/HD resolution for absolutely free.

    1. Re:A bit OTT by Creepy+Crawler · · Score: 1

      After watching some of their documentaries and interesting content, I (as a US citizen) would be willing to pay the British TV-Tax if I could access an unencumbered SD/HD version of the shows they make.

      If they don't do that, Ill just bittorrent them anyways. I'm not going to buy crippled software/media when the thieves can provide better for free.

      To me, freedom matters more than cost. Capitalism at its finest.

      --
    2. Re:A bit OTT by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      The BBC are quite good when it comes to open formats and open standards. The BBC is not being criticised in general. just this very specific decision. It's heading away from the openness that it should be promoting.

      It makes no difference to me whether other people are getting our BBC for free. I've already paid for it and I've used it. I don't need it any more, everyone else can have it. Perhaps the BBC do want to make money from international sales. I have no objection over this as long as it doesn't inconvenience me. But this does inconvenience me. Aside from this, the DRM is pointless. The organisation is already broadcasting unencrypted MPEG 2 streams that can easily be captured directly by any home computer with a cheap USB DVB receiver.

    3. Re:A bit OTT by japhering · · Score: 1

      As for the DRM - if their was a guarantee that the content wouldn't spread beyond the UK I don't think it would be there. BBC world the commercial arm wants to make money from international sales. If that one can be solved then the DRM would likely disappear. I do object to DRM - I don't object to its use if that means folks in the UK are paying £140 a year to fund TV that others in the rest of the world are watching at full SD/HD resolution for absolutely free.


      And I for one wouldn't mind paying a reasonable fraction of the UK TV license fee to be able to download the shows I like (DrWho, Spooks) and those I might like (Torchwood, Dr Who Confidential), but that's not even an option...
    4. Re:A bit OTT by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 1

      I (as a US citizen) would be willing to pay the British TV-Tax if I could access an unencumbered SD/HD version of the shows they make No worries, just buy a beer for the next licence-payer that you meet!
  8. No Difference by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    It continues to amaze me that there are still those among us that have yet to realize that there is no difference between "copy protection" and "read protection".

  9. so don't offer it at all. by Animaether · · Score: 1

    seriously, BBC.. unless the government is twisting your arm to offer your programs online while saying that only UKians should be able to view it for free and the populace complaining that the player won't work on their operating systems and companies telling you to pony up for the bandwidth costs... why don't you just tell them all "screw it, then"; and not offer it at all. There. Everybody happy.

    1. Re:so don't offer it at all. by Billosaur · · Score: 1

      Well... except for all the people who were hoping to have access to the content.

      --
      GetOuttaMySpace - The Anti-Social Network
    2. Re:so don't offer it at all. by Wizard+Drongo · · Score: 2, Insightful

      Thing is, only UKians as you put it, pay for the BBC. And we have to. No choice in the matter, if you want a TV in this country you have to pay "licence fee". That fee funds the BBC. They make some cash from overseas sales, syndication etc. but about 95% of their budget comes from the fee paying public. Because we have no choice in the matter, it's not like, say, Sky, who people can choose to receive or not. As such, it puts the onus on them to allow all UK licence payers a way to access the programming they've paid for. The web was made for this kinda thing. If only they'd use their own codec (they've been making one for years), a fairly simple DRM system (sadly a legal necessity given the distribution deals they have overseas) and then release it for all major OS's and whatnot, we'd be just dandy (except the ISP's who can quite frankly go fuck 'emselves. I pay for 4MB access. Not 4MB access for-half-an-hour-till-i've-used-up-the-bandwidth or 4MB access as-long-as-it's-with-the-ISP's-content). But no, they code a terribly shitty system, that locks into a really oppressive OS that only some people can/want to use. No wonder people are pissed.

      --
      The truth shall always be free: Boris Floricic is Tron.
    3. Re:so don't offer it at all. by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      It seems like they took the easiest and cheapest approach, which seems reasonable to begin with to see what the demand really will be. Don't people complain about the licence fee because they say they never watch the BBC to begin with? Now they have to pay for internet (not even tv) access to shows they never watch. Maybe they should charge a license fee for computers instead, and make it large enough to cover all the cross-development expenses and the ISP bandwidth expenses while they are at it.

      If the requirement is that they have to keep everyone happy, and it costs too much to do that, then saying "screw it" and doing nothing seems like the logical conclusion.

    4. Re:so don't offer it at all. by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      seriously, BBC.. unless the government is twisting your arm to offer your programs online while saying that only UKians should be able to view it for free and the populace complaining that the player won't work on their operating systems and companies telling you to pony up for the bandwidth costs... why don't you just tell them all "screw it, then"; and not offer it at all. There. Everybody happy. Do it wrong or don't do it at all!
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    5. Re:so don't offer it at all. by 91degrees · · Score: 1

      The public are clamouring for something. The BBC exists to serve the public interest. The BBC isn't giong to choose not to commit to its primary purpose just because it's a hassle. If they did that what would be the point of the organisation?

    6. Re:so don't offer it at all. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      Right on. I don't understand the furor. BBC is offering a _new_ service. Now people are whining it's not enough. So get rid of it completely, then.

    7. Re:so don't offer it at all. by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1

      You pay for the BBC. You get the BBC on your TV. Now you're acting like you have this new "right" to get it over the Internet as well. The BBC went the cheap/easy route, and now people are complaining. They're complaining about a service above and beyond what they already had, which I find odd, and moreover they're complaining becuase a tiny percentage of people won't be able to use the new service. As the grandparent post said - fine, they should just not offer it at all.

    8. Re:so don't offer it at all. by seriesrover · · Score: 1

      I dont understand why the BBC doesnt offer a tiered subscription approach. Everyone complains, especially me, about having to pay a license fee which is independent of how much service you recieve from the BBC. Offer a terestrial tv + basic web service license, a digital tv license and VOD license - or at least something similar. You pick the ones you want. Yes the devil is in the details but this concept of one price fits everyone is crazy - it worked when there were a couple of tv and radio channels 40 years ago but not now - hardly anyone uses 25% of all the services the bbc offers and so feel like they're overpaying.

    9. Re:so don't offer it at all. by Cederic · · Score: 1


      We pay for the BBC. The BBC use the money to provide programming over the web.

      Why shouldn't we have access to it?

      I'd rather they didn't offer it at all than offered it in a format I can't access.

  10. This isn't a Net Neutrality Issue by MBraynard · · Score: 1
    Net Neutrality is usually a reference to limiting bandwidth of a competitor or a competing service.

    The UK ISPs point isn't about limiting services, it is a fear about the sheer bandwidth of the BBC's peer-to-peer system slowing down the net for all of the consumers. Sure, BBC can distribute it's content through it's own bandwidth that it pays for - fair. The UK ISPS say it is unfair for the BBC to profit from and use the ISP's customers' bandwidth to distribute the content.

    P2P bandwidth issues are becoming a severe issue for ISPs and may, on a technical legal issue, violate the terms of service (love it or hate it - don't expect or demand more than you are agreeing to pay for. If you don't like it - start your own ISP with no restrictions and see how far that gets you.)

    BBC is getting singled out because it's one clear and large profit-driven business that is using P2P - not something you can say about torrent sharing sites.

    The street protests are just stupid mobs getting far more publicity than their point of view deserves. Pay it no mind.

    Between the consumers, the BBC, and the ISPs, a market solution will likely solve the issue in favor of the consumers.

    1. Re:This isn't a Net Neutrality Issue by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      But we already pay based on amount of bandwidth. Why should it be the ISPs business what I do with my bandwidth whether it's for P2P or not. ISPs are only complaining because with P2P, people are actually starting to really use the bandwidth that they supposedly paid for.
      ISP: Oh no, we can't actually have our users use all the bandwidth we promised them!

    2. Re:This isn't a Net Neutrality Issue by guruevi · · Score: 1

      I hate to tell you this, but the uproar from the providers is only because they can't deliver what they promise.

      They get you to buy into a larger broadband service (3M, 5M, 10M heck even 50M) by saying it will go x-times faster and look, it's only $20 while their competition offers a similar product for $30 or more. Then they deliver and lo-and-behold I actually like to USE my 10M of bandwidth (uncompressed HD easily consumes 20Mbps). Well, apparently they didn't think of that and if my neighbor likes to do the same thing, we're SoL.

      This wasn't an issue until recently because I was probably the only BitTorrenting (downloading Linux ISO's) geek on the block. The issue is that they now sold 50M to Joe Sixpack that bought into the sales drone scripted explanation why he should get it (hey, you will have enough bandwidth for HD content) instead of remaining with 1M. Since BBC (or other channels like Google, YouTube or soon even Joost) brings that type of content to Joe Sixpack the broadband providers will all of a sudden have to provide that promised bandwidth for more than just the geek on the block, and guess what, most of that is not even HD, it's a plan to get 320x200 compressed streaming and they're already complaining.

      To put your broadband connection in perspective (yes I worked at some large ISP's). If you have DSL in a rural environment, your DSLAM's (the concentrator for your neighbourhood) most likely only has 2-8Mbit/s over copper to the ISP per 100-200 customers, in a more dense environment it might go up to 20Mbit/s over copper or fiber for the same amount of people and some even have a failover that is actively used.

      If you're on cable or in cities you might or might not have more luck with the concentrator's connection, I know in some areas there are full gigabit fiber connections to the 'box-on-the-street'.

      If you're in a colo's datacenter it's even worse since there you do have a contract for a minimum expected service. Until 3 years ago a colo I worked for had a single 50Mbit/s up/down to their provider while offering 100Mbit/s to approx. 1000 servers. Currently (with the surges in bandwidth use) they have 2x 2Gbps from different ISP's with BGP but their servers also tripled in that time.

      --
      Custom electronics and digital signage for your business: www.evcircuits.com
    3. Re:This isn't a Net Neutrality Issue by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      Hi,

      If you read the terms of your agreement with the ISP, you will probably find they can simply turn you off for any reason at any time.

      Here's the issue. When they developed all of this, they looked at average use - even for higher end users - and made a determination as to how much bandwidth they needed. It's similar to insurance. You do not anticipate EVERY DRIVER to wreck on the same day at the same time. If they DID need to make allocations based on how much bandwidth YOU use (or I use) or someone who is non-stop maxing out upload and download 24/7, the service would be far, far more expensive.

  11. I can't even get the bloody thing to work by DrXym · · Score: 4, Interesting
    Aside from insisting you have XP and IE (Vista W2K or any other OS won't do nor any other browser), the thing doesn't even work when I install the proper software. I can see the listings but no download button. The thing is a mess with DRM wrapper files, horribly complicated, broken & proprietary HTML/JS driving it all, and a standalone downloader that automatically runs at startup with no obvious way to stop this behaviour. It really is an overly complicated and broken mess.

    While I recognize their desire to protect their content, I wonder what the hell made them choose this pig's dinner of a solution.

    They would be better off to deliver watermarked content in an open format such as H264 that plays just about anywhere. They could require users to register their TV licence in order to get the service, after which they can use it from any OS or browser within reasonable restrictions. Basically people should be able to do what they like with the content, short of sharing it. If they share it, use the watermark to look-up their address and send the heavies round.

    1. Re:I can't even get the bloody thing to work by Captain_Chaos · · Score: 1

      If they share it, use the watermark to look-up their address and send the heavies round.

      The big problem with that method is that you can't prove they intended to share it. Someone may have hacked their computer and stole it, or perhaps their computer was stolen, or their ipod, or a USB stick. Perhaps they had their computer repaired and someone took the file, or someone hacked their WLAN and sniffed it. Etc., etc. There are many ways in which a file might be taken from you through no fault of your own, and the BBC (or anyone trying this business model) would rarely be able to prove that you shared the file on purpose.

  12. What Happened? by organgtool · · Score: 3, Informative

    A few years ago, the BBC seemed to be keen on the idea of releasing content in Ogg/Theora. Then they wanted to help develop and use the Dirac codec. And now they want to use a DRM-encumbered Microsoft codec.

    This is an interesting situation because of the BBC's role as a "state-owned but independent corporation". I skimmed the Wikipedia article and it appears that the BBC is a for-profit corporation, but the fact that it's state-owned leads me to believe that its funded by taxpayers. If that is the case, why should taxpayers have to pay for DRM-infested media that was sponsored by their tax money?

    1. Re:What Happened? by DrXym · · Score: 1

      The BBC is for profit in the sense that any money it makes from sales gets ploughed back into programme making. I think they're trying to be more commercial overseas so that they don't have to keep asking for the TV licence to be hiked.

    2. Re:What Happened? by shish · · Score: 1

      A few years ago, the BBC seemed to be keen on the idea of releasing content in Ogg/Theora. Then they wanted to help develop and use the Dirac codec. And now they want to use a DRM-encumbered Microsoft codec. The BBC is a freaking huge organisation, I would think it possible that they have two separate departments :P
      --
      I mod down anyone who says "I will be modded down for this", regardless of the rest of their comment
    3. Re:What Happened? by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 4, Insightful
      Actually, there is no reason they couldn't use Ogg/Theora/Dirac as a WMP plugin. The DRM is a wrapped around the file and independent from the codec used.

      If that is the case, why should taxpayers have to pay for DRM-infested media that was sponsored by their tax money?

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?
      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    4. Re:What Happened? by cyborg_zx · · Score: 1

      Actually the BBC has a for-profit arm that handles that: BBC Worldwide.

    5. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "... the fact that it's state-owned leads me to believe that its funded by taxpayers."

      Not state-owned: it has a charter. And it's not funded from taxes. However, it is funded from a compulsory television licence fee ... which comes to much the same thing:

      http://www.tvlicensing.co.uk/index.jsp

      In effect, it is the only private organization in the UK that gets to levy taxation. (Strictly speaking, it doesn't levy it, but it gets all the money that's levied.)

      I live in England, and if I owned a telly, which I don't, I'd have to buy a licence even if I only watched non-BBC channels and pre-recorded DVDs, and that would cost me some $270 in your money every year.

      Since I use Macs and Linux, if I were paying that, I'd be extremely pissed off at paying for the cosy little relationship that the BBC and Microsoft have.

    6. Re:What Happened? by jeevesbond · · Score: 3, Insightful

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?

      I've always thought this to be a narrow-minded viewpoint, people from around the world watching British TV will help the export industries. Perhaps more Americans will learn about how to make a proper cup of tea (honestly, I heard you chaps don't even use boiling water!), buy-in some UK brands: I recommend Yorkshire Tea--am not affilliated with them, it's just bloomin' good tea. Next will come the Digestive biscuits, you've got to have a biscuit to dunk in your tea, the local grocery store in Canada imports these from the UK so there's obviously a market, real ales, DVDs of British shows, and a boost to the tourism industry. At the local farmers market here, across the pond, you can even buy 'Real Men Watch Coronation St.' t-shirts (no I don't own one, and yes I know C. St. is produced by ITV, that's beside the point).

      So you might complain about foreigners watching shows paid for by your tax £'s, but consider the tax money the export and tourism industry will make back from a greater awareness of British culture. When put up against the cost of distribution: a slightly higher bandwidth bill for the Beeb, the benefits far outweigh the costs. The net result will be more tax collected from UK companies.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    7. Re:What Happened? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 2, Insightful

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for? No, the real problem is that some UK taxpayers don't understand that it costs them the same whether or not anyone else watches the shows too.

      At best, an argument can be made that there are additional bandwidth costs for internet distribution. In which case, the BBC should just limit downloads to people in the UK. But there is absolutely no need to restrict distribution - if someone else wants to pay for the bandwidth to share a show worldwide, then they should not be stopped from doing so.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    8. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >"No, the real problem is that some UK taxpayers don't understand that it costs them the same whether or not anyone else watches the shows too."

      Shame that's not true. Selling the shows abroad makes the BBC a significant amount of money. If they didn't do so, then they wouldn't make as much money.

    9. Re:What Happened? by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 3, Informative
      No, the real problem is that some UK taxpayers don't understand that it costs them the same whether or not anyone else watches the shows too.

      No, it doesn't, as the BBC currently makes money selling content to foreign stations, which would dry up if the BBC gave the content away for free.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    10. Re:What Happened? by MontyApollo · · Score: 1

      British TV progamming is already available in America. There is the BBC America channel on cable, and many popular shows end up on other cable channels or on PBS stations. This exposure is much higher for the average person than what the website would be, so the website itself would contribute very minimally to the secondary effects that you have stated.

    11. Re:What Happened? by TooMuchToDo · · Score: 1

      Fair enough. Give me (a US taxpayer) a way to pay for BBC content feeds with a credit card, and I'd be happy to. Hell, I'll even pay in british sterling if it gets the job done.

    12. Re:What Happened? by organgtool · · Score: 1

      You are correct that UK taxpayers don't HAVE to let people in other countries watch their shows. However, the DRM doesn't prevent that from happening. Instead, it prevents a video from being played after a certain amount of time (a DRM "time bomb"). So what exactly is the BBC gaining from this DRM that it warrants imposing this restriction on its own citizens? If they were really worried about preventing people in other countries from viewing this content, they could redirect requests from IP addresses outside of the UK to an error page explaining that they have to be UK citizens to view the content. I know that proxies could be used to get around this, but the point is that it would be more effective than DRM time-bombs that affect viewership of taxpaying citizens.

    13. Re:What Happened? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      No, it doesn't, as the BBC currently makes money selling content to foreign stations, which would dry up if the BBC gave the content away for free. It would also go away if the foreign stations just stopped buying the programming too. There is no guarantee that the BBC will make a dime from foreign sales.

      Unlike most of the rest of the entertainment business, the BBC works on the model of getting paid first and then producing content - which allows them much greater freedom to produce quality programming rather than having to pander to the lowest common denominator. They ought to be maximizing the potential of their business model rather than trying to dilute it by trying to force themselves into 'venture capital' model, with all of its drawbacks, of the rest of the entertainment industry.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    14. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?

      They aren't paying for it. It doesn't cost more to let other people watch it, in fact it costs more to try to stop other people from watching it. This isn't a zero sum game, just because people in other countries are getting something for free, it doesn't mean that it is costing UK citizens anything.

    15. Re:What Happened? by jeevesbond · · Score: 1

      so the website itself would contribute very minimally to the secondary effects that you have stated.

      This is partly true, although aving been a resident of the UK I know there is still quite a bit we don't get this side of the pond (BBC Canada up here). The Web service should fill in the gaps nicely, and it'll hopefully be full-on BBC too: no adverts, and no cutting the programs to fit adverts in either (I hope).

      Anyway, my main point still stands. The OP was complaining that the rest of the world is getting programs the British license fee payer has paid to produce, when really they're not looking at the bigger picture: the advantages that come from exporting British culture (well the good bits anyway :) ).

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    16. Re:What Happened? by monxrtr · · Score: 1

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for? And why should the BBC get to copy and copyright content they didn't create or pay for either? Please make sure they "bleep" out every use of a public domain language word on their copyrighted broadcasts, or remove any and all claims of copyright for every segment employing public domain language. Yes, it should play exactly like "this is an actually emergency of the emergency broadcast system. This is not a test. If this was only a test, you would hear and see information on your screen. Bllleeeeeeeepppp...... Bleep, bleep, bleeep." Please also in the future send any "cease and desist" legal requests in proprietary owned and understood language so as not to be hypocritical. Remove the video as well, as it is merely copying previously existing naturally endowed technology of sight. Thank you for your cooperation, and have a nice day.
      --
      "From DNA to P2P, we are all Copycats now. Go Go Copycat Power! Copycat Powers activate! Form of, a Copycat." --monxrtr
    17. Re:What Happened? by jrumney · · Score: 1

      Actually, there is no reason they couldn't use Ogg/Theora/Dirac as a WMP plugin. The DRM is a wrapped around the file and independent from the codec used.

      The DRM is independent of the codecs used, but it is tied to the file format. So they'd need to bundle the free Ogg+Theora/Dirac content into a proprietary ASF format file to be able to use the Microsoft DRM. And it still leaves Linux and Mac users high and dry.

    18. Re:What Happened? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      So you might complain about foreigners watching shows paid for by your tax £'s, but consider the tax money the export and tourism industry will make back from a greater awareness of British culture.
      Why the hell should I subsidise the export and tourism industry? Of course a few people might buy things they see on TV, but will that offset the THREE BILLION POUNDS a year we are taxed for the BBC?
    19. Re:What Happened? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      It costs the same whether someone without a licence fee in the UK watches it or not, so why shouldn't someone who isn't paying for a licence in the UK not get to watch the BBC without fear of prosecution?

      A person in America watches BBC content for free, gets away with it. Someone in England watches the same content for free, thousand pound fine. Why are we subsidising other people's entertainment? If they want it, let them pay for it like the rest of us.

    20. Re:What Happened? by legirons · · Score: 1

      "The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?"

      As someone paying the BBC's licensing fee:

      Giving away content to other countries is way, way more preferable than being locked-out of the BBC content just because the BBC would prefer that I use Windows Media Player 10 on "The BBC recommends Windows Vista Media Centre Professional Edition"

      When we're looking at (a) not being able to watch TV on computers not blessed by Microsoft, and (b) the BBC becoming a force against freedom, the idea of worrying that foreigners might watch our telly is just absurd.

    21. Re:What Happened? by jeevesbond · · Score: 1

      Why the hell should I subsidise the export and tourism industry?

      Because you want to improve the nation you live in. Because the cost to the license fee payer for the extra bandwidth is going to be nothing in the grand scheme of things, it wouldn't even cost the individual license fee payer a penny.

      [...] but will that offset the THREE BILLION POUNDS a year we are taxed for the BBC?

      Why should it? That's the total of license fee contributions to the BBC, it doesn't change if access to people outside the UK is blocked. If allowing access brings in more money than the bandwidth costs then Britain is a winner, more business means more jobs, means more taxes collected, means better public services. Just putting some big figure in capital letters doesn't mean you've got a valid point.

      Basically you're being extremely selfish, the cost to you would be negligable to nill so stop quibbling.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    22. Re:What Happened? by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Because you want to improve the nation you live in.
      And we do that by bankrolling the marketing of the exports and tourism industries? If that's your logic, we may as well bankroll all of the country's marketing. Pay a thousand pounds a year for a licence, and the BBC can spread propaganda around the world.

      That's the total of license fee contributions to the BBC, it doesn't change if access to people outside the UK is blocked.
      It doesn't change if they stop people in Britain with no licence fee watching it, what's the difference? Why should a Brit with no licence fee not be able to view content than an American with no licence fee can?

      Basically you're being extremely selfish
      I'm selfish for not wanting to pay for things that others get for free? Maybe you'd like to buy me some DVDs so I don't have to pay for them. It'd be good for your country's exports and tourism.
    23. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?"

      What the fuck? Have you ever heard of password-protected pages (that you get when you pay your BBC TV license, NOT a tax), or restricting access based on the geographic origination of an IP address? Hell, MTV.com can even do that.

      What a stupid comment that is. BTW, BBC already airs terristrial content via sattelite -- DRM FREE!!

      This is about Microsoft using their monopoly, again, as even the European COmmission found when it singled out Windows Media Player/formats, or when MS was found to be unduly influencing European cable companies. http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/686985.stm http://findarticles.com/p/articles/mi_m0NEW/is_200 1_April_18/ai_73355519

    24. Re:What Happened? by jeevesbond · · Score: 1

      If that's your logic, we may as well bankroll all of the country's marketing. Pay a thousand pounds a year for a licence, and the BBC can spread propaganda around the world.

      It doesn't cost that much to allow people to download BBC content. That's a strawman argument and has no basis in reality.

      Why should a Brit with no licence fee not be able to view content than an American with no licence fee can?

      Brits who don't pay the license fee are not excluded.

      Maybe you'd like to buy me some DVDs so I don't have to pay for them. It'd be good for your country's exports and tourism.

      If the DVDs cost me nothing and all I had to do to distribute them is not block you from viewing them online then absolutely. No problem.

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    25. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      That's the total of license fee contributions to the BBC, it doesn't change if access to people outside the UK is blocked.

      It doesn't change if they stop people in Britain with no licence fee watching it, what's the difference?

      The difference is that people outside of the UK aren't the target market. They can't buy British TV licenses even if they want to. So stopping them from watching it won't induce them to pay their license fee. But people within the UK are part of the target market, and can pay for a TV license. But why would they if they could watch for free?

      Basically, letting Brits watch for free hurts the bottom line, but letting foreigners watch for free does not.

      I'm selfish for not wanting to pay for things that others get for free?

      No, you are selfish for wanting others to not have something despite the fact that it doesn't affect you in any way. It's spiteful.

      Maybe you'd like to buy me some DVDs so I don't have to pay for them.

      If I'm buying the DVDs anyway and you can get a copy without affecting me, then why not?

      Somehow I don't think you've grasped the concept of digital abundance. Sharing is good. Didn't your parents ever teach you that?

    26. Re:What Happened? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Ah, the "I was forced to do something so everybody else should be forced to do it too" argument.

      Which is why we all need to get a master's degree in mathematics and spend 20+ years of our lives studying math before we should be allowed to use calculus. Why we all need to go deaf before we can play the melody from Beethoven's "Ode to Joy" and why weall need to become astronauts before we can look at pictures of the moon's surface.

      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    27. Re:What Happened? by trawg · · Score: 1

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for? I would never have bought BBC TV show DVDs if I hadn't seen them "on the Internet".

      Actually, there is no reason they couldn't use Ogg/Theora/Dirac as a WMP plugin. The DRM is a wrapped around the file and independent from the codec used. This, to me, is a much much bigger question than anything else. The INSTANT someone like the BBC starts using Dirac and proves an independently developed open source video codec can stand on its own two feed in the Real World, everyone can get away from using proprietary bullshit codecs that cost zillions of dollars to license and use.

      We do a lot of work with video, so I get to see first hand how much it costs when you want to start doing video work and you're paying for all these patent-encumbered things like mp4, mpeg2, vc1, etc. All the open source tools for working with them are generally ridiculously better, but they're not "legitimate" as they're not licensed by the proper licensing authorities.

      Getting out of this huge hole could mean Dirac replacing Flash/vp6/etc (and the upcoming silverlight) as the web streaming standard, meaning everyone can just use awesome open source tools for it. It could mean we can finally stop using the hacked and legally dubious xvid.

      Content restriction nazis can still happily go with Windows Media for their DRM purposes, but at least the rest of us will have a nice, stable, alternative. Assuming, of course, Dirac doesn't suck :) ... one thing I haven't checked yet. But I'm hoping if someone starts using it to get some mainstream content, we'll see a horde of video codec hackers descend upon it like a plague of goodness and optimise the crap out of it.
    28. Re:What Happened? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      what happened? simple - the whitewash hutton report and more pressure to tow the government and big business's line.

    29. Re:What Happened? by endofcell · · Score: 1

      It appears that the further this project has gone in the development cycle, the more its 'open' credentials have been chiselled away. Lets not forget the iPlayer is a laudable initiative, but its implementation has been corrupted and mismanaged.

    30. Re:What Happened? by griblik · · Score: 1

      No, the real problem is that some UK taxpayers don't understand that it costs them the same whether or not anyone else watches the shows too. Not true, I'm afraid. Pretty much all BBC content contains something that someone else owns the rights to, whether that's music, performers rights, imagery or whatever. A licence for UK-only distribution is generally a lot cheaper than worldwide rights.

      The BBC has a legal obligation to spend the licence fee in a responsible fashion to provide as much content of the highest quality to the licence fee payer as they can, and that usually means not paying extra for non-uk licensing. Bandwidth costs come into it too, as does the cost of purchasing and maintaining a farm of servers with enough capacity to stream broadband to the whole world.

      All these things add up, and they're all things that the BBC shouldn't be spending money on if they could be spending it on something else for the UK audience.
      --
      Warning: May contain nuts
    31. Re:What Happened? by Jah-Wren+Ryel · · Score: 1

      Not true, I'm afraid. Pretty much all BBC content contains something that someone else owns the rights to, whether that's music, performers rights, imagery or whatever. A licence for UK-only distribution is generally a lot cheaper than worldwide rights. That's putting the cart before the horse. Just because business was done a certain way before the internet does not mean it needs to continue in that fashion now. I suspect that the majority of said "rights" are indeed performer's right, aka royalties which are entirely negotiable up front.

      Certainly some shows do incorporate other content that is not so negotiable - e.g. Life on Mars including a lot of David Bowie material (which ironically would be in the public domain if copyright extensions had not gotten out of control) - but it is also entirely possible for the producers to deliberately reduce their show's dependency on such material if need be.

      Bandwidth costs come into it too, as does the cost of purchasing and maintaining a farm of servers with enough capacity to stream broadband to the whole world. Yeah, I kinda hit that one out of the part in my original post.
      --
      When information is power, privacy is freedom.
    32. Re:What Happened? by mdwh2 · · Score: 1

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?

      I pay so that I can watch it - preferably without DRM. Contrary to popular anti-piracy beliefs, I am not harmed by someone elsewhere getting to watch it. (If they were happy with an online version, they'd be able to download it off bittorrent now, anyway.)

      And anyway, I'm glad if more people around the world are watching more British-produced content. One of the whole points of having a public-funded corporation is to promote British TV. If you're only concerned about maximising profit, go with a private company.

      Lastly, the point is that licence payers should have a say in what happens. If they want to protest that the BBC should use DRM, let them. But in this case, they're protesting that the BBC shouldn't use DRM.

    33. Re:What Happened? by Mex · · Score: 1

      I've bought a bunch of British comedy DVDs, if it counts. Monty Python and Coupling and the original Office sitcom, thanks to the BBC.

    34. Re:What Happened? by metamatic · · Score: 1

      The problem is why should UK taxpayers pay for people in other countries to have free media that they didn't pay for?

      Because they won't sell us the media. If I could buy a subscription to the BBC's channels, I'd do so tomorrow. They can't or won't sell me such a thing. Even shows that are available on DVD are often only available in the UK. As such, my sympathy for the "What if people overseas see the content?" argument is slim to none. If you won't sell it to me, I don't believe you have any moral right to complain if I copy it illegally.

      --
      GCHQ Quantum Insert installed. If only our tongues were made of glass, how much more careful we would be when we speak
  13. Re: Erik Huggers by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    A few questions:
    * Were the decisions to enter into the BBC/MS MOU and iPlayer deal taken before or after the decision to employ Erik Huggers and by how long?
    * Did MS encourage Erik Huggers to take his position at the BBC or encourage the BBC to employ him?
    * To what extent did Mr.Huggers influence these decisions?
    * Does Mr.Huggers directly or indirectly (for example via trust, family or fund ownership) hold any MS stock or other financial interest in MS or affilliated companies from which benefit could have been gained as a result of these dealings between the BBC and MS?
    * If such interests are held will the BBC please disclose them in the public interest?
    * What oversight is or has been in place to ensure the dealings in relation to this matter were conducted with the integrity that the public has a right to expect from the BBC?
    * Has the BBC or any employee or contractor of the BBC with involvement in this project received any hospitality, gifts or concessions from MS? If so please disclose the extent of these.
    I have posted this anonymously because I have a potential commercial relationship with the BBC and do not wish to prejudice it.

  14. Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by also-rr · · Score: 3, Insightful

    If you want a current example from the _very same market_ in the UK (TV watchers) then glance your eye over Sky vs Virgin.

    The number one non-over-the-air channel, Sky One, is owned by the same people who own the satellite broadcast system. (In the UK TV service to households with reasonable disposable income is, or was, split into cable vs satellite. Over the air is probably more common but not really in the same market. Outside London there are no real alternatives yet.)

    Sky have denied the Sky One (and a few other not very interesting channels) license to Virgin. This has resulted in a massive exodus from cable. As a TV watching friend of mine pointed out "it's not worth the grief from the missus - and the kids would yell at me too". My choice would have been emigration without kids or wife, but he chose to switch to Satellite/Sky instead.

    What does this have to do with internet TV, which has no presence yet to be missed? Well, the BBC has a tendency to plug new services endlessly on their channels. There is no one in the UK who doesn't hear or see something from the BBC every single week. Computer penetration is also very high, it's a small island so broadband is readily available too (cable and DSL, the latter from a number of ISPs). Even the people who won't see TV adverts listen to Radio 4 (available over the internet for free - give it a go! - especially the comedy) giving them a direct and unique line to highly educated and very powerful people.

    So, a large number of people who have already shown that TV is important enough to make them pick up the phone, will get bombarded with adverts for a new service that they can probably access. Until they get home and try to get to it and see:

    The BBC can't give you access to the iPlayer because unlike every reputable ISP yours is trying to charge you extra and we said we wouldn't be part of it. Here is a list of ISPs, that you probably can switch to with a single phone call, that are doing the right thing.

    Even if the ISP blocks the error page the cost of handling the phone calls to customer support *alone* will probably make the whole thing impossible to maintain for very long.

    Now, it won't come to this. A backroom deal will be cut and the whole thing will go away - precisely because the ISPs have no possible way to win.

    1. Re:Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      >This has resulted in a massive exodus from cable

      That just isn't true.
      Sky One is pretty crap anyway, filled with junk.
      I doubt anyone cares.

    2. Re:Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by drsquare · · Score: 1

      I don't think it will have the same effect for the BBC. People will switch TV providers so they can get premium imported content. They won't do the same for reality TV shows, house buying shows and Top Gear repeats.

    3. Re:Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by Stevecrox · · Score: 1

      Actually while Virgin did hermirage some customers the total number of their customers has actually risen slightly.

    4. Re:Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by iainl · · Score: 1

      Really? That's not the impression I got from The Register's story on their financials.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    5. Re:Net neutrality no threat to the BBC by Stevecrox · · Score: 1

      The BBC has a different story

      http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/business/6936235.stm

  15. The real issue is.. by beldraen · · Score: 1, Flamebait

    Wow. BBC is having street protests? And, this is over a media player? The U.S. invades Iraq on dubious grounds, without warrant wiretaps its people, and suspends the constitution, and what does the people of the United.. OOOOohhhh.. MSNBC says Brittany is being a bad mother and Kevin is being a good guy;although, it may be a shame just to get more money from her. Back in a few minutes.

    --
    Bel, the mostly sane.. "Of course I can't see anything! I'm standing on the shoulders of idiots." -- Me
    1. Re:The real issue is.. by xaxa · · Score: 1

      Well, I thought that was funny, even if a mod thought it was 'troll'. The mod probably didn't get your point.

      Now if you'll excuse me, I have to go and protest against the expansion of Heathrow airport.

    2. Re:The real issue is.. by TheRaven64 · · Score: 4, Insightful

      In case it wasn't covered on the news channels you watch, roughly one million people (around 2% of the UK population) took to the streets of London to protest against the invasion of Iraq before it happened.

      --
      I am TheRaven on Soylent News
    3. Re:The real issue is.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Please, go kill your self

    4. Re:The real issue is.. by beldraen · · Score: 1

      Thank you. At least one person got it. :o)

      --
      Bel, the mostly sane.. "Of course I can't see anything! I'm standing on the shoulders of idiots." -- Me
  16. pissed off by Gearoid_Murphy · · Score: 3, Insightful

    this is so completely wrong. The ISPs are selling people bandwidth that actually isn't there. You might have dozens of people running off a pipe a few 10s of megs wide but each person is being charged for the bandwidth of a 5-10 megs. this is referred to as the contention ratio of the channel. However, when people go to actually use the bandwidth they were sold, the ISPs recoil in horror and demand that they be paid to upgrade their networks to a capacity that they are already charging people for. Mutherfuckers

    --
    prepare the survey weasels.
    1. Re:pissed off by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I hear that in South Korea, 8Mbps broadband is considered slow; if ISPs in Britain gave us such speeds as standard and allowed us to fully utilise them, the iPlayer bandwidth requirements would be a non-issue.

    2. Re:pissed off by Rudolf · · Score: 1

      this is so completely wrong. The ISPs are selling people bandwidth that actually isn't there. [...]

      And how does the BBC figure into this?

    3. Re:pissed off by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      Why are you focusing on bandwidth, this isn't streaming media which needs to be delivered in real time just hefty sized files. They do not need to be downloaded in realtime, or for that matter at a particular time. A smart user would schedule the download to run at off peak times.

      Cable providers such as Virgin Media can easily cope with increased demand within their network just use an additional frequency in the cable.
      Outside of Virgins network is another matter entirely.
        The sensible thing will be for ISP's to cache shows using a transparent proxy for their customers. The big question is if fred and joe download a show are they getting an identical copy? if not then they have a problem.

      The real problem is smaller ISP's buy capacity from the larger isp's and if their customers download more they pay more.

      One thing I don't understand is why the BBC isn't making use of it's own DVB-T network (or DVB-S for that matter) DVB-T looks pretty much the same as the stream provided by my cable modem. so couldn't the actual content be delivered via DVB-T pretty much bypassing an ISP's Pipes?

      http://www.kvant-efir.com.ua/en/products/developme nts/e-fir.shtml

    4. Re:pissed off by blackest_k · · Score: 1

      This page gives a very readable account of what is possible with dvb-t
      http://www.zetacast.com/Assets/TVB%20Europe,%20IDP C%20article.htm

      admittedly it's not the best way to shift packets to individuals but for bulk transfers to many people wanting the same content. it's got to be cheap.

  17. Simple Answer by jd · · Score: 1
    1. Everybody in Britain is paying for this content. The license fee payers pay some, but the license fee doesn't cover all of the cost so all taxpayers make up the rest of the cost. (Those who pay the license fee and taxes therefore pay the bulk of the costs.)
    2. The BBC is not regulated by the Government at all - one of its strongest points - but it IS subject to its charter. The charter is The Strong Arm Of The Law, as far as the BBC is concerned. The charter exists for so many years and is then re-negotiated. The charter also protects the BBC - it can be made to do nothing, by the Government or the populace, that violates the charter.

    If the DRM, the agreement with Microsoft, or the restriction to a Windows player, is in violation of the charter, the BBC could be hung, drawn and quartered by the courts. If all three are acceptable - or even required - by the charter, then the BBC's legally guaranteed independence and freedom mean there is nothing anybody can do. Anybody. The Prime Minister could beg on his knees or order in the tanks, and it wouldn't do any good.

    --
    It's a small world and it smells funny; I'd buy another if it wasn't for the money; Take back what I paid (SoM)
  18. To all the protestors: by thatskinnyguy · · Score: 0, Troll

    If you don't like it, stop watching the BBC and watch something else that has DRM free (as in beer) content on their website. Nobody is forcing anyone to watch content produced by the BBC. They do have some good programming. I'm kinda disappointed in them but I'm not about to get out the torch and pitchfork over it.

    --
    The game.
    1. Re:To all the protestors: by mccalli · · Score: 1

      Nobody is forcing anyone to watch content produced by the BBC

      No, but they are forcing me to pay for it. And I damned well want to use it if so.

      Cheers,
      Ian

    2. Re:To all the protestors: by helicon_00 · · Score: 1

      Easy on the hate....

      I am not stating nothing new, plenty of previous post, state a similar comment, therefore as plainly as possible, the ruckus is that BBC content is in part funded for, via taxes, therefore their, UK citizens, complain is that the BBC's implementation poses an implied double tax to UK viewers; due to limited OS and Media Player availability.

      With all good intentions there is an implied test of due diligence that your implementation will be equitable to all; problem is that is rarely possible.

    3. Re:To all the protestors: by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      We want it. its ours. We've paid for it, so they can damn well give it to us!

    4. Re:To all the protestors: by startling · · Score: 1

      Quite so. The BBC is acting like a private company, and not just on this issue.

      It saddens me to say it, but when the BBC is not bothering to even pretend to be independent any more, I think it's time to get rid of the BBC licence tax and make them a wholly commercial enterprise instead.

  19. Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by Dusty101 · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Parent post is generally true: as I understand it, the BBC is required by their partners to make at least some token
    gesture towards restricting the redistribution of material which doesn't totally belong to it.

    To also respond to the grandparent: the big thing here is that the BBC is not a company in the same sense that (say)
    US cable networks are. As Douglas Adams used to observe "The BBC's not in the same business as the other TV stations" (or words to that effect): their customers are not corporate advertisers. The BBC is funded by the UK TV licencing fee, & has therefore already been paid for by every Windows, Mac, Linux, *BSD, Solaris, etc. user in the UK with a TV licence, so it clearly is unfair for the Beeb to release iPlayer access to their programmes only to Windows users. (In the interests of full disclosure, btw, I'm a British ex-pat who only uses OS X & (GNU/)Linux).

    I do feel some measure of sympathy for the BBC about this, though. As has been noted elsewhere, it should be considered admirable that the BBC are trying to make as much of their programming available online as is feasible without charging. Unfortunately, the only way they can think of at the moment to reconcile that ideal with the legal realities of their programme-producing partnerships & so on is to present them with some sort of anti-duplication measure, hence the DRM. However, my sympathy for the BBC on this issue is tempered by the information that one of the senior execs in charge of making the decisions is an ex-Microsoft Windows Media Player guy, which does tend to suggest scope for conflict of interest on his part.

    On balance, I think that the pressure the BBC is feeling reflects the fact that it's pushing the boundaries on making their content freely available online, which is a forward-thinking policy in general, & should be applauded. The woes listed in the summary are largely due to some short-term lack of wisdom in the means currently being used to attain those goals.

    1. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Interesting

      "However, my sympathy for the BBC on this issue is tempered by the information that one of the senior execs in charge of making the decisions is an ex-Microsoft Windows Media Player guy, which does tend to suggest scope for conflict of interest on his part."

      My sympathy for them is tempered by that, and by a couple of other things...

      - for a while they used to provide replays of radio programmes etc. in Ogg, but they stopped that and went to Windows or Real only a long time ago. Obviously somebody there had a clue, but was (eventually) shut down. This is more of a bad sign than if they had never done it at all.

      - while claiming they were 'intending to provide a non-Windows solution', this was only expected to happen in 'about 24 months' and they were only going to review progress on that project 'every 6 months or so'. That sounds to me very much like 'yeah, yeah, we'll get to it one day. Maybe.'

    2. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by gutnor · · Score: 1

      "The BBC is funded by the UK TV licencing fee, & has therefore already been paid for by every Windows, Mac, Linux, *BSD, Solaris, etc. user in the UK with a TV licence"

      Just some complementary information here. You pay for a TV License *only* if you have a way to view BBC channels. Currently that means that you have a TV or TVCard for your computer.
      So if a Linux user has a TV License, somehow, he is already capable of receiving the broadcast programs ( i.e. he has a TV )

      The main difference between now and before, is that Windows users WITH a TV License will be able to access BBC Content using an *additional* medium for no extra-charge.

      Other operating system users will still have the traditional methods to access the content.

    3. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      They're making some of their programming available online for a *limited period* (you can view it for 7 days after you've downloaded it) so it doesn't eat into their DVD profits. TBH, as I've already paid for the content via my TV licence I don't feel the least bit bad about downloading via BitTorrent *anything* the BBC show and I've never bought a BBC DVD. Asking people to pay over and over for the exact same content is a record label business policy and I don't see many people supporting it from them.

    4. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by laddiebuck · · Score: 1

      They could opt to just release BBC content (that they own the copryights to) on the 'net, and skip imported content for now... It would even be a good thing, as BBC programmes are a cut above the rest.

    5. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The problem is that a few years ago, amid complaints from the commercial broadcasters that they could no longer compete with the BBC as it was too big and too well funded from the license fee, the government introduced new legislation compelling the BBC to oursource the production of at least 25% of it's output to private production companies and not make everything in-house as it did before. The upshot of this is that many of the programs are commissioned to be made by the BBC but the copyright is part owned by the private production company. So, it's not just the obviously imported stuff like The Simpsons or Star Trek that they wouldn't be able to show as they don't own all the copyright but a substantial amount of other programs (at least 25% of all output) as well.

    6. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Bull argument. Why would they be required to poison the stream with DRM when distributed over the net but not when broadcast over freeview ?

    7. Re:Bit of a rock & a hard place thing here... by OffBeatMammal · · Score: 1

      ...However, my sympathy for the BBC on this issue is tempered by the information that one of the senior execs in charge of making the decisions is an ex-Microsoft Windows Media Player guy, which does tend to suggest scope for conflict of interest on his part..... who actually joined after the decisions had already been made and approved by the BBC Trust. The BBC have already said that they're committed to reviewing the cross platform issues (and assuming that they go with, say, MS Silverlight that works on PCs and Macs probably hits >98% of the desktop market and with the Mono teams Moonlight port hits the rest. The only sticking point is DRM which apparently is coming real soon - http://www.theregister.co.uk/2007/08/16/silverligh t_iplayer_playready/ - assuming MS and Mono can play nice and get a ported client) ... I don't get why people are so up in arms about this. Just like b&w to colour, or analogue to digital the Beeb have to target the vast majority of their users for the maximum attention. Linux and OSX are still a small (but vocal) percentage. I'd be happier for the Beeb to iron out the problems on the WinXP crowd first and give us something that works right ;)

  20. There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 0, Flamebait

    I live in the UK. Quite a lot of my relatives and friends know about iPlayer. None of them know of this "uproar". DefectiveByDesign's website looks cheap and tacky, and they seem to be a mostly US group. The BBC has said multiple times that they intend to support other OSes in time. The main reason they aren't is a lack of DRM on those other platforms.

    Non-UK groups, like the FSF, saying "Give us free unprotected content" is pointless. Many people in the UK want the DRM, so the BBC can make money selling their programs abroad.

    --
    Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    1. Re:There is no uproar by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

      Many people in the UK want the DRM, so the BBC can make money selling their programs abroad. Many people in the UK are idiots then. That snake oil will only cost the BBC money, it will not magically boost export sales.
      --

      You can't take the sky from me...

    2. Re:There is no uproar by jedidiah · · Score: 2, Interesting

      Many, eh? I bet you wouldn't be able to find a handful? Why would the average Brit care whether or not the BBC can make a little bit more money when they've already got their hands in everyone's pockets.

      This is PUBLIC television we're talking about here.

      --
      A Pirate and a Puritan look the same on a balance sheet.
    3. Re:There is no uproar by Drachemorder · · Score: 1

      "The main reason they aren't is a lack of DRM on those other platforms."
      That's exactly what we find unacceptable: denying access because of a lack of DRM. It's explicit proof of why we hate DRM so much, because it interferes with the ability of legitimate users to get access to something.
    4. Re:There is no uproar by Pop69 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      If there's a survey on this, I'd just like to say that I'm in the UK and I DO NOT want DRM

    5. Re:There is no uproar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Also... once MS-DRM is used enough.. then they can start charging content producers per sale (without their lovely DRM they coulda lost a sale).. its win win for MS.

    6. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      You can get it. You can watch TV.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    7. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      So out of interest, where should the BBC recover the money it currently gets from selling series to foreign TV stations? Because they aren't going to pay anywhere near as much when the BBC gives the files out for free over the internet.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    8. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      It's generally known that good foreign sales are paying a substantial part of the budget for the new Doctor Who series. If you wandered around and asked if we should give Doctor Who to the rest of the world for free, I bet you wouldn't find many people who said yes.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    9. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      The DRM isn't to boost export sales, it's to stop the existing sales to foreign networks collapsing to nothing when people can get the programs off the internet.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    10. Re:There is no uproar by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      It's not a choice between DRM and no DRM, it's a choice between DRM or (say) an extra 80 pounds on the license fee to make up for lost export revenue. Given the giant bitch-fest that occurs when the license fee goes up by 5 pounds I wouldn't even bother asking most people "Would you be willing to pay an extra 80 pounds a year so 4% of the computer using population can avoid buying Windows?" - I'd know the answer ahead of time.

    11. Re:There is no uproar by jimicus · · Score: 1

      The main reason they aren't is a lack of DRM on those other platforms.

      By letting the Dirac project die on the vine, the BBC has essentially demonstrated that it has no real interest in developing its own cross-platform codec (and almost certainly cross-platform DRM). Fundamentally, it's a broadcaster so it probably won't pay someone else to come up with something either.

      This leaves only one option. Wait for someone else to write a cross-platform DRM product they can use. But such a thing already exists - it's called Flash. Flash can support DRM and is reasonably cross platform. But that's been the case for some time, and yet the BBC didn't use Flash.

      Now, most TV companies (and I'm sure the BBC is no exception) have a fair mix of IT. Most of the creative types will almost certainly be using Apple Macs, for starters. So it's not like the BBC as an organisation is unaware of the existence of platforms other than Windows.

      Others have said "give them time, it's a beta". I say "get real, nobody prepares a beta product with a view to completely redesigning it from the ground up when they go live".

      There is therefore only one sensible explanation. The BBC is lying. This was intended as a quick, easy, cheap project which could gain them brownie points from the general public and the BBC Trust - nothing more, nothing less.

    12. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      While Flash supports streaming DRM, it doesn't support "download then timeout"-style DRM, which is what the BBC iPlayer uses.

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    13. Re:There is no uproar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      You are 100% correct.

    14. Re:There is no uproar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      "I live in the UK. Quite a lot of my relatives and friends know about iPlayer. None of them know of this "uproar"."

      Oh, that's funny! How do most people hear news like that? Through the BBC? Wow, that's dandy for them.
      Have you noticed BBC News have avoided the issue completely? One text article on their site, and only after an official complaint to Ofcom.
      Now if only The Sun & Daily Mail editors read /.... all the proles would know ;)

    15. Re:There is no uproar by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      DefectiveByDesign's website looks cheap and tacky

      Not only that but they don't seem to know how or what the different parts of the BBC do. Both sites they protested at aren't where the iPlayer team are based as they claim. As a linux user I'm against the BBC only supporting one group of users, but stating things which are incorrect doesn't make one seem very credible. Also what's up with the yellow suits?

    16. Re:There is no uproar by MartinG · · Score: 1

      People can already get the programs off the internet. Have you been asleep for the last 10 years?

      DRM DOES NOT WORK.

      --
      -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
    17. Re:There is no uproar by toQDuj · · Score: 1

      Yes, because a youtube video is just so much more enjoyable than a real love tv broadcast or the dvd.

      There is a place for everything.

      --
      Every experiment which ends in a big bang is a good experiment.
    18. Re:There is no uproar by mickwd · · Score: 1

      "Why would the average Brit care whether or not the BBC can make a little bit more money when they've already got their hands in everyone's pockets."

      Because the government frequently restricts the licence-fee raises that the BBC asks for, based (partly) on how much they think the BBC needs. More profit for the BBC means the licence fee can be kept lower, so the average Brit ends up paying less money.

    19. Re:There is no uproar by Jherek+Carnelian · · Score: 1

      It's not a choice between DRM and no DRM, it's a choice between DRM or (say) an extra 80 pounds on the license fee to make up for lost export revenue. That's a gigantic exaggeration. According to the BBC Annual Report the TV license fee produced £3,243million. While BBC Worldwide only "returned £75million in dividends and invested a further £96million directly into BBC programmes..."

      That means the foreign licensing only contributes roughly 5% of the budget (actual BBC Worldwide income is roughly £800million, which means roughly £600million of overhead).

      So if BBC Worldwide closed shop (the absolute worst case assumption, and really not so likely), the increase to the TV license fee would be roughly £7 per year, not £80. And that's only to maintain parity, a 5% budget cut to cull a couple of lesser quality programs, or reduce some of the £1,100million that goes to "external spend in the UK creative industry," would probably pass without notice.

      "Would you be willing to pay an extra 80 pounds a year so 4% of the computer using population can avoid buying Windows?" - I'd know the answer ahead of time. A much less biased and much more accurate question would be:
      "Would you be willing to pay an extra £7 a year so that anybody on a computer anywhere in the world can watch BBC programmes without any extra hassle?"
    20. Re:There is no uproar by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      If you wandered around and asked if we should give Doctor Who to the rest of the world for free, I bet you wouldn't find many people who said yes.

      No, but I bet you'd find a huge number of people who think we should pay them to take it.

    21. Re:There is no uproar by Kalriath · · Score: 1

      That, and the Canadian broadcaster that also funds it (or is that another program? I think it's Dr Who, but it's the best example anyway) might just object to having content they paid for given away to free to people who haven't paid for it.

      My opinion on this is largely neutral, since I'm not (technically) a UK citizen and therefore it's not really my business.

      If only the folks in the USA would get that through their thick heads too: it's none of their business.

      --
      For a site about things like basic rights, Slashdot users sure do like to censor "dissent".
    22. Re:There is no uproar by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 1

      OK, fair points. The spend on "UK creative industry" probably includes all the money spent on small indie production companies that produce some of the best BBC programming though, so I doubt it makes sense to cut that. I'd have been willing to pay more money to make the BBCs output (specifically news) available for free to people, but that's orthogonal to the DRM issue and is more a political statement.

    23. Re:There is no uproar by Chris_Jefferson · · Score: 1

      That is a part of this I'm not 100% sure about, I know you can just pop onto the bittorrent site of your choice and get everything off the BBC. However, in the eyes of people who might pay for BBC content, there is I'm sure a difference between "This stuff is pirated" and "The BBC actually gives this stuff away to people, for free"

      --
      Combination - fun iPhone puzzling
    24. Re:There is no uproar by MartinG · · Score: 1

      There is no difference.

      Oh, hold on yes there is! The difference is I can't play it if I get it from the BBC, so I'm forced to "pirate" it myself even though I have already paid for it.

      Artificially crippling the iPlayer service that paying customers receive, solely to prevent those that don't pay from getting as large a benefit from the service is rather like breaking your own leg so that you get better value from the NHS.

      --
      -- MartinG To mail me: echo kewyjlcxyzvjfxbqwh | tr bcefhjklqvwxyz .@adgimnoprstu
  21. The BBC's Core by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 1, Interesting

    from: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article22 40427.ece

    From The Sunday Times
    August 12, 2007
    Confessions of a BBC liberal
    The BBC has finally come clean about its bias, says a former editor, who wrote Yes, Minister
    Antony Jay

    In the past four weeks there have been two remarkable changes in the public attitude to the BBC. The first and most newsworthy one was precipitated by the faked trailer of the Queen walking out of a photographic portrait session with Annie Leibovitz.

    It was especially damaging because the licence fee is based on a public belief that the BBC offers a degree of integrity and impartiality which its commercial competitors cannot achieve.

    But in the longer term I believe that the second change is even more significant. It started with the BBC's own report on impartiality that effectively admitted to an institutional "liberal" bias among programme makers. Previously these accusations had been dismissed as a right-wing rant, but since the report was published even the BBC's allies seem to accept it.

    It has been on parade again these past few weeks on the Radio 4 programme The Crime of Our Lives. It included (of course) the ritual demoni-sation of Margaret Thatcher (uninterested in crime . . . surprisingly did not take a closer interest), a swipe at Conservative magistrates and their friends in the golf club and occasional quotes from Douglas Hurd to preserve the illusion of impartiality, but the whole tenor of the programme was liberal/ progressive/ reformist.

    The series even included a strong suggestion that Thatcher's economic policies were the cause of rising crime. So presumably she shouldn't have done what she did?

    There is a perfectly reasonable case for progressive liberal reform of penal policy. There is also a perfectly reasonable case for a stricter and more punitive penal policy.

    This programme was quite clearly on the side of the former and the producer/writer was a member of BBC staff. Can you imagine a BBC staff member slanting a programme towards the case for a stricter penal policy?

    The growing general agreement that the culture of the BBC (and not just the BBC) is the culture of the chattering classes provokes a question that has puzzled me for 40 years. The question itself is simple - much simpler than the answer: what is behind the opinions and attitudes of this social group?

    They are that minority often characterised (or caricatured) by sandals and macrobiotic diets, but in a less extreme form are found in The Guardian, Channel 4, the Church of England, academia, showbusiness and BBC news and current affairs. They constitute our metropolitan liberal media consensus, although the word "liberal" would have Adam Smith rotating in his grave. Let's call it "media liberalism".

    It is of particular interest to me because for nine years, between 1955 and 1964, I was part of this media liberal consensus. For six of those nine years I was working on Tonight, a nightly BBC current affairs television programme. My stint coincided almost exactly with Harold Macmil-lan's premiership and I do not think that my former colleagues would quibble if I said we were not exactly diehard supporters.

    But we were not just anti-Macmil-lan; we were antiindustry, anti-capital-ism, antiadvertising, antiselling, antiprofit, antipatriotism, antimonarchy, antiempire, antipolice, antiarmed forces, antibomb, antiauthority. Almost anything that made the world a freer, safer and more prosperous place - you name it, we were anti it.

    Although I was a card-carrying media liberal for the best part of nine years, there was nothing in my past to predispose me towards membership. I spent my early years in a country where every citizen had to carry identification papers. All the newspapers were censored, as were all letters abroad; general elections had been abolished: it was a one-party state. Yes, that was Britain - Britain fr

    1. Re:The BBC's Core by VJ42 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      from: http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/news/uk/article22 40427.ece

      From The Sunday Times
      August 12, 2007
      Yes, this is obviously all true because newspapers never lie and the Rupert Murdoch owned Times, couldn't possibly be bias against the BBC; a competitor to the Rupert Murdoch owned Sky TV.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    2. Re:The BBC's Core by rnws · · Score: 3, Insightful

      However the tone of your post seems to indicate that what the Beeb says is gospel truth as opposed to the Times?
      I love the Beeb, I think it's an amazing institution and I believe that Murdoch is a baby-feasting spawn of Satan and a genuine threat to Democracy, BUT part of our open society is being able to provide a counterpoint which the Times is doing - just because they are owned by the aforementioned hellspawn please don't accuse them of lying. Don't accept everything the BBC says as perfect truth either.
      The BBC does do a very good job - probably the best in the World (IMHO) of balanced reporting, certainly when compared to bile like Fox news (gak, "news" is certainly a misnomer there...) but there is also an obvious liberal bias. This may reflect that Britain is a reasonably liberal society.
      Remember - "Question everything including what I am telling you now."

    3. Re:The BBC's Core by IamTheRealMike · · Score: 3, Insightful

      As pointed out by another poster, The Sunday Times is owned by Murdoch who has no qualms at all about forcing a very strong right-wing bias on all his publications. His orifices generally delight in lampooning the BBC (and any other institution that competes with Murdoch) whenever possible and factual accuracy is deemed optional in these cases. I'd ignore any such article from his publications, especially one written from an "insider perspective" that is 40 years old!

      Anyway, the whole idea of a pervasive "liberal bias" in the BBC is nonsense - even if you think such a thing exists, so what? Given how poorly the Tories do in the polls even after years of Labour disillusionment and given how left-wing the UK is in comparison to the US, perhaps such a bias would just reflect the bias of the British people?

    4. Re:The BBC's Core by ktappe · · Score: 1

      this is obviously all true because newspapers never lie and the Rupert Murdoch owned Times, couldn't possibly be bias against the BBC; a competitor to the Rupert Murdoch owned Sky TV.
      It is incorrect logic to state that because bias may (or even can be proven to) exist that all statements by the biased party are necessarily wrong.
      --
      "We can categorically state we have not released man-eating badgers into the area." - UK military spokesman, July 2007
    5. Re:The BBC's Core by drsquare · · Score: 1

      Given how poorly the Tories do in the polls even after years of Labour disillusionment and given how left-wing the UK is in comparison to the US, perhaps such a bias would just reflect the bias of the British people?
      Believe me, the BBC do not represent the average person in Britain. In fact your statement assumes the BBC actually has to care what British people think. Considering they're not dependent on ratings or revenue, they can say what they like whether anyone agrees with it or not.

      The BBC bias is completely incongruent to the average British citizen. Most people over here are not the middle-class, politically-correct, Guardian-reading, latte-drinking, dinner-party attending, winebar-frequenting, trendy inner-city apartment dwelling, liberal-arts studying, chattering, self-important, elitist, and any number of other stereotypical-adjectives that make up the BBC's payroll.

      They pretend to be anti-establishment, despite being very much part of the establishment. They pretend to be left-wing, despite all being from well-off backgrounds and never having ever met someone who wasn't middle-class. They pretend to be anti-corporate, despite themselves being a huge megacorporation with powers that most multi-nationals could only dream of, not to mention treating their low-rung workers worse than any private corporation treats their workers. They pretend to be environmentalist, despite their stars and executives all being chaufferred round London in luxury cars. If you want an image of the BBC, think Starbucks with microphones and cameras.
    6. Re:The BBC's Core by cayenne8 · · Score: 1
      "The growing general agreement that the culture of the BBC (and not just the BBC) is the culture of the chattering classes provokes a question that has puzzled me for 40 years. The question itself is simple - much simpler than the answer: what is behind the opinions and attitudes of this social group?"

      So, do they not put out good programming like Monty Python, or AbFab anymore?

      --
      Light travels faster than sound. This is why some people appear bright until you hear them speak.........
    7. Re:The BBC's Core by jez9999 · · Score: 1

      Not all British people are the same. Some are very liberal, some are very conservative.

      The Tories are doing badly in the polls because they suck, their best policies have been thrown away and replaced with New Labour-style bullshit (which, guess what, most people are fed up with now), and they're "fighting for the centreground" (ie. ignoring 80% of people).

      More people in England voted Conservative than Labout at the last election.

      Is the BBC liberal because the British people are, or the other way around? It's a chicken-and-egg problem. The BBC unfortunately holds a lot of sway with many people's opinions, and I firmly believe that this country's as politically correct as it is largely in thanks to the BBC.

    8. Re:The BBC's Core by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Remember - "Question everything including what I am telling you now."

      You're talking out of your ass! The article was bollocks because was the Times, a Murdoch owned newspaper!

    9. Re:The BBC's Core by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      However the tone of your post seems to indicate that what the Beeb says is gospel truth as opposed to the Times? No, I just don't trust a thing that comes from a Murdoch owned rag like the Times. Indeed, I can't stand any fleet street papers, and refuse to buy them. I get my news from my local paper, the Internet and Private Eye.

      I love the Beeb, I think it's an amazing institution and I believe that Murdoch is a baby-feasting spawn of Satan and a genuine threat to Democracy, BUT part of our open society is being able to provide a counterpoint which the Times is doing - just because they are owned by the aforementioned hellspawn please don't accuse them of lying. Don't accept everything the BBC says as perfect truth either.
      The BBC does do a very good job - probably the best in the World (IMHO) of balanced reporting, certainly when compared to bile like Fox news (gak, "news" is certainly a misnomer there...) but there is also an obvious liberal bias. This may reflect that Britain is a reasonably liberal society.
      Remember - "Question everything including what I am telling you now." I agree 100% with all the points you make.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    10. Re:The BBC's Core by VJ42 · · Score: 1

      this is obviously all true because newspapers never lie and the Rupert Murdoch owned Times, couldn't possibly be bias against the BBC; a competitor to the Rupert Murdoch owned Sky TV.
      It is incorrect logic to state that because bias may (or even can be proven to) exist that all statements by the biased party are necessarily wrong. It might not be logically correct, I wouldn't trust Rupert Murdoch, or any of his mouthpieces to tell me the time, let alone anything more important. Sometimes, you just have to go with your gut.
      --
      If I have nothing to hide, you have no reason to search me
    11. Re:The BBC's Core by halfcuban · · Score: 2, Informative

      Except, oddly enough, that people do tune in. From looking at ratings charts, a large measure of the British public is tuning into BBC's channels to be entertained or informed at some point in the day or night. Does this mean that watching means automatic agreement, or a universal consensus of values? No, but it does mean that the Beeb, and hence the people who work for it, must be doing something right. You can't seriously believe that only fellow "elitists" are the ones watching the the BBC posts ratings of 9 or 10 million viewers? This kind of errant lobbing of "elitism" simply doesn't wash then.

      This is not say that any institution doesn't have faults, and I have read some persuasive arguments about various problems with BBC News and its entertainment programming, many of which I agree with. But that does not mean, as you build up using straw men arguments, that the Beeb is some multi-headed, unwatched giant, unaccountable, and this is especially absurd, irrelevant to the British viewing public.

    12. Re:The BBC's Core by gadders · · Score: 1

      So your point is who cares if the BBC lies so long as you agree with them? You dick.

    13. Re:The BBC's Core by BridgeGarth · · Score: 2, Insightful

      But more people in the *UK* voted for Labour than for Conservative. The UK parliament is not just decided on who has most votes in England.

  22. They should just launch the dam thing! by el_monkeyo · · Score: 1

    I really don't see what the problem with launching the iPlayer using M$ software is, the BBC have a way of distributing their content to the vast majority of licence paying computer users right now, and the BBC Trust have said "the broadcaster must open up the iPlayer as soon as possible and plans to review progress every six months" (http://news.bbc.co.uk/1/hi/technology/6922024.stm ).

    Sure, it may have been better to use Flash Video (but certainly not RealPlayer or Quicktime), but in reality the percentage of licence payers who don't have access to a Windows P.C. is small enough that can get the iPlayer up and running to the vast majority now, and fill in the gaps later. They have made attempts to make their own open format (http://www.bbc.co.uk/rd/projects/dirac/), but obviously it's nowhere near ready for large scale use, so why not use something that is ready now?

    The idea that the BBC is going to start releasing their content in a DRM free format is totally absurd, given that they make a sizeable portion of their income selling it to other broadcasters and releasing DVD box sets. If you can watch DRM "infected" media, then you can probably crack it, but the BBC a hardly likely to give away their content in a format that can go straight onto a P2P network. And why should U.K. licence payers fund the Worlds entertainment anyway?

    I also think the ISP think will blow over, as the BBC are working with Virgin Media (the U.K.'s cable T.V. provider and largest home ISP) to bring the iPlayer to cable TV. I'm sure the other ISPs will think again when their biggest competitor starts making a big deal about their unrestricted access to iPlayer content.

    I think they should launch it not, and not let a few whiners ruin it for everyone else

    1. Re:They should just launch the dam thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      The idea that the BBC is going to start releasing their content in a DRM free format is totally absurd

      Really? I'm using 4 digital tuners here and happily copying the unprotected broadcasts around my network to watch. Freeview (DTV) can be DRM'd, none of the BBC channels are. The devices needed to get perfect copies of broadcasts onto PC or DVD are cheap and very common.

    2. Re:They should just launch the dam thing! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Sure, it may have been better to use Flash Video (but certainly not RealPlayer or Quicktime)

      QuickTime would really have been the best option. It uses open formats (MPEG4) which are playable on any platform and the player is a fairly simple and elegant application that it isn't as obnoxious as Windows Media Player or as resource-hogging as Flash.

  23. DRM is a Non Issue - Just Don't use it by Junior+Samples · · Score: 2, Insightful

    I download the BBC programming that I want to watch with Azureus an hour after it airs in the UK and watch it shortly after using VLC on my PC. Sometimes I'll burn a DVD and watch it on my TV. The quality is excellent.

    Alternatively I can catch the programming 6 months to a year later on BBC America or the SciFi Channel with commercials and reduced resolution.

    Whatever they do on their web site is a non-issue, although I'm a bit annoyed that I have to use a UK based proxy server to access some of the program guides.

    1. Re:DRM is a Non Issue - Just Don't use it by Malc · · Score: 1

      Missed Dr. Who on Monday. Thanks Azureus. Quick download of 350MB, and then hooked my laptop up to my TV via S-Video. Picture quality better than Rogers Cable's CBC feed here in Toronto. No adverts to skip through either. Sweet.

    2. Re:DRM is a Non Issue - Just Don't use it by Junior+Samples · · Score: 1

      Demonoid.com (one of the better sites for BBC torrents) has torrents for the full season 3 of Dr. Who. Get the Mad Martha [MM] torrents. They are the best quality.

      I can't wait for the Sara Jane Adventures to begin http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sarah_Jane_Smith and season 2 of Torchwood http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Torchwood. I also started watching Robin Hood on BBC America - That's another full season I'll need to grab.

    3. Re:DRM is a Non Issue - Just Don't use it by bbtom · · Score: 2, Informative

      The iPlayer is basically a distraction. It keeps the BBC Management from realising the rampant use of BitTorrent for BBC content. The folks at the BBC have their hands tied behind their back by legalities. That said, a huge chunk of people who work at the BBC are tech savvy and use BitTorrent to download their shows. The iPlayer is just fine. Everyone will just use BitTorrent instead. The BBC have pretty much adopted a "live and let live" policy with regards to BitTorrent. Unless you do something really stupid (oh, you know, break into Television Centre, steal and leak a new Doctor Who ep), you will have no trouble from the BBC Legal Department.

      So, feel free to open up Azureus and enjoy. You may find the websites uknova.com and thebox.bz quite educational, entertaining and informing. Which is funny, because that's exactly the motto of the BBC. ;)

      --
      catch (HumourFailureException e) { e.user.send("You, sir, are a humourless idiot."); }
    4. Re:DRM is a Non Issue - Just Don't use it by pev · · Score: 1

      Whatever they do on their web site is a non-issue, although I'm a bit annoyed that I have to use a UK based proxy server to access some of the program guides.

      The oldest UK TV guide (AFAIK) is the Radio Times. This is online at http://www.radiotimes.co.uk/ if you want to know whats on and when!

      ~Pev
  24. What Would Satisfy Me by Nom+du+Keyboard · · Score: 4, Interesting

    I don't need real-time streaming for a lot of my cable video. I'd be satisfied to initiate the download, eat dinner, then go back and enjoy the desired program without interruption, and at a higher resolution or less of a compression ratio. That option seldom seems offered, although it would be so much faster than Netflix US Mail delivery.

    --
    "It's the height of ridiculousness to say for those 9 lines you get hundreds of millions."
    1. Re:What Would Satisfy Me by CavemanKiwi · · Score: 1

      What quality level is acceptable to you? What wait is acceptable? I like the Xbox live service although you need an Xbox 360 for it and I wouldn't buy one just for that. It does offer DVD quality downloads ready in less then 5 minutes for viewing. HD seems to be ready in several hours. (To long for me)

    2. Re:What Would Satisfy Me by rhizome · · Score: 1

      I'd be satisfied to initiate the download, eat dinner, then go back and enjoy the desired program without interruption, and at a higher resolution or less of a compression ratio. That option seldom seems offered, although it would be so much faster than Netflix US Mail delivery.

      This solution conflicts with Microsoft's business rules.

      --
      When I was a kid, we only had one Darth.
    3. Re:What Would Satisfy Me by armb · · Score: 1

      Lovefilm does offer some downloads as an alternative to DVDs in the mail, but generally unless a download has some sort of "can only be played once" DRM, it's competing with DVD sales, not with rentals.
      Similarly BBC Radio offers everything as streaming audio under "Listen Again" for a limited time, but only a very few things as savable podcasts (and they sometimes have bits missing, replaced with a voice over saying things like "there was some music here, but out licencing agreement for it doesn't cover the podcast version"). Of course you can record the stream version for later, but it's tedious.

      --
      rant
  25. Um.. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    ...I work there, and I failed to see any protests. I would've gone down to have a look at them.

    Actually, thinking about it I've seen quite a few "British Broadcasting Corrupted" flyers put up on walls around the building I work in - they must have got them from somewhere! ;)

  26. Goolge killer? by davelab6 · · Score: 1

    Adobe currently has web video locked down; Apple, Real, Java, Xiph, and of course Microsoft are all in very niche use compared to Adobe Flash. Adobe Apollo is a direct competitor to Microsoft Silverlight, and with the inertia of Flash video and a large group of web designers already familiar with Flash, plus cheaper a licensing model than Microsoft, it looks like its in with a chance. The typical Microsoft response to fair competition is to compete unfairly. iPlayer, and a number of other high profile 2007 BBC projects, are based on Silverlight technology. Highfield's reponse on the Backstage blog points at the other proprietary technologies the BBC foists on the public, but these are based on previous technology decisions; the new stuff is all Silverlight based. 100,000 iPlayer sign-ups in a week, Martin? That's 100,000 more Silverlight installations. Given Microsoft's other major play to deploy Silverlight is Vista, and we all know how well that's working out for them this year, its outrageous to me that the BBC has paid Microsoft _anything_ for forcing license fee payers to install this key piece of strategic technology for them. Then UK is, afterall, one of the most broadband-saturated and media-consuming audiences, leading the way for other nations - Is the BBC likely to open up a non-zero-price iPlayer to international viewers at somepoint? So this is a big win for Microsoft's bid to control the next stage of web development with Silverlight. The BBC is committed to shipping a cross-platform iPlayer, and its a shame that this becomes the sole focus of the reporting on this issue. An iPlayer for 3 or 4 platforms is 3 or 4 times as worse as an XP-only iPlayer, because it is imposing DRM on even more people, and implying that DRM is acceptable. When it does ship a cross-platform iPlayer, I expect it will be based on Novell's Mono Moonlight for GNU/Linux, probably doing the media codec stuff with the GStreamer framework given that Fluendo, its sponsor, sells Windows Media Codecs already - https://shop.fluendo.com/product_info.php?products _id=45 - and the Mac OS X one might be Mono or Microsoft based. That's going to really help the widespread adoption of Silverlight as the Rich Internet Application platform of choice. In 2007, Google has maintained the dominant position for monetising search and advertising - of the text web. Their purchase of YouTube suggested they were serious about monetising the emerging video web, but the DRM aspects of Silverlight video delivery mean that their ability to provide search and advertising for web video is going to be undermined. So the BBC hasn't just helped Microsoft pull a Adobe-killer, it's also helping Microsoft pull a Google-killer.

  27. Don't get your knickers in a bind. by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    It's just some dodgy kit for the telly. It's all to cock, really. Smoke a fag, mate, and pour yourself a wee pint of the 80 shilling. Personally, I really couldn't be arsed with the whole row.

  28. This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by Orig_Club_Soda · · Score: 0, Troll

    I realize everyone hates DRM - prosting in the street!? Over previously aired TV!!!??? Don't Briton's have something better to do - like going to work!?

    People need to grow up. You can't have everything for free - or the way you want. And PLEASE go protest something important like excessive waiting lines for tax funded health care.

    1. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by cparker15 · · Score: 2, Insightful

      ...except that the iPlayer content is funded by the British “TV tax”. Free (gratis)? Hardly.

      If I lived in the UK and was forced to pay for a TV license (instated by the BBC), I would expect to have equal access to the programming for which I payed, regardless of my operating system and browser of choice. I choose freedom by using free software, so I would be ineligible to make use of a service for which I've already paid.

      Government agencies forcing people to do business with monopolistic corporations? Yeah, that's definitely protest-worthy.

      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

    2. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by bus_stopper · · Score: 1

      I dont know what the people complaining about bandwidth are moaning about, so limit the downloads if you feel you have to make a fuss about it. You cant stream the content to the iPlayer anyway, it's a straight download and then watch. As far as I can see its another way for the UK ISP's to grab more money from the UK consumers. We get a really bad deal here compared to the US market, and the ISP's use any excuse to wring even more money from us. They just want to excuse another price hitch.

    3. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by Orig_Club_Soda · · Score: 0

      This is re-aired content. Why should you get it free twice when you paid once?

      You are a nut job. The player is free. "Almost all BBC TV content broadcast over the last seven days is available, free of charge." And it's already cost $6.1 million to re-air the content online. Tax payers don't own the content, they have usage permissions.
      http://www.streamingmedia.com/article.asp?id=9651

      How about the BBC just calling it even, airing content once, and then you can never see it again. Even American PBS sells its post-aired content.

      There is no room in this world for lazy and cheap-ass communists.

    4. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by cparker15 · · Score: 1
      I usually don't respond to trolls, but I'll bite.

      First, a little education for you, courtesy of Wikipedia: (emphasis mine)

      Founded in 1922 as the British Broadcasting Company Ltd, it was subsequently granted a Royal Charter and made a state-owned but independent corporation in 1927. The corporation produces programmes and information services, broadcasting globally on television, radio, and the Internet. The stated mission of the BBC is "to inform, educate and entertain"; its motto is "Nation Shall Speak Peace Unto Nation".

      The BBC is a quasi-autonomous Public Corporation operating as a public service broadcaster. The Corporation is run by the BBC Trust; however, the BBC is, per its charter, to be "free from both political and commercial influence and answers only to its viewers and listeners".

      Its domestic programming and broadcasts are primarily funded by levying television licence fees (under the Wireless Telegraphy Act 1949), although money is also raised through commercial activities such as sale of merchandise and programming. The BBC World Service, however, is funded by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office. In order to justify the licence fee, the BBC is expected to produce a number of high-rating shows in addition to programmes that commercial broadcasters would not normally broadcast.
      With that out of the way...

      This is re-aired content. Why should you get it free twice when you paid once?
      Why should people who do business with Microsoft get it “free twice”, as you put it, but everyone else shouldn't? Tax dollars/license fees are still paying for the online hosting and distribution of this content.

      How about the BBC just calling it even, airing content once, and then you can never see it again. Even American PBS sells its post-aired content.
      I personally wouldn't see an issue with that. The key phrase you used is “calling it even”. Everyone would have the same access to the re-aired content, regardless of their personal commercial and political preferences regarding computing. However, I'm not a license-fee-paying BBC viewer or listener, so my opinion on that doesn't really matter. I'll bet there are viewers and listeners who do pay the license fee who do want content to be available and accessible for no additional fee. These are the people the BBC answers to.

      When a government agency introduces outrageous requirements that force people to do business with a single corporation in order to get access to a service, that is an example of either corruption or incompetence. The BBC are punishing people who aren't Microsoft customers by denying them access through technical means to the content that's distributed through their Web site and playable with iPlayer. Like it or not, the British populace has no choice but to fund the hosting of the iPlayer content if they own televisions.

      Does that sound like the BBC is being “free from both political and commercial influence” to you?

      There is no room in this world for lazy and cheap-ass communists.
      Do you also think the issues surrounding ODF usage in government are stupid, or fueled by cheap, lazy communists? It's the same issue, just packaged differently. I pay my government through tax money. Therefore, I have a right to any service the government furnishes to the general public for which I've paid. As a government agency, it is the BBC's obligation to cater to every person who pays them the TV tax, which is pretty much everybody.

      It all boils down to equal taxation without equal consideration and representation. The BBC's viewers and listeners have spoken. As a corporation that “answers only to its viewers and listeners”, the BBC needs to be held accountable, one way or another.

      The American Revolution was started over these same principles. Petty? Communist? We'll let history answer that question.
      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

    5. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by Orig_Club_Soda · · Score: 0

      Free software and free access to RE-AIRING of content is not outrageous. Educate yourself.

      Don't be a lazy-assed communist.

    6. Re:This is absurd. The world needs perspective. by cparker15 · · Score: 1

      Free software and free access to RE-AIRING of content is not outrageous.
      Great! I'm glad you see things my way! That's exactly what I'm saying. iPlayer is not free (libre) software. It's a platform-dependent proprietary application. The community is fighting for a cross-platform solution, free from vendor lock-in; a free software alternative that will run on a free software operating system. While the access technically isn't free (gratis), as it's already been subsidized by TV license fees forced out of the British populace's collective pocket, it absolutely should be free (libre) for everyone who has subsidized it. Therefore, one of the messages behind all of the protest is: Free (libre) software and free (libre) access to RE-AIRING of content that's already been paid for is not outrageous. In fact, it's expected. Because it is expected by the British general public, it is the BBC's legal obligation to comply. Don't forget that everybody (law-abiding) in England pays the BBC to own a TV. The BBC is not a subscription-based service.

      Educate yourself. Don't be a lazy-assed communist.
      Did you forget to take your medication this morning? You seem to be lumping yourself in with the “lazy-assed communists” you so readily seem to bash.
      --
      Have you driven a fnord... lately?

      You must wait a little bit before using this resource; please try again later.

  29. Parent is bang-on by jeevesbond · · Score: 1

    Radio 4 (available over the internet for free - give it a go! - especially the comedy)

    Not only is this an interesting post, but the parent is bang-on about Radio 4, it's a fantastic station. Am particularly looking forward to: Dirk Gently's Holistic Detective Agency, it's starring Harry Enfield too.

    Good thing is the DRM hasn't infected radio at all yet, so listen all you like!

    --
    I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
  30. Its Nepotism, Stupid by David+Off · · Score: 3, Interesting

    The problem with the iPlayer fiasco is nepotism. Erik Huggers is Group Controller at BBC Future Media & Technology. Erik was previously Senior Director at Microsoft Corporation and before that a Director of Business Development at Microsoft Corporation. Also the UK government in the form of the Labour Party is in thick with Microsoft for all kinds of projects including the Health Service.

    Having worked on some of these kinds of projects it is all nepotism. Erik gets a nice job at the BBC, someone from the BBC goes to Microsoft, an ex Labour Minister gets a job on one of Microsoft's Partner companies.

    I reckon the BBC will abandon the Linux iPlayer the second it can.

    The DRM stuff is a load of guff too. People as far as North Africa can pick up the BBC for free by sticking up a 130 cm satellite dish and aiming it at 28.2 degrees south as the Astra 2 satellite. Wonderful, crisp, digital downloads in realtime.

    1. Re:Its Nepotism, Stupid by Ant+P. · · Score: 1

      Hmm, does that satellite carry their radio stations as well as the TV ones? I've never been able to get a usable signal for either, and I'm more or less right in the middle of the UK.

    2. Re:Its Nepotism, Stupid by AskChopper · · Score: 1

      Actually it's hard to get any BBC signal from the Astra2 sat past Southern Italy and Malta. My dad lives in Malta and despite having a dish over 2m he still can't get any of the BBC channels, just the Sky ones and Channel4. Something to do with the footprint there I've heard.

      On top of that the DRM issue is indeed valid. A lot of 3rd party companies make stuff for the BBC and they demand that in this case DRM must be used. My wife just left the BBC in Manchester and I spoke to a few employees there about this at her leaving do.

      --
      The old believe everything, the middle-aged suspect everything, the young know everything. - Oscar Wilde
    3. Re:Its Nepotism, Stupid by iainl · · Score: 1

      Yes it does. The simplest way to get it is to take Sky's bottom package for the free box and installation, cancel after the minimum 12 month contract, and then all the BBC, ITV and radio stations continue working. Pay £20 more for a FreeSat card, and you'll get Channel 4 as well.

      --
      "I Know You Are But What Am I?"
    4. Re:Its Nepotism, Stupid by David+Off · · Score: 1

      I know 3rd parties have an issue but the genie is already out of the bottle the second they publish (broadcast) their products. The best bet for them is to negociate a one time DRM free royalty with the BBC. IMHO.

  31. Quarter Billion Dolar Waste. by twitter · · Score: 1

    why don't you just tell them all "screw it, then" .... unless the government is:

    • twisting your arm to offer your programs online Taxes are like that. UK citizens have spent almost a quarter billion dollars on iPlayer based on M$ DRM, while letting their free player rot.
    • and only UKians should be able to view it for free For bandwith costs and revenue generation, they would like to do that but should not care. The shows are paid for by a license fee and taxes. Other broadcasters will still have to pay fees for the shows and people will still tune in for them, but P2P is going to reduce the need for fees in the first place by eliminating costly broadcasting and all of the money will go into production.
    • and the populace complaining that the player won't work on their operating systems They have a right to complain about such an obviously flawed decision. I'm not sure why this would be reason for them not to shelve the player.
    • and companies telling you to pony up for the bandwidth costs. Once again, they are and this is not a good reason to keep the player. Internet transmission is the future, ISPs need to be ready for it or they are not offering much of a service.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Quarter Billion Dolar Waste. by GalionTheElf · · Score: 1

      twisting your arm to offer your programs online Taxes are like that. UK citizens have spent almost a quarter billion dollars on iPlayer based on M$ DRM, while letting their free player rot. Do you have a source for that? Sounds like a ridiculously huge amount especially when according to wikipedia spending on bbc.co.uk is 37 million GBP (assuming it falls under this department, otherwise it's even cheaper).

      A long way from a quarter of a billion dollars (Dr Evil BBC olol)
      --
      I'm going over here and I don't know why!
  32. Restrictions make no sense. by twitter · · Score: 1

    While I recognize their desire to protect their content...

    I don't. What restrictions are reasonable for state monopoly content that you have already paid for? Why should the BBC keep people from sharing when there's no loss of revenue and it reduces their costs by using networks more efficiently?

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

    1. Re:Restrictions make no sense. by DrXym · · Score: 1

      The BBC is not a state monopoly. And you claim you've paid for the content, but how does the BBC know you've paid for that content? I already suggested a way that they could restrict content to people who are eligible for it - via their TV licence and watermarking. I also said that users should be able to do anything they like with it within reason. Everybody else can and should get lost.

  33. It's all about $$! by antdude · · Score: 1

    It's all about money. I bet MS paid BBC to use their stuff.

    --
    Ant(Dude) @ Quality Foraged Links (AQFL.net) & The Ant Farm (antfarm.ma.cx / antfarm.home.dhs.org).
  34. jesus by veeoh · · Score: 0, Troll

    I wish the anally retentive pricks that are threatening to spoil the iplayer get told to get to their rooms, or at least get out and meet girls.

    God it makes me seeth.

    1. Re:jesus by startling · · Score: 0, Flamebait

      You utter, utter, complete and utter pillock. You unthinking twat. Are you so dim that you cannot see the wider implications of this issue? Believe me, I loathe spelling and grammar lamers as much as anyone but, in your case, since you're so obviously a fuckwit who pretends to be a writer by boasting about being published on what appear to be sockpuppet sites, I'll make an exception. Why do you 'seeth' about people who are rightly pointing out that the BBC should, at the very least, be seen to be independent rather than giving the convicted monopolist company, Microsoft, an unfair commercial advantage?

    2. Re:jesus by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0
      Can I play too?

      You drooling freetard asshat! You basement-dwelling pile of stinking pustulence! You hairy-palmed social inadequate!

      Fun, innit.

      (and, as a pedant, you should appreciate that there's no such thing as a "convicted monopolist", since having a monopoly isn't illegal)

  35. The VHS will destroy the movie industry! by Scrameustache · · Score: 1

    it's to stop the existing sales to foreign networks collapsing to nothing when people can get the programs off the internet. Yes, because that's not a boogey man and you can prove it?

    DRM is snake oil. It can't stop anything: It's cracked, it's circumvented, it's preempted. The only thing this folly of the BBC accomplishes is that it makes it a crime to view otherwise free BBC content on a machine not running Windows.
    --

    You can't take the sky from me...

  36. Open Source DMR Project :) by ClaraBow · · Score: 1

    What we need is a solid open source DMR project that is cross-platform. Now, couple this project with an open source media player of your choice and all the problems with proprietary DMR goes way. The added benefit of open DMR is that when someone cracks the protection scheme, we have the source at our disposal to fix the problem quickly.

    1. Re:Open Source DMR Project :) by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Cool.

      Not sure how it relates to DRM, but sounds good.

    2. Re:Open Source DMR Project :) by ianare · · Score: 1

      No. What we need is no DRM.

  37. Supporting other OS ... later! by pbhj · · Score: 1

    >>> "The BBC has said multiple times that they intend to support other OSes in time."

    Unfortunately the BBC now thinks it's a commercial enterprise - paying presenters by the million when any half decent presenter of the thousands could do their job for maybe at most 80-100k; copying other channels rather than providing an alternate choice; quantity over quality, etc. - part of this commercialisation has been a lack of real honesty IMHO. Check out the recent revelations about their ripping off people who phone in to their shows ... not what you expect of an enterprise supposedly run solely for the benefit of the license paying public.

    I don't trust the BBC when they say other OS will follow shortly - partly because they're not choosing a platform agnostic solution and partly because I don't think the DRM solution they want (for unsound reasons*) is even possible.

    ---
    * they say the DRM protects the interests of other broadcasters - that however is not the BBC's remit. We pay for the programs, I don't care if Sky, Virgin, whoever makes less money for their shareholders because I was forced to pay for something else.

  38. Netflix are you listening? by jumping+jeff · · Score: 1
    The uproar over Microsoft only content and the DRM restrictions reminds me of NetFlix, the US DVD distribution service.

    Netflix is offering live video content over a Windows PC through Internet Explorer. I love NetFlix and have a PC but my primary home PC is a MAC and if I can't use FireFox and can't use a Mac it's game over.

    For media distributors, get the message. Your customers don't want lock in by platform, OS, or browser.

  39. The only real problem... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    is it uses more bandwidth than ISPs can handle. No one cares whether or not it works on linux.

  40. How many people at the street protest? by spectecjr · · Score: 0, Troll

    Looking at the photos.. all of 15 people?

    Seriously... who cares?

    --
    Coming soon - pyrogyra
    1. Re:How many people at the street protest? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      I would venture to say that you're not one of the people who care...you Microsoft shareholders are like that, I suppose.

    2. Re:How many people at the street protest? by spectecjr · · Score: 1

      I would venture to say that you're not one of the people who care...you Microsoft shareholders are like that, I suppose.

      *rotfls*

      Nope, sorry, don't hold any Microsoft stock. Don't actually hold any stock in any company at all. But hey, nice ad hominem attack there, buddy.

      --
      Coming soon - pyrogyra
  41. TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREETING by LordSnooty · · Score: 2, Informative

    does that TV tax actually cover television programs distributed over the Internet?
    The simple answer is to read the BBC's Royal Charter - scroll to point 5, "How the BBC promotes its Public Purposes: the BBC's mission to inform, educate and entertain", and make what you will of this:

    The BBC's main activities should be the promotion of its Public Purposes through the provision of output which consists of information, education and entertainment, supplied by means of (a) television, radio and online services; (b) similar or related services which make output generally available and which may be in forms or by means of technologies which either have not previously been used by the BBC or which have yet to be developed.
    Since the online output is already generally available via television that commitment is fulfilled - there is no extra content on the iPlayer to my knowledge. But, the point about tech which is 'yet to be developed' makes it unclear. Ultimately they may have a responsibility to be fair, but there's no actual obligation to provide it at all.

    One thing is clear, in the real world this ground-breaking project was never going to get off the ground without some form of DRM to stop casual copying, for two simple reasons - many of the BBC's shows are supplied by independent producers, and the BBC itself has an interest in the post-broadcast DVD market. Neither would want to allow their exploitation of the product to be killed by multiple high quality copies al over the Internet. Yes I know this happens already, but it's not on a massive scale yet, and it would be naive to think that profit-seeking companies would want to sign up to a scheme that would only increase it.
  42. BBC ISP by PacketScan · · Score: 1

    Time for BBC for Buy some Fiber and some new peering arrangements.

  43. This should not surprise anyone... by jivasbarabbas · · Score: 1

    Everyone was warned about this quite some time ago. If they had pushed in earnest for Net Neutrality, none of this would even be possible. Save the Net has been actively trying to prevent this for MONTHS in the US. But too many dopes with their heads in the sand got fed the line "this is purely theoretical - there's no proof any ISP is planning to throttle or censor Internet content" (take the extremely vapid nonsense being spewed at handsoff.org for instance) and now the chickens have come home to roost. This is only the beginning - and the folks in the UK are getting exactly what they deserve for sitting on their fat arses while a handful of business men began debating what the public should and should not have free access to. I'm very pleased that this is in the public arena now. Perhaps people will FINALLY stand up, take notice and take the steps necessary to prevent things like this from happening again in the future. I highly doubt that will happen though. How sad. The solution IS more investment in Internet technologies, but that should be a matter of public debate to ascertain where the monies will come from. I certainly know where it's going right NOW...and it's not in new technology. It's going into the pockets of the same few businessmen who are complaining about broadband shortages. I pay dearly every month to have access to the fastest technology available right now. Where the HELL is MY MONEY going??? Or everyone else's for that matter?? By the end of 2007, China will have 57 million broadband subscribers and the U.S will have 54 million. 111 million people times, let's say 30 dollars a month on average, for broadband. That's over 3 BILLION dollars...A MONTH available to various ISPs from just 2 countries to manage and invest in Internet infrastructure. I am deeply sorry, but the stated justification for "taxing" entities like the BBC because they provide free services that are overwhelming existing Internet bandwidth resources is a load of hogwash. There's already plenty of money in the pipeline to pay for the necessary upgrades and supply should follow demand. I demand the right to have unfettered access to resources like iPlayer, I pay through the NOSE to have those demands met and now it's up to the ISPs to SUPPLY IT utilizing their ENORMOUS revenue streams in a less greedy fashion. And that's all I have to say about that.

    1. Re:This should not surprise anyone... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      A new paragraph now and then does wonders for readability. Try it sometime.

  44. multicast and ipv6 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    If they announced the content would only be available over multicast and even better over ipv6 multicast then im sure all the uk ISPs would fall over themselves to get this implemented. Would solve the bandwidth and access control problem in one hit.

  45. Happy for other people to pay... by fantomas · · Score: 1

    Most folk in the UK will grumble about the price of the licence fee. On the other hand, most people in the UK really like the BBC not having commercial breaks and really enjoy being able to watch a whole episode of "Heroes" or "Dr. Who" or a feature length movie without a break, and realise the money has to come from somewhere. Most people are pretty happy with the idea that the BBC sells on the programmes it produces to broadcasters in other countries and uses the money to turn out more high quality programmes. We don't mind if you like our programmes and want to pay us some money to see them. Gives us more money to do more cool things. I think it's quite a substantial earner, as well, not just a little bit.

    Folk aren't too stupid - they know it's public broadcasting but they realise it still needs money. And to be selfish, if foreign sales can keep the licence fee down, most people would approve of that! There's a belief that Auntie Beeb still turns out high quality drama and sometimes off-the-wall humour and bringing money in allows a freedom and quality that isn't always possible in some countries with more commercial broadcasters. Folk are proud that seemingly uncommercial programmes can get given a chance.

    1. Re:Happy for other people to pay... by zoney_ie · · Score: 1

      Have pity for us in Ireland - we pay a TV licence fee to our government, yet our publicly funded broadcaster, RTÉ, gets to use commercial advertising too. You'd think of course they'd have great home-produced content? Hah hah hah hah. I'm just happy that one can usually get BBC without too much hassle here in Ireland, although it usually involves paying cable/satellite providers.

      If we ever get Digital Terrestrial here, it could be used to broadcast BBC (encrypted and requiring a minimal monthly fee) - except that unsurprisingly enough, RTÉ will let that happen over their dead bodies (they control the current transmission network).

      --
      -- *~()____) This message will self-destruct in 5 seconds...
  46. Feared uproar did not occur by vorlich · · Score: 0, Troll

    I am a UK citizen and the last time I counted, I had approximately 72 cousins (Pre-war families were large and post war families weren't much smaller) all of my cousins and their respective parents (my aunts and uncles) have been emailing me to declare their utter outrage at this decision of the BBC.
    My children have emailed me, my grandchildren have emailed. My extensive set of nieces and nephews including the German side of my family who have only ever heard of the BBC World Service, have emailed me.
    Friends and acquaintances have been emailing me and even a guy I met in the pub in 1994 who lived in the bottle bank with his dog, in Irvine Place emailed me. An elderly woman I once shared a rather amusing conversation about the British Weather, while waiting on the number 55 bus emailed me. All two thirds of my old High School,(approx 2000 people - including cousins) whom I knew well enough to greet by name emailed me. The 162 members of my University computer science course emailed me. The entire fan base of New Youth who are very familiar with me, as the manager who sold them out to the man, emailed me.
    All the people who organised the street party for the Royal Wedding in 1981 in my old street, emailed me, they were outraged too.

    Not.

    I guess they must have all missed it?

    Bummer!

    --
    Posts, MyBio or Sig, may contain satire, sarcasm, bolded nouns be sardonic or even witty & be Church of SD
  47. Petition misses the point by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    The petition misses the whole point about why DRM is used in the iPlayer

    Unline other "on-demand" players (*cough* 4 on demand *cough - more on that later) the BBC isn't selling videos. They are allowing you to download them free.

    Why the DRM then? It's to do with licensing of the content. The BBC cannot just willy-nilly broadcast things. They have to strike arrangements, pay royalties and the like. They've obviously managed to negotiate a royalty for these downloads, probably because of the somewhat restrictive terms therein (you can download for 7 days after the programme orginally airs, then must watch it within 30 days). If this was not possible, those royalties and payments would have been considerably (prohibitively?) higher.

    I have no problem with them using DRM for this purpose. The iPlayer is a great way of catching a show you've missed without having to stay up and watch the repeat at some ungodly hour of the morning. It's useful, and very convenient.

    4 on demand is a very different kettle of fish. They still have the "free catch up" downlodas on offer, but they also sell content. Have a read of the F.A.Q. - they've managed to come up with every possible horror story that could affect your downloads, and the answer to each one of them? Pay again. Crashed hard-drive? Pay again. Re-install OS? Pay again. Transfer to another hard-drive when running out of space? Pay again.

    That's the kind of DRM I'm against.

    I do think that the BBC should offer paid-for downloads to people who have a problem with their (frankly very reasonable) terms. Perhaps £1.50-£3.00 per episode to cover license costs. That way everyone is happy.

    I know this isn't a particularly popular P.O.V. here on Slashdot, and I'm normally on the other side of the fence (I think DRM is abhorrent in paid-for-content - see the Google Video debacle for a good primer on why). I just think that the BBC iPlayer is a very narrow exception to the rule (maybe I'm just biased as I find it useful).

    Long story short. If I had to choose between BBC iPlayer with DRM or no iPlayer at all, I'd probably choose DRM, it's the lesser of two evils. I would rather a paid for option though, and would definitely use that if it were made available.

  48. OT: Tea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    "I recommend Yorkshire Tea--am not affilliated with them, it's just bloomin' good tea."

    Im a recent coffee convert, coffee is great for a hit, but tea is much more soothing and relaxing...

    So what is this Yorkshire Tea, is that a brand or a flavour ?

    Im on Dilmah extra strength atm, twinings/english breakfast is nice, hate early grey/green tea/herbal tea with a vengance !

    1. Re:OT: Tea by jeevesbond · · Score: 1

      So what is this Yorkshire Tea, is that a brand or a flavour ?

      It's a brand, you can get it on Amazon, there's also a 'British shop' that stocks it near here. T'was recommended to me by a tea taster!

      Im a recent coffee convert, coffee is great for a hit, but tea is much more soothing and relaxing...

      Agreed, coffee is good first thing in the morning to get you going. Tea is good for the afternoon, along with some nice Digestive biscuits dunked-in. It's all a matter of choosing the right tool for the job. :)

      --
      I'm going to transform myself into a mighty hawk. Either that or I'll just go and work at Dixons, haven't decided yet.
    2. Re:OT: Tea by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Yorkshire Tea is a brand, but honestly, it's just a blend of "everyday" English tea that is very similar to almost every other blended tea. If you're already drinking Twinings Breakfast tea, you're close enough already (Although if you can get it, Twinings Everyday Tea is even closer).

      Of course real men drink PG Tips...

      hate early grey/green tea/herbal tea with a vengance !

      Earl Grey is flavoured with Bergamot, a bitter citrus fruit, and it is an acquired taste. Green Tea is O.K but doesn't quite work as a traditional English cup of tea (I.e. with milk & sugar) and of course, herbal teas arn't really tea at all in the sense that they have no tea leaves in them.

  49. BBC, Virgin/NTL and Microsoft by Bloater · · Score: 1

    The Beeb is heavily dependent on its relationship with Virgin Media for the UKTV channels and will depend on them to kickstart demand for iPlayer-to-the-TV. Microsoft has a significant stake in Virgin Media, which is constantly working with Microsoft on various projects and depends on them to swell the capital for various developments and services.

    Ultimately, the BBC thinks it needs Microsoft because it thinks it needs UKTV and it will do what Microsoft wants as long as that is true.

    We are fortunate that Virgin Media is having its spat with BSkyB over Sky One because it makes the BBC slightly more important to it than it would otherwise have been since it needs the UKTV channels to make their basic service as valuable as it is just that little bit more. That in turn slightly decreases the BBCs dependence on Microsoft - probably not enough.

    It is interesting that the BBC recently referred to "... the popular Linux ..." and also, after months of responding to calls to produce a Linux version of the iPlayer with (paraphrasing) "the BBC is committed to releasing a version for Mac" finally said it would release a version for Linux - but that would depend on the actions of third parties, which I assumed meant that the BBC would release a Linux version if Microsoft agreed to permit Linux to be an option for the British license payer.

  50. Nope, I'm happy with this! by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I have no problem funding other peeps if it gets us DRM free content.

    rgds

  51. not exactly by Weezul · · Score: 1

    It's pretty obvious that anyone with a UK TV license should have full access. And they could sell internet only licenses pro-rated for your country of origin. But why should anyone get DRM infested crap? It's not like they've ever cared about UK Nova.

    DRM free was a major opportunity for pushing British cultural exports.

    --
    The Christian religion has been and still is the principal enemy of moral progress in the world. -- Bertrand Russell
  52. Re:BBC ISP by _Shad0w_ · · Score: 1

    You mean like all the links and peering they have on their network diagram...

    The BBC used to have an ISP, but they sold it off to some other company because it wasn't worth their while to run it, iirc.

    --

    Yeah, I had a sig once; I got bored of it.

  53. Thank you the OSC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I would like to thank the OSC for fucking up a system which would have made viewing BBC content more convenient for the 90% or more of us that use (and in a lot of cases perfectly happy with) our choice of the OS with the largest market share. I would like you to understand that in voting terms you are not even a significant minority in voting terms so the rest of us would kindly like it if you rolled up and died. Thank you for your time

    1. Re:Thank you the OSC by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      No need to worry: I'm sure the BBC will - once again - do the right thing and wait for the yellow-suited fuckwits to crawl back into their parents' basements before ignoring them completely. Which is, of course, as it should be.

  54. It's time to forget broadcasting. by twitter · · Score: 1

    The BBC is not a state monopoly. And you claim you've paid for the content, but how does the BBC know you've paid for that content?

    If you have to pay a fee because you own a television and BBC gets to use the money collected, BBC is a monopoly power. It would be easier on everyone if they just taxed each house instead of pretending to be fair to people who don't own a TV. Internet provided TV makes the old model look even sillier.

    If that's done, why bother to restrict the files? You still have not explained to me why someone who's paid their fees should not be able to share their shows with their friends, so I still don't understand.

    --

    Friends don't help friends install M$ junk.

  55. Linux DRM is impossible by Rix · · Score: 1

    You could just write a kernel module to grab whatever is being "protected".

    1. Re:Linux DRM is impossible by oliverthered · · Score: 1

      On windows you don't even have to do that, all you have to do to rip itunes songs is hit the record what I hear button, play the song in itunes and rip away.

      --
      thank God the internet isn't a human right.
  56. Fair solution by I'm+Don+Giovanni · · Score: 1

    Apparently Linux and Mac UK users are pissed that their taxes go to the BBC yet they can't use iPlayer because it's currently a Windows only thing.

    Here's the solution:
    Divide the cost required to support a particular platform among the users of that platform.
    For instance, let's say it takes two million dollars to support iPlayer on Windows, two million to support it on Linux, and two million to support it on Mac. OK, so the obvious solution is for the BBC to charge all of its Windows users a combined two million dollars in fees/taxes, charge all of its Linux users the same, and its Mac users the same. Of course, since Windows has 92% userbase share, Mac has 5%, and Linux as 1%, each Linux user would pay 5 times as much as a Mac user and 92 times more than a Windows user, but fair is fair. If you don't go along with this, then what you're asking the BBC to do is to go out of its way spending tax dollars paid by 92% of its users (Windows users) just to satisfy 1% of its users (Linux users). Let Linux users pay the amount it takes to support Linux.

    Or, let the BBC refund to each Linux user the handful of pounds of his taxes that went into iPlayer.

    --
    -- "I never gave these stories much credence." - HAL 9000
    1. Re:Fair solution by bogie · · Score: 1

      "Let Linux users pay the amount it takes to support Linux"

      But your pulling numbers out of your butt with regards to how much it really would cost to support linux users. It is not likely that it is 92% harder or more expensive to port it to linux. If the entire project took 365 days to code and only 14 of them to port to linux part what then? How about the idea that Windows users would be responsible for say 92% of the bandwith costs to run the back end and linux only represented 2% of the costs, etc.

      --
      If you wanna get rich, you know that payback is a bitch
  57. Obligatory Bill Bailey quote... by Curmudgeonlyoldbloke · · Score: 1

    It's almost as good as taping it... on tapes that self-destruct after a week.

  58. The problem the BBC has by jonwil · · Score: 1

    Is that they have obligations with all kinds of 3rd parties and they have to take steps to make sure that iplayer content is NOT viewable by anyone without a TV license and is NOT viewable after however long the service lets you view content for. Which generally means DRM. And right now Microsoft Windows Media DRM is the only viable solution for video DRM (unless you count DRM from Real Media which is just as bad and installed on far less computers than Windows Media DRM)

  59. Re: DRM is ridiculous by Kazoo+the+Clown · · Score: 1

    The funny thing is, with some of these DRM systems, even if you have the platform that it is supposed to work on, many people still can't make it work. I downloaded a legal FREE download of a TV program from AOL and found that it just wouldn't run on my Windows XP box due to some DRM issue with the computer (now, this is a FREE download, mind you). I'd like the program bad enough to actually PAY for a DVD of it if one were available. Whoever the content provider is can actually get MONEY out of me for this if what they provide isn't defective, but given they haven't I'm spending this weeks media budget on someone else's content. Doesn't matter if it's FREE, it's useless if it's defective. Ya gotta laugh at the arrogant and clueless minds that conceived of this stuff.

    In my book, it's not about free stuff. I'm perfectly happy to pay for content. But, it must have these characteristics for that to happen:

    1. Not just downloadable. I want something physical for my money-- a disk in the mail, primarily. Frankly, if I'm paying, one of the things I'm paying for is something that preserves the value of my purchase-- my purchase must be resaleable, and that legitimate disk is that resaleable entity. Etherial datastreams have little percieved value, and the media corporations insistence on it in the face of new distribution and replication technologies is IMHO the reason for the drop in their sales.

    2. No time limit. It can't "stop working" after awhile, either based on elapsed time since purchase or the number of times it's been watched or listened to.

    3. In an OPEN format. A format that can be made to play on future devices that don't even exist yet, possibly on a different media, that can be converted and that can be backed up.

    4. Reasonable cost. DVDs <$20, CDs < $10 (don't ask me about HD, I'm in no particular hurry to go there and it doesn't yet meet #3).

    Note that most of these criteria are about preserving value. I rarely go to the movie theater because the experience does not justify the cost for me. I will go to a live concert or live theater performance, and there the cost is justified-- I can't see paying $8 or whatever movies cost these days to sit in a too-small theater and have to pay inflated prices for unhealthy snacks when I can buy the DVD and watch in the comfort of my own home and pause it when someone has to take a leak or refill their snack dish. Even at home though, I'm not willing to pay $5-$20 for media that I can only watch for a limited time, won't work with the next generation of playback systems, that I can't let friends borrow or can't resell.

    Can such a combination be abused? Undoubtedly, but that's the age we live in-- even without P2P music trading, college students can still convert their CDs to MP3 and trade them en-masse to their local circle of friends, which can significantly propagate the content. Welcome to the information age, guys. GET USED TO IT. The RIAA isn't gonna fix it, and their pathetic attempts are *really* bad PR. And DRM doesn't stop the abuse, it just pisses off those who try to legitmately access the content and motivates them to look for alternatives that actually work.

    That's my criteria for spending $$$ on content. I buy quite a bit of media that fits all the above criteria (though DVDs only do because of deCSS, and not all DVDs because many are overpriced). But I don't buy ANY media that does not, and waste no more time on supposedly FREE media that's simply, broken.

    Want my money you big media corporations? It's simple-- all you have to do is EARN it.

  60. Clouded issues by Durzel · · Score: 1

    First off I'm both a Windows and Linux user, in business and home life. I have no axe to grind one way or the other, I use each OS on its own merits.

    That said I think the whole BBC/iPlayer furore has more to do with DRM than any "Windows only" agenda. As has already been remarked (and unless I'm mistaken) DRM isn't achieveable through open-source players. The BBC will have a mandate to enforce licensing restrictions on the programmes it places on its iPlayer service - they're not "free" for everyone to view, they're only intended for people who have otherwise already funded it in the first place (i.e. UK licence fee payers).

    The BBC have already stated that a Mac version is coming - and you can be sure that this will implement whatever DRM methods Apple media players support.

    The argument about the security (or lack thereof) of DRM implementations is academic at the end of the day. The BBC have to at least show that they have taken steps to protect their "clients" (for want of a better word) interests. If, how and when the DRM is cracked on it at least they can say they tried, and it was ultimately "Microsofts fault".

    There is a difference between implementing something you know is ultimately going to be cracked anyway - like pretty much any copy protection on a game or application - and not putting any copy-protection at all in place, and this is the same.

  61. BBC is not a profit driven business by mongrol · · Score: 1

    And there I thought everyone paid a license fee to pay for the BBC. Surely someones dropping a ball (or a globe) and somehow forgot to commision advertising to "profit".

    1. Re:BBC is not a profit driven business by MBraynard · · Score: 1
      No, they are for-profit. They are not the same as CPB who is not for-profit (though all of the producers of their programing are for-profit).

      Note a story on Teletubbies boosting BBC profit... as reported by the BBC.

  62. Re:TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREET by LuYu · · Score: 1

    . . . the BBC itself has an interest in the post-broadcast DVD market.

    The question is: Does the BBC have the right to wall off this content which has already been paid for just to guarantee future profits on DVD sales? If the programming is paid for by government mandated TV Licenses (which it appears to be), is it fair -- or even legal -- for the BBC to even charge money for DVDs? The public already paid for those shows. Why should they have to pay again?

    --
    All data is speech. All speech is Free.
  63. With respect to ISPs' concerns... by msquared.id.au · · Score: 1

    I can understand why the ISPs are worried about P2P traffic affecting all customers.

    One of the great things about P2P is that it reduces load on servers. Servers are bottlenecks. However, P2P doesn't necessarily remove the bottleneck, just move it. I think ISPs are discovering that their pipes are now becoming the bottlenecks, and they're trying to protect their pipes.

    Perhaps a solution is a relatively simple modification of P2P clients: modify them to favour peers that are closer (in network hops) over peers that are not. This would mean that most traffic would be *within* a network, rather than *between* networks, thus reducing load on the pipes between ISPs...

    As for the DRM issues, I agree that BBC should drop DRM.

  64. What about non-computer users? by LostGamer · · Score: 1
    Most of the threads are bitching about a design choice to Beta iPlayer on Windows rather than on *all* platforms. Companies - public or otherwise - should be able to make simplifying decisions like this during development to give them a chance of ever making it to release. If there's sufficient demand, they can add or fund additional platform support.

    As for those who bitch about excluding the It's a pity that a well-intentioned, poorly reasoned perspective ("make the technology available to everyone or no one") may keep the BBC firmly out of the internet video age.

    1. Re:What about non-computer users? by LostGamer · · Score: 1
      So much for my typing skills.

      The main point I was trying to make (that got mangled in the 2nd paragraph) is that there are more people who pay a TV license fee and don't have ANY broadband, than there are people with broadband who don't have Windows.

      The same argument made against doing a Beta Windows-only applies to the BBC doing anything electronically. Think of all the people who pay the TV license that don't have home access to electronic content such as internet video and even - in some cases - websites.

      Funny I don't see anyone screaming for their website to be taken down.

  65. They begin 0870 by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Sorry. In this country we PAY to call customer support through premium rate phone numbers used as standard. They begin 0870.

  66. Tea! by Goth+Biker+Babe · · Score: 1

    You can get Yorkshire Tea in the US. It's my cuppa of choice and when I'm based in El Segundo, LA County, I buy it from the local Ralphs. I can even get marmite! The interesting thing is trying to make a decent cuppa once you have proper tea and milk but you only have a coffee machine...

  67. What bit is "easy" by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I don't have windows, therefore in order to use this player, I need to

    a) buy a machine with windows
    b) install a home network
    c) keep the new machine working

    Oh, you mean easy for THE BBC.

    Well tough titty. If I'm paying for it, I want it. If I ain't getting it, then I aint paying. What's that? Detector vans, well, I want a refund then...

    Oh, now it's not the easy option for them either.

    So how about using Dirac to encode the datastream and using bittorrent for distributing their content. All they lose is the ability to lock the content down, but they already have the cash that pays for the work done, so nothing is "lost" just nothing new gained. Live with it.

    1. Re:What bit is "easy" by RightSaidFred99 · · Score: 1
      You're mising the point. First, you have a TV, no? So you can get the BBC. That's all you're entitled to. Internet streaming is an extra service. A lot of people don't even have PC's, so obviously it's not an entitlement you all have some "right to".

      Sorry, no refund. I'm paying for all kinds of shit I don't want to pay for. How do I get my refund for paying for some lazy whore to pop out 5 kids and have them taken away and taken care of by the state?

  68. Tough titty for the rights holders by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    I tell the BBC (who I pay, so I'm the Boss. "It's your BBC" they say) don't use MS's code. Write your own. Bill me and let me have the source. Since the BBC are the rights holders, they can do this.

    NOTE: They also make the programs, so are the rights holders there too.

    MS loses a revenue stream? Tough titty.

    "Slashdot requires you to wait between each successful posting of a comment to allow everyone a fair chance at posting a comment.

    It's been 23 minutes since you last successfully posted a comment"

  69. Doesn't bother me by DaveDerrick · · Score: 1

    I use iPlayer, I dont care what format they choose to deliver their content in or if it has DRM. If I want to watch it, thats the flavour it comes in, if you dont like it then dont watch it. What does annoy me is the Kontiki P2P service, its constantly eating into my bandwidth by uploading my downloads to other clients. My bandwidth costs me money, why should I be paying to help the BBC redistribute its content ?

    1. Re:Doesn't bother me by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Do what I do then, ctrl-alt-del, terminate KService in task manager.

  70. Any BBC viewer should have the right to: by mrcgran · · Score: 1

    Any BBC viewer should have the right to:

    1) See the BBC content without having to buy MS Windows (or any other OS for that matter). BBC therefore should make its contents available using open formats such as OGG, openly available to free operating systems such as GNU/Linux, *BSD, OpenSolaris etc. (http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Ogg)
    2) Record a BBC program for personal use, as BBC viewers have been doing since the invention of VHS recorders. Therefore, no DRM should be used, since it doesn't restrict the bad guys (just see DVD's DRM fate) and it just cripples legitimate viewers rights of doing personal copies.

    ==
    == Having to buy MS Windows to watch BBC is the same
    == as having to buy air to breathe.
    ==

    BBC, wake up!!!

    1. Re:Any BBC viewer should have the right to: by Durzel · · Score: 1

      1) Open formats aren't compatible with DRM. You have to understand that irrespective of your opinion about DRM, the BBC has to use it to protect the rights, royalties, etc of the artists and programmes it redistributes.

      BBC programmes aren't free, they're available to people who have a TV licence which - as it's mandatory - should be anyone with a television set. It just seems like they're free because you (presumably) have a TV licence so aren't restricted in any other way from watching and recording their programmes.

      2) It doesn't matter that DRM can be cracked. Copy-protection routines on games and applications are routinely cracked and removed, but that doesn't stop publishers continuing to use them. Why? Because these publishers have to at least try and protect their interests to appease their shareholders, etc.

      The big problem with this argument is technically speaking the general licence-fee paying public should be entitled to watch the iPlayer programmes without DRM, on any platform. However, since it can't be guaranteed that they are licence payers (people from places outside of the UK could just as easily download and use it) how else are they supposed to protect their interests other than through DRM?

    2. Re:Any BBC viewer should have the right to: by mrcgran · · Score: 1

      1) Open formats aren't compatible with DRM. You have to understand that irrespective of your opinion about DRM, the BBC has to use it to protect the rights, royalties, etc of the artists and programmes it redistributes. BBC programmes aren't free, they're available to people who have a TV licence which - as it's mandatory - should be anyone with a television set. It just seems like they're free because you (presumably) have a TV licence so aren't restricted in any other way from watching and recording their programmes.


      The DRM that BBC wants to adopt ends up being a proprietary (in this case Microsoft's) Digital Restriction Management.

      But the best way to manage restriction access (in order to be fair to the rights/royalties of the artists,producers and shareholders) is to use well-proven and studied mechanisms such as simple login+password to access the BBC OGG content. In this case, BBC licencees would be able to access the OGG content from any operating system (GNU/Linux, *BSD, Plan9, etc etc), while still protecting the content from anyone not paying the TV license. Gee, a paranoid BBC should just put a random watermark (or even a random plaintext tag) associating the downloaded OGG stream with the login, and if this OGG shows up on P2P networks, or other public place on the Internet, BBC can easily track down the offender and lock down his/her BBC iPlayer account (much like the guy who distributed digital pictures of the latest Harry Potter book and ended up having its digital camera serial-number found). If you say that any motivated-enough offender can remove the tag, I say that any motivated-enough offender can also remove any proprietary DRM. So, better stick to non-proprietary methods that are simpler and cost less to the legitimate user.

      There's lots of well-proven non-proprietary open methods like these for doing these restrictions, there is NO need to use instead an undisclosed proprietary everybody-knows-it-wont-work nobody-but-microsoft-knows-how-it-works i-will-have-to-buy-ms-windows Microsoft-only WMV+DRM.

      2) It doesn't matter that DRM can be cracked. Copy-protection routines on games and applications are routinely cracked and removed, but that doesn't stop publishers continuing to use them. Why? Because these publishers have to at least try and protect their interests to appease their shareholders, etc. The big problem with this argument is technically speaking the general licence-fee paying public should be entitled to watch the iPlayer programmes without DRM, on any platform. However, since it can't be guaranteed that they are licence payers (people from places outside of the UK could just as easily download and use it) how else are they supposed to protect their interests other than through DRM?


      The Microsoft's proprietary DRM does not work as a method to restrict access to payees only, because it requires both the encrypted content AND the key to be available during playblack in your local computer, so anyone (even viewers not paying the licence) can access the supposedly 'protected' content.

      The practical non-proprietary way to restrict access to TV-licence-payees-only is to use simple login+password. MS-DRM, sadly, only makes it much more difficult for the legitimate BBC-licencees to COPY the program for personal use, time-shifting and backup, a widely accepted fair-use practice during the VHS years: because the tools available to the normal user do not know how the MS-DRM content is encoded or they do not allow the legitimate user to do the copying the way he/she wants. This artificial MS-DRM proprietary restriction is annoying to the legitimate user, ends up costing more to the user and the society (everybody has to buy windows, there's no competition to improve media formats because everybody must use MS-formats only, etc), and it does not make it more difficult for the organized pirate organization to copy, because they can build these tools, like the DVD-DRM fiasco any many others show.

  71. Iplayer is Windows only by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    So the BBC is basically showing the finger to anybody that has decided not to make Uncle Bill richer.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  72. What is wrong with using an standard format? by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    One that could be supported amongst multiple platforms?

    You are "proposing" (and here, I use the word generously) a solution taking the stand that Linux users are leeches.

    IF we were going to use the same methods of reasoning any minority would have to pay more taxes in order to receive equal treatment by any tax funded agency. I am sure you don't want to go down that alley of reasoning.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  73. There is no viable solution. by jotaeleemeese · · Score: 1

    Because there is no solution that works in all devices.

    If the BBC needs to introduce DRM then they should invent their own distribution methods that would be platform independent.

    If they had asked the help of the FOSS community I am sure that a solution could have been reached.

    --
    IANAL but write like a drunk one.
  74. Um, no by Rix · · Score: 1

    Microsoft is entirely capable of hiding secret, protected paths to and from hardware in it's closed code. In an open source OS, you can just redirect those paths.

  75. Re:TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME, GREET by SpiritSniper · · Score: 1

    I know they think they are covered by the fact that the programmes have already been aired on TV, but the cost of creating the iplayer is coming from license fee payers. Now intentionally leaving out a cross section of fee payers is simply wrong. And they'd been using RealPlayer just fine until whats his name from microsoft took over at their online media wing. I don't want to be paying them to develop a product that I will never be using.