Tell Membership

Sign up for the FREE Tell Membership and receive benefits that include the digital edition of Tell Magazine sent straight to your inbox, product giveaways, coupons and much more!

 
 

WTFH: iTunes to give up on video?

Sections: Audio, Business News, Content, Features, Online Music/Video, Web, Websites, WTFH

1
Print Friendly

Is the end near for iTunes movie offerings? According to a recent study, the answer is yes. For-pay services will wither and die once a better distribution system is in place; oh and this system will be free.

The new paradigm will be the Google method of offering services that are advertisement supported. From Reuters:

“In the video space, iTunes is just a temporary flash while consumers wait for better ways to get video. They’re already coming,” said Forrester Research analyst James McQuivey, the author of the study, who also called the paid download video market a “dead end.”

The study goes on to say that video purchases will peak next year after tripling to $279 million this year. That is a big chunk of change to just disappear, but the proof is already around us.

Currently many of the major networks offer their hit shows for free today online. As network executives scramble to get advertisers, the result is radical changes. For the past year networks have scrambled to build their own YouTube, their own spot to show off content, but are the viewers coming? According to the Wall Street Journal, the year old InnerTube site created by CBS as its in-house player will be abandoned. Starting this week, you’ll find CBS content on as many as 10 other video portals such as Joost and AOL.

Can advertising supported content really survive? Will networks, studios and other content creators be able to cluck in the same hen house? So far they’ve not played too nicely together.

Read Study [techXtreme] Read Innertube [Wall Street Journal]

1
Print Friendly

One Comment

  1. I use iTunes TV for watching stuff when I'm away and the downside of the online viewing that I've seen so far is that I can't take it with me and watch on a plane or somewhere with no connectivity.

    I know other people who do the same. Until they let me download it to my iPod or other player I doubt this will work.

    bob

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

*