Similar Articles |
|
Wired February 25, 2008 Frank Rose |
Dear Hollywood Studios: If You Hold Digital Downloads Hostage, the Pirates Win We should no longer have to drive to the video store or wait for the mail carrier. But that's not the case. The entertainment industry is blowing it once again. |
BusinessWeek April 9, 2007 Stephen H. Wildstrom |
Now Playing: Digital Disarray Hollywood's piracy fears are stifling online video expansion. |
CRM December 2011 Eric Barkin |
The Monday Morning Numbers on Movie Marketing How international growth, social media, and a decline in DVD sales are changing the film industry's marketing strategies. |
BusinessWeek October 24, 2005 Peter Burrows |
Hollywood Holds Its Breath The iPod - and Disney's blessing - could create a mass audience for video on the go. |
IEEE Spectrum June 2006 von Lohmann & Seltzer |
Death by DMCA A flood of legislation released by the passage of the Digital Millennium Copyright Act threatens to drown whole classes of consumer electronics. |
Reason April 2005 Julian Sanchez |
SuitTorrent Hollywood vs. downloaders: Newer programs such as BitTorrent have made it practical for Internet users to swap the much larger files required to store movies and TV shows, pushing Hollywood into the same hot seat as the record labels. |
PC World March 2006 Dan Tynan |
Hollywood vs.Your PC: Round 2 Legal options in digital entertainment are growing. But they come with restrictions that can hobble your ability to enjoy the content you've paid for and even threaten your control over your system. |
Macworld August 2000 Christopher Breen |
Steal This Song Will Napster Change The Way we Buy--or--Don't Buy Music Forever? |
Fast Company John Paul Titlow |
And The Awards For The Most Illegally Downloaded Oscar Movies Go To... Piracy remains a challenge for the film industry, whose wares make up a significant portion of illegal downloads overall. |
PC Magazine March 14, 2007 Muchmore & Kaplan |
Broadband Cinema Movie download sites eliminate the trips to the video store and the wait for Netflix mail. Is there a catch? |
eCFO April 2001 Russ Banham |
The Terrors of Tinseltown Peer-to-peer file-sharing, which enables users to swap digital content, could cut the major studios out of the distribution loop. Here's a look at the CFOs behind the Napsterization of Hollywood... |
Fast Company December 2005 |
Peer-to-peer: The Problem is the Solution The future of film distribution will take a cue from the pirates of today. |
The Motley Fool January 5, 2004 W.D. Crotty |
Not-So-Scary Movie Does piracy threaten the movie studios? Not just yet. |
HBS Working Knowledge August 17, 2011 Kim Girard |
Protecting against the Pirates of Bollywood Despite a thriving movie industry in India, Hollywood studios have experienced difficulty making much money there. Researchers discovered a complicated mix of piracy and plagiarism. |
BusinessWeek July 14, 2003 Grover & Green |
Hollywood Heist Will tinseltown let techies steal the show? The ripping and burning of movies to DVDs is growing into a global underground industry that last year cost film studios an estimated $3 billion in lost DVD sales. It's prodding the guys in Guccis into action. |
PC World August 2003 Frank Thorsberg |
Consumer Alert: Copy Controls Crackdown Multimedia lovers find themselves caught in a digital vise these days, as Hollywood tightens its copyright controls on movies, games, and music on DVDs and CDs -- most recently squeezing customers accused of copyright infringement in court. Technology is starting to offer some relief, though. |
Wired October 2009 Daniel Roth |
NetFlix Everywhere: Sorry Cable, You're History Netflix CEO Reed Hastings has a vision -- every movie ever made on every screen everywhere. |
PC World December 2003 Anne Kandra |
To Copy or Not to Copy? Here's what the law says you can -- and can't -- do with digital media files. |
PC Magazine December 8, 2004 John C. Dvorak |
Deja Sue The movie industry seems levelheaded and smart. Now it's setting itself up to follow the failed strategy of the RIAA. And it's doing so for no apparent reason other than the fear created by the RIAA. |
The Motley Fool April 3, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
Want Movie Downloads? Pay Up! Digital movie downloads? Good. Paying $30 a pop? Not so good. Given the fees and the limitations involved, it seems that this development mostly pays lip service to the nascent digital downloading industry. |
The Motley Fool July 17, 2006 Alyce Lomax |
Movie Download Dreams and Dilemmas Digital downloading of feature-length movies may be an idea whose time has come. While the party may have started, there's still a lot of work and planning left to do. |
InternetNews March 10, 2006 Ed Sutherland |
Amazon Latest in Video Download Arena? The giant is reportedly thinking about it, but the services, while gaining popularity, are still 'not a slam dunk.' |
Salon.com March 13, 2002 Damien Cave |
Chained melodies Copyright-holding corporations are pushing new laws and computer-crippling technologies in their war on piracy. But can anything keep geeks from copying the music and movies they crave? |
Fast Company December 2005 Alan Deutschman |
Building a Better Movie Business It's the iconic American industry. But audiences are vanishing, piracy is soaring, and new technology is treacherous. Can Tinseltown innovate its way out of trouble? |
PC World March 15, 2002 Tom Spring |
Copy Controls: Fair Use or Foul Play? Hollywood, techies, and Congress wrangle to control what digital video you can store, swap, and see... |
BusinessWeek December 29, 2009 Ronald Grover et al. |
Netflix vs. the Hollywood Studios The subscription service wants to deliver films directly to your TV or PC. Studio heads are balking. |
Fast Company December 2005 Scott Kirsner |
Maverick Mogul Broadcast.com founder Mark Cuban is questioning everything about the film business - and naturally ticking a lot of people off. |
The Motley Fool August 19, 2009 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Nixing Netflix Would Be a Huge Mistake Time Warner wants to delay releases to Netflix or charge more. Either way, Time Warner loses. |
Salon.com July 30, 2002 Farhad Manjoo |
Sour notes The legal crackdown hasn't squelched MP3 trading -- it's just made it more of a pain. But the music industry would still rather fight than give its online customers what they want. |
BusinessWeek December 27, 2004 Lorraine Woellert |
Why The Grokster Case Matters The high court faces a hard choice between innovation and copyright protection. |
BusinessWeek May 28, 2007 Ronald Grover |
I Oughta Be In Pictures Smelling opportunity, heavy hitters are suddenly cranking up new studios. |
The Motley Fool February 14, 2007 Nathan Alderman |
The Serpent in Apple's Garden Now that Apple's moving from music into movies and TV, has the Mac maker begun to jeopardize its success by aligning itself more with the content-creating industry heavyweights -- at the risk of alienating the customers responsible for its current download dominance. |
Wired October 2004 Chris Anderson |
The Long Tail Forget squeezing millions from a few megahits at the top of the charts. The future of entertainment is in the millions of niche markets at the shallow end of the bitstream. |
The Motley Fool August 18, 2006 Steven Mallas |
DVD: Devalued Disc? Even though many of the free movies British newspapers are giving away might be antiquated, there's no question that such a marketing move does corrupt the image of the disc as a premium commodity. Why do studios allow this to go on? |
BusinessWeek July 11, 2005 Ronald Grover |
What's Driving The Box Office Batty Hollywood is pushing movies to DVD and video faster -- and theaters are feeling squeezed. And with the price of cinema tickets skyrocketing, this gives movie fans new clout. Clearly, some big script changes are in store. |
The Motley Fool July 19, 2011 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
Netflix Can't Kill the DVD The movie studios won't let it -- yet. |
InternetNews April 4, 2006 David Miller |
Movie Studios Offer Downloadable Films Now playing on a PC near you: downloadable movies available for purchase on the same day they're released on DVD. But the price - up to double the cost of DVDs - may be too steep for consumers. |
BusinessWeek June 19, 2006 Ronald Grover |
The Pornographers vs. The Pirates Smut giants are showing mainstream Hollywood how to fight back. |
Popular Mechanics March 2007 Glenn Derene |
Movie Download Site Comparison: Test Drive The future of buying and renting movies is streaming now to a PC near you. But not all online flicks are equal. Here's what you get with your near-instant gratification. |
Knowledge@Wharton July 2, 2003 |
Online Music Wings its Way to the Celestial Jukebox In a celestial jukebox, instead of downloading songs to a computer hard drive or burning them onto a CD, listeners log onto a site that streams the music directly to their computers for immediate listening. It's like having your own all-request FM channel. |
Home Toys October 2005 |
DVD Insider #42, #43 and #44 Here is some insight about what's happening in the home technology and DVD industry: Beta Will Change the World... Next Gen - The Public Be Damned... I Did It My Way... etc. |
New Architect March 2002 Bret A. Fausett |
Data Control Or Quality of Service? It's difficult to deliver QOS in digital entertainment without having the kind of control that contracts and copyright protection schemes afford. Unfortunately, these are precisely the controls that have bedeviled the free sharing and use of information... |
PC World April 12, 2002 Tom Spring |
Gateway Ads Hit Sour Chord With Music Industry RIAA calls anti-copy controls campaign 'misleading scare tactics'... |
BusinessWeek October 8, 2009 Grover & Lowry |
Squeezing Every Dime from DVDs With consumers flocking to low-cost Netflix and Redbox, Hollywood wants a bigger share of the profits. |
InternetNews February 6, 2007 Nicholas Carlson |
Wal-Mart Joins Video Download Party All the major studios are on board. Is Apple's iTunes store in trouble? |
BusinessWeek May 5, 2011 Michael White |
This Summer, Hollywood Could Use a Hero Hollywood will roll out big-budget movies almost weekly this summer in an effort to erase a $500 million box-office deficit so far in 2011. |
PC Magazine February 16, 2005 Michael J. Miller |
What's Hot for 2005 Wirelessly streaming, wearable technology and HD TV reign at Consumer Electronics Show. |
Reason May 2002 Mike Godwin |
Hollywood vs. the Internet Why entertainment companies want to hack your computer... |
The Motley Fool October 7, 2011 Rick Aristotle Munarriz |
3 Reasons Why Comcast's $60 Movies Will Fail The cable giant is testing on-demand rentals of nearly first-run features. |
The Motley Fool February 2, 2010 Tim Beyers |
Why the iPad Is Great for Netflix For the first time in seven years, DVD sales trailed movie theater sales in 2009. Enter Apple's iPad to the rescue. |