Archive for July 19th, 2010

DECE’s UltraViolet DRM locker is ultra-useless

Jim O'NeillThere hasn't been much news about the Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (DECE), the industry group that has the backing of most major Hollywood studios, CE manufacturers and retailers, DRM vendors, Sony, Cox, Comcast and a number of other heavy hitters in the industry, of late.

The group, which has nearly five dozen members, was put together to make it easy--and make it secure--to give consumers keys to premium content they purchased so they can keep it in the cloud, but use it on a number of devices, TVs, PCs, and smartphones for example. DECE was formed, in part, to try and create a standard, industry-wide anti-piracy technology that would be compatible with any device.

This week, it rolled out UltraViolet, which it says will be an online digital rights management locker that will store the various rights consumers acquire for a piece of content.

Retailers, like Best Buy, or service providers like Comcast, will send info about a consumer's purchases or rentals to UltraViolet, which will then unlock the content to compatible-and authorized-devices that the consumer owns for downloading or streaming.

It's a dense system of rights management that many in the industry are depending on to end--or at least slow down-video piracy, while allowing the first steps to be taken toward a Hollywood-equivalent TV Everywhere landscape.

The problem--aside from the name which, really, is meaningless to consumers (and pretty much anyone in the industry)--is that the DECE has moved at a glacial pace and, unable to overcome its own inertia, has become a dinosaur even before it rolled out its first product.

At least one industry exec told me the DECE was doomed before it even started: In trying so hard to include all the players, it created a lumbering beast that was unable to make the decisions it needed to make quickly enough to move the project forward. The result? Companies have continued to cobble together their own DRM solutions or turned to third-party vendors to help them. Two of the biggest players in the sandbox, for example, Disney and Apple, are working on their own DRM solution called KeyChest.

There's no doubt DRM needs to be standardized, especially since consumers desperately want their content to be as portable and mobile as they are. And, as DVDs follow VHS tapes into the ranks of "Jeopardy" answers in the category "Antique Entertainment Media," it's increasingly likely we've seen the last generation--or near enough--of physical media.

The DECE, although it's announced UltraViolet, acknowledges that the digital-rights locker still has no firm timetable for rollout and hasn't finalized the technical specs. Members of the group say they expect the trials to begin this year. Good luck.-Jim

French hospital chooses GoBackTV’s RetroVue platform

GoBackTV, the Menlo Park, Calif.-based supplier of digital video headend and edge solutions, has implemented its RetroVue personal TV solution at the Central Hospital in Douai, France. RetroVue was installed as part of an end-to-end bedside patient entertainment solution, and was delivered by GoBackTV's local partner, Telecom Services, an Operator for the Healthcare sector.

The platform gives patients access to digital TV, time-shifting and video on demand services from GoBackTV, as well as access high-speed Internet, email, telephony, and games via a single user interface running on touch-screen multimedia terminals. Hospital staff can also access clinical applications and patient records using their touch-screen terminals.

"GoBackTV's RetroVue allows us to offer cutting-edge entertainment services to our patients, which enhances the quality of their visits," said Edmond Mackowiak, Director of the Central Hospital Douai, one of the newest hospitals in France. The complex has a total of 450 multimedia terminals for the use of the patients and the hospital staff.

"Our objective was to bring a contemporary solution to the hospital that allows in-patients not just to be entertained and informed but to do that on their own terms," said Pascal Wagener, CEO of Telecom Services." "We recognize that more and more hospitals in France wish to offer not just broadcast TV to their patients, but also to offer a range of personal entertainment services, including video-on-demand and TV time-shifting. To date, we have used RetroVue in more than 12 hospitals."

GoBackTV's RetroVue allows hospital patients to rewind broadcast video, to start over a program whose beginning they missed, or to pause live TV during medical procedures and resume when the doctor or the nurse has left.

"People want their TV to be personalized, and it is no surprise that time-shifted TV is gaining momentum in hotels and hospitals, where having more control over how they watch video really improves the customer experience," said Dave Baran, president of GoBackTV.

For more:
- see this release

Related articles:
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Rumor Mill: Boxee looks at earlier STB release

Boxee was scheduled to release its set-top box, the Boxee Box, in June, but the company pushed back the release until the fourth quarter as it and partner D-Link continued to polish the product. Several news reports this week said the release date had been moved up from the November date announced by Boxee CEO Avner Ronen last month.

Andrew Kippen, Boxee's VP for marketing, told FierceIPTV the reports are the result of the off-the-cuff video that showed the latest STB shell and was intended to be shared among Boxee "friends and family."

"Truth is that there has been no change in release date (still November)," said Kippen. "And people are chomping at the bit for this little box and jumping on every word. We've taken that into account for the next time we make a home movie."

If the amount of play the Boxee rumor got is any indication of potential demand, it's no surprise, as Boxee CEO Avner Ronen said in June, that Boxee and D-Link would like "to start selling the boxes yesterday."

Boxee has to be working to get its STB to market before Google TV--and now possibly Apple TV--grab the spotlight. Google has plans for a fourth quarter roll out and just about everyone is waiting for Apple to drop the other shoe as well; there's been a number of rumors and reports that Apple is getting ready to turn its hobby into a business.

Boxee says it wants to bring to market a box that is as good or better than it's PC client, one that plays HD videos from the web or a local network in 1080p and use hardware acceleration whenever possible.

For more:
- see this article

Related articles:
Boxee stalls on STB; hooks up with Sonic Solutions for premium content streaming
Boxee to make the jump to the iPad
Boxee boss urges MSOs to compete 'over-the-top'
Google TV and the OTT space: Winners and Losers