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Rabu, 17 Juli 2013

Google Said to Weigh Supplying TV Channels

If Google has its way, you might someday get cable television the same

way you get Gmail: through any ordinary Internet connection.

Foreshadowing a new challenge to entrenched cable and satellite

providers, Google is one of several technology giants trying to

license TV channels for an Internet cable service, according to people

with direct knowledge of the company's efforts.



No deals are imminent. But Google's recent meetings with major media

companies that own channels are a sign of the newfound race to sell

cablelike services via the Internet, creating an alternative to the

current television packages that 100 million American households buy

from companies like Comcast and Time Warner Cable.



Intel is hard at work on one such service and companies like Sony and

Microsoft have previously shown interest in the same idea, called an

"over the top" service because the channels would ride on top of

existing broadband connections. They need support from the channel

owners, though, and so far that has been tepid.



Google, which also owns YouTube, the world's largest online video

site, declined to comment on its television interest. But by

instigating conversations with channel owners about a service that

would compete with the likes of Comcast, the company is taking a

different tack than its rival Apple, which has been trying to

collaborate with both channel owners and their distributors on a TV

offering.



"Google feels the need to beat Apple to the punch," said one of the

people with direct knowledge of the meetings, who like the others

interviewed spoke on condition of anonymity.



Apple's thinking, according to these people, is that any

next-generation television service must be set up in partnership with

existing distributors, in part for quality assurance reasons. A future

Apple service could include a user-friendly interface layered on top

of Time Warner Cable or Cablevision's channel lineup. "Apple's working

within our current ecosystem," one of the people said.



What Google and Intel, and probably others, have in mind is more

disruptive and more difficult. One person involved in the talks with

Google cautioned that the company might end up just selling a library

of TV shows, the way Netflix, Amazon and Hulu already do. But others

said that Google has pitched an easy-to-use subscription service that

would stream a bundle of live channels as well as on-demand shows,

replacing the cable bundles that most households now purchase.



Google, an advertising company at its core, has tried to make a dent

in the television business before. Previous talks with channel owners

in 2011 went nowhere. An attempt at an automated TV ad-buying system

was shut down last year. Broadband in the meantime has continued to

become more popular and more widely available, spurring interest in

alternatives to traditional television distribution.



Google's renewed push was first reported by The Wall Street Journal

Tuesday afternoon. Intel is trying to create a similar over-the-top

service, but it has run into roadblocks set up by Time Warner Cable

and other incumbent television distributors. These include contracts

between existing distributors and some channel owners that prohibit

the channels from being licensed to new competitors like Intel. An

Intel spokesman declined to comment on Tuesday.



Another challenge involves channel owners like the Walt Disney Company

and Viacom, who could stand to benefit or suffer greatly from the

potential service, depending on how it is developed. Some owners doubt

that there is much of a market for cable via the Internet in the first

place, and they are content with the three methods of distribution

they have today: cable companies like Comcast, the satellite providers

DirecTV and Dish Network, and the fiber optic providers Verizon FiOS

and AT&T U-verse.



But if Intel, Google or another firm succeeds in selling a cablelike

bundle, some of those existing distributors would almost certainly

start doing the same thing. That would represent a sea change for the

cable industry, whose firms have historically stayed with their own

regional footprints and avoided direct competition with each other.



One of the reasons DirecTV recently tried, unsuccessfully, to buy Hulu

was because the Web site could have helped position the company in an

over-the-top marketplace.



One of the country's smaller cable companies, Cox Communications, is

already trying what amounts to this service in Orange County, Calif.

There, the company recently started selling a bundle of nearly 100

channels to its customers who have broadband but not cable TV. The

company has called it a "small trial," and it declined to comment on

its status on Tuesday.



"We are still early on, results and customer feedback will determine

if we proceed with any future plans on this product," Todd Smith, a

Cox spokesman, said.



A cable service delivered via the Internet would most likely have to

compete on quality — say, superior features like more space for

digital video recording — rather than on price. That is because, as a

Government Accountability Office report on the marketplace put it last

month, "networks generally offer significant discounts based on the

number of subscribers a provider has. Thus, a substantial disadvantage

that an entrant has relative to a large provider is that it will

likely have higher programming costs, making entry challenging."



But Google, Intel and the others eyeing the television space are

deep-pocketed giants. And they have another thing going for them: in

customer satisfaction surveys, they are a lot more popular than the

cable guys.

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