ABC Leads The Ad-Supported Way

from the desperate-lost-grey-housewives dept

Last month, ABC said it planned to offer ad-supported versions of its shows on its web site, and it’s now offering more details: a new version of ABC.com will launch April 30, featuring episodes of several popular shows that users can watch online. They’ll be able to pause, fast-forward and rewind — but won’t be able to skip the three built-in ad breaks. They will, however, be able to choose if they want to see a normal video ad, or a more interactive one, like a game. Shows will be available the morning after they’ve aired, and eventually ABC will store archives of episodes so users can watch an entire season. This sounds like a pretty solid plan (despite some miggling faults), and ABC deserves some kudos for being the first to step into the breach. Of course, some stakeholders will get upset, like retailers concerned about the service undermining DVD sales. But those worries are unfounded. ABC is just grabbing the low-hanging fruit, essentially translating their broadcast content to the web. By adding additional services — like the removal of ads on DVD versions, or formatting the content for portable devices — there’s still a market for paid content. What ABC is doing, and rightly so, is offering consumers the choice of how they want to receive content, and how it should be paid for, either by purchase, or by advertising.


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Comments on “ABC Leads The Ad-Supported Way”

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16 Comments
anon says:

Re: Sounds reasonable ....

If I had to guess, I’d say WMP. On the up side, as long as you legally own a copy of Windows, you can use the codecs on another system. I run Debian at the house (and keep an old Windows XP CD that I bought before I used linux), and have no problem running any video or audio format using VLC or MPlayer and the plugin for Firefox.

I wish people would go to an open format, but you know what they say: wish in one hand…..

Waste o Space says:

Good Times, TV sucks

They are not the first to do this sort of thing, but folks really like their content so it’ll get lots of hype.

I’d say most likely they’ll require WMP 10, and have the content DRM protected to force you into thier advertising. But.. Content is one thing, what about delivery and qualtiy? “DVD Quality” is more than bits. and how long with a straight download take for a 1 Gig Episode of a 30 minute show?…

Waste o Space says:

Good Times, TV sucks

They are not the first to do this sort of thing, but folks really like their content so it’ll get lots of hype.

I’d say most likely they’ll require WMP 10, and have the content DRM protected to force you into thier advertising. But.. Content is one thing, what about delivery and qualtiy? “DVD Quality” is more than bits. and how long with a straight download take for a 1 Gig Episode of a 30 minute show?…

Alex C says:

I wonder if this content will be available to Europe. I see it as a viable option if the advertising shown is selected according to which country you are in.

On demand content via the internet and targeted advertising should be the future all together. Shouldn’t it?

This is also gonna reduce the pirated copies found on the net. ABC doesn’t really care about selling DVDs if they’re getting advertising revenue.

Besides, timeless shows will be bought on DVD anyway.

The question is, when are movies gonna be released with regulated advertisement content free and on demand over the internet. The possibilities for this sort of thing are endless.

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