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Category: MediaTransformationUpdate

MediaTransformationUpdate

  • Google Strikes Deal to Bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV

    Google Strikes Deal to Bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV

    Google has beat out its rivals to secure a deal with the NFL to bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV and YouTube Premium.

    Amazon, Apple, and Google were all in the running to secure NFL Sunday Ticket, beginning with the 2023 season. Apple was considered to be a frontrunner before backing out of the negotiations.

    Google has now secured a multi-year deal with the NFL to bring the programming to both YouTube TV and YouTube Premium.

    “We’re excited to bring NFL Sunday Ticket to YouTube TV and YouTube Primetime Channels and usher in a new era of how fans across the United States access, watch and follow the NFL,” NFL Commissioner Roger Goodell said. “For a number of years we have been focused on increased digital distribution of our games and this strategic partnership is yet another example of us looking towards the future and building the next generation of NFL fans.”

    “YouTube has long been a home for football fans, whether they’re streaming live games, keeping up with their home team, or watching the best plays in highlights,” said Susan Wojcicki, CEO of YouTube. “Through this expanded partnership with the NFL, viewers will now also be able to experience the game they love in compelling and innovative ways through YouTube TV or YouTube Primetime Channels. We’re excited to continue our work with the NFL to make YouTube a great place for sports lovers everywhere.”

  • Substack Is Experiencing an Outage

    Substack Is Experiencing an Outage

    Digital newsletter platform Substack is undergoing a major outage, with the entire website inaccessible.

    Shortly before 1:00 PM ET, Substack posted a message on its status page saying it was investigating an issue. Roughly an hour and a half later, the issue was still unresolved.

    Visitors to the website are being greeted with the following message:

    We’re performing maintenance right now, but will be back shortly!

    Please check back in a few minutes or go to substack.statuspage.io for updates—we’ll get you back to reading your favorite writers as soon as we can!

  • UK Government Rules Netflix Password Sharing Illegal

    UK Government Rules Netflix Password Sharing Illegal

    Netflix customers in the UK are in for a big disappointment, with the government ruling that password sharing is illegal.

    Netflix password sharing is a common practice and one the company condoned for much of its history. The company appears to be backing off of that stance, and is widely believed to be preparing for a major crackdown on the practice.

    According to TorrentFreak, Netflix’s attempts to reign in password sharing may have just received a big boost from the UK government. The UK Government’s Intellectual Property Office published new privacy rules that make password sharing illegal, potentially even opening users up to “criminal liability for fraud.” The rule impacts Netflix, as well as virtually all other major streaming platforms.

    “There are a range of provisions in criminal and civil law which may be applicable in the case of password sharing where the intent is to allow a user to access copyright protected works without payment,” the IPO told TorrentFreak.

    “These provisions may include breach of contractual terms, fraud or secondary copyright infringement depending on the circumstances.”

  • Epic Games Fined $520 Million Over Child Privacy Laws & Dark Patterns

    Epic Games Fined $520 Million Over Child Privacy Laws & Dark Patterns

    Epic Games, the creator of Fortnite, has been fined $520 million by the FTC for failing to comply with child privacy laws and employing “dark patterns.”

    According to the Federal Trade Commission, Epic violated the Children’s Online Privacy Protection Act (COPPA) by collecting massive amounts of data without parental consent. What’s more, the company made it needlessly difficult for parents to request that any data regarding their children be deleted. Because the company licensed and marketed various Fortnite-inspired toys and merchandise, the company could not say it didn’t know that many of its users were children.

    In addition, the FTC accused Epic of using so-called “dark patters” to trick children into unintentional purchases. As a result, the company was fined $275 million for the COPPA violations, and will pay another $245 million in refunds for dark pattern purchases. The company is also required to change Fortnite’s default settings to better protect children’s privacy.

    “As our complaints note, Epic used privacy-invasive default settings and deceptive interfaces that tricked Fortnite users, including teenagers and children,” said FTC Chair Lina M. Khan. “Protecting the public, and especially children, from online privacy invasions and dark patterns is a top priority for the Commission, and these enforcement actions make clear to businesses that the FTC is cracking down on these unlawful practices.”

    “The Justice Department takes very seriously its mission to protect consumers’ data privacy rights,” said Associate Attorney General Vanita Gupta. “This proposed order sends a message to all online providers that collecting children’s personal information without parental consent will not be tolerated.”

  • Xbox Boss Fires Back at Sony Over Activision Deal Objections

    Xbox Boss Fires Back at Sony Over Activision Deal Objections

    Xbox boss Phil Spencer has fired back at Sony over the latter’s objections to Microsoft’s Activision Blizzard deal.

    Microsoft announced plans to purchase Activision for $68.7 billion in early 2022, a move that was met almost immediately with criticism and regulatory scrutiny. Sony has been one of the most vocal critics, claiming Microsoft will use the purchase to unfairly favor its Xbox console in the gaming market.

    According to VGC, Spencer is firing back, accusing Sony of trying to unfairly keep the Xbox a small contender to its PlayStation.

    “Sony is trying to protect its dominance on the console. The way they grow is by making Xbox smaller,” Spencer said in an interview on the Second Request podcast.

    “[Sony] has a very different view of the industry than we do. They don’t ship their games day and date on PC, they do not put their games into their subscription when they launch their games.”

    Much of Sony’s objections revolve around Activision’s Call of Duty franchise, which Microsoft has committed to keep on the PlayStation long-term.

    “Sony is leading the dialogue around why the deal shouldn’t go through to protect its dominant position on console, so the thing they grab onto is Call of Duty,” Spencer told Second Request.

    “The largest console maker in the world raising an objection about the one franchise that we’ve said will continue to ship on the platform. It’s a deal that benefits customers through choice and access.”

    It’s unclear if the Microsoft/Activision deal will go through, with regulators on both sides of the Atlantic increasingly objecting to it. The FTC most recently filed a lawsuit to block the deal from proceeding.

  • FTC Sues to Block Microsoft’s Purchase of Activision

    FTC Sues to Block Microsoft’s Purchase of Activision

    Microsoft’s efforts to purchase Activision Blizzard just took a major hit with the Federal Trade Communications (FTC) filing a lawsuit to block it.

    Microsoft announced a $68.7 billion deal in early 2022 to purchase Activision Blizzard, one of the biggest game studios in the industry. The deal sparked immediate concerns from rivals, especially Sony, that owning Activision could give Microsoft too much power in the game console market.

    Regulators on both sides of the Atlantic launched investigations, with the UK’s Competition Authority launching a challenge to the deal. The FTC has followed suit, filing a lawsuit to prevent the deal from moving forward.

    “Microsoft has already shown that it can and will withhold content from its gaming rivals,” said Holly Vedova, Director of the FTC’s Bureau of Competition. “Today we seek to stop Microsoft from gaining control over a leading independent game studio and using it to harm competition in multiple dynamic and fast-growing gaming markets.”

    The FTC makes the case that Activision is part of a very small group of top-tier game publishers that produce games for multiple platforms. The FTC is concerned that Microsoft could alter that dynamic, ending development for multiple platforms in favor of its own Xbox.

    Only time will tell if the FTC will prevail, but the odds of Microsoft’s deal moving forward just got much slimmer.

  • Xbox Game Studios Prices Increasing to $70 per Title

    Xbox Game Studios Prices Increasing to $70 per Title

    Microsoft is raising the prices of its Xbox Game Studios titles by $10, impacting new games starting in 2023.

    Microsoft develops and releases its first-party games via its Xbox Game Studios. The studio is responsible for titles such as Forza Motorsport, Redfall, and Starfield. Until now, titles were $59.99, but the company will begin charging $69.99 in 2023, according to The Verge.

    The company confirmed the change in statement to the outlet:

    We’ve held on price increases until after the holidays so families can enjoy the gift of gaming. Starting in 2023 our new, built for next-gen, full-priced games, including Forza Motorsport, Redfall, and Starfield, will launch at $69.99 USD on all platforms. This price reflects the content, scale, and technical complexity of these titles. As with all games developed by our teams at Xbox, they will also be available with Game Pass the same day they launch.

  • Amazon Prime Is the Top US Streaming Service

    Amazon Prime Is the Top US Streaming Service

    Amazon Prime has pulled off a major win against Netflix, supplanting it as the top streaming service in the US.

    The latest research comes from Parks Associates, and shows Amazon Prime taking the top spot in the US for the first time in 2022. In previous years, Prime consistently took second place.

    Nonetheless, despite Prime’s move up, Parks Associates believes Netflix is well-positioned to regain the top stop.

    “Streaming services are introducing new content, services, and partnerships that are changing how consumers interact with video,” said Jennifer Kent, VP, Research, Parks Associates. “Netflix’s ad-supported plan gives the company a way to win back subscribers who left over high subscription prices. It also gives Netflix a path to creating unique accounts for those who have been content to share passwords with friends and family in the past. It’s an exciting time to track these services, with lots of disruption and change.”

    Credit: Parks Associates
  • Media Groups Voice Support for Julian Assange

    Media Groups Voice Support for Julian Assange

    Media groups have come out in favor of Julian Assange, urging the US to drop the charges against him.

    Twelve years ago Monday, a collection of media outlets published portions of the 250,000 secret documents Assange gained access to in his role as Director of WikiLeaks. Since then, Assange has been wanted by US authorities and spent years holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in the UK before Ecuador revoked his asylum in 2019. Assange was set to be extradited to the US, but his legal team is currently fighting extradition, leaving him in London’s Belmarsh prison.

    According to The Guardian, a group of media outlets are petitioning the US government to drop its charges against Assange. The group includes The GuardianThe New York TimesLe MondeDer Spiegel, and El País.

    Below is a copy of the letter in its entirety:

    Publishing is not a crime: The US government should end its prosecution of Julian Assange for publishing secrets.

    Twelve years ago, on November 28th 2010, our five international media outlets – the New York Times, the Guardian, Le Monde, El País and Der Spiegel – published a series of revelations in cooperation with WikiLeaks that made the headlines around the globe.

    “Cablegate”, a set of 251,000 confidential cables from the US state department, disclosed corruption, diplomatic scandals and spy affairs on an international scale.

    In the words of the New York Times, the documents told “the unvarnished story of how the government makes its biggest decisions, the decisions that cost the country most heavily in lives and money”. Even now in 2022, journalists and historians continue to publish new revelations, using the unique trove of documents.

    For Julian Assange, publisher of WikLeaks, the publication of “Cablegate” and several other related leaks had the most severe consequences. On April 12th 2019, Assange was arrested in London on a US arrest warrant, and has now been held for three and a half years in a high-security British prison usually used for terrorists and members of organised crime groups. He faces extradition to the US and a sentence of up to 175 years in an American maximum-security prison.

    This group of editors and publishers, all of whom had worked with Assange, felt the need to publicly criticise his conduct in 2011 when unredacted copies of the cables were released, and some of us are concerned about the allegations in the indictment that he attempted to aid in computer intrusion of a classified database. But we come together now to express our grave concerns about the continued prosecution of Julian Assange for obtaining and publishing classified materials.

    The Obama-Biden administration, in office during the WikiLeaks publication in 2010, refrained from indicting Assange, explaining that they would have had to indict journalists from major news outlets too. Their position placed a premium on press freedom, despite its uncomfortable consequences. Under Donald Trump however, the position changed. The DoJ relied on an old law, the Espionage Act of 1917 (designed to prosecute potential spies during world war one), which has never been used to prosecute a publisher or broadcaster.

    This indictment sets a dangerous precedent, and threatens to undermine America’s first amendment and the freedom of the press.

    Obtaining and disclosing sensitive information when necessary in the public interest is a core part of the daily work of journalists. If that work is criminalised, our public discourse and our democracies are made significantly weaker.

    Twelve years after the publication of “Cablegate”, it is time for the US government to end its prosecution of Julian Assange for publishing secrets.

    Publishing is not a crime.

    The editors and publishers of:

    The New York Times

    The Guardian

    Le Monde

    Der Spiegel

    El País

  • Comcast Continues Its Race to the Bottom With $27 ‘Broadcast TV’ Fee

    Comcast Continues Its Race to the Bottom With $27 ‘Broadcast TV’ Fee

    Comcast is once again showing why it is among the most hated companies in America, charging customers a $27 “Broadcast TV” fee.

    While broadcast TV can be accessed for free via an antenna, cable and other TV providers must pay a fee to retransmit those stations. Despite the transmission fee, the amount of this price hike is substantial and may be difficult for customers to swallow, given the state of the economy.

    The TV Answer Man was the first to break the story, including the amount Comcast is raising prices:

    Comcast has started notifying customers and municipalities that it plans to raise video and Internet prices next month, including a whopping $7.35 a month increase for the Broadcast TV fee in one town.

    Comcast confirmed the price hike to The TV Answer Man:

    “TV networks and other video programmers continue to raise their prices, with broadcast television and sports being the biggest drivers of increases in customers’ bills. We’re continuing to work hard to manage these costs for our customers while investing in our broadband network to provide the best, most reliable Internet service in the country and to give our customers more low-cost choices in video and connectivity so they can find a package that fits their lifestyle and budget. Our national average increase of 3.8% is about half of the most recent rate of inflation.”

  • Netflix Ramping Up Game Production With Its First AAA PC Title

    Netflix Ramping Up Game Production With Its First AAA PC Title

    Netflix is wading deeper into the gaming market, with a job posting revealing it is planning to release its first AAA PC game title.

    Netflix posted the requirements for a Game Director role on its website:

    We’re looking for a creative and highly-skilled Game Director to help us forge the game direction and creative vision on a brand-new AAA PC game. As Game Director, you will be the creative leader of one of Netflix’s first generation of internally developed original games.

    The streaming TV company launched its game service in late 2021, focusing on mobile gaming for Android, iOS, and iPadOS. The company has hired top talent, including former EA exec Mike Verdu and launched its own internal game studio.

    Despite the company’s investment, its gaming efforts have yet to gain much traction. In fact, as recently as August 2022, 99% of Netflix customers had never tried one of the company’s games.

    Netflix no doubt hopes that branching out into the wider PC market, with a blockbuster AAA title no less, may get the attention it needs to make its gaming platform a success.

  • HBO Max Is Trying to Fix Playback Issues on Apple TV 4K

    HBO Max Is Trying to Fix Playback Issues on Apple TV 4K

    HBO is aware of an issue with HBO Max running on Apple TV 4K devices and is working to address it.

    Many users have reported “can’t play title” errors. The issue seems to be impacting all generations of Apple TV 4K devices, especially those running tvOS 16.1.

    HBO’s SVP of Communications Chris Willard confirmed to The Verge that the company is “aware and working on a fix.”

  • Amazon Commits $1 Billion a Year for Theatrical Releases

    Amazon Commits $1 Billion a Year for Theatrical Releases

    The movie industry received good news Wednesday, with Amazon committing more than $1 billion a year for theatrical releases.

    The movie industry has had a rough couple of years as the pandemic took a toll on in-person attendance. Amazon is deeply entrenched in the industry — for an internet company — thanks to its Prime Video service and its MGM studio acquisition.

    According to a report by Bloomberg, Amazon plans to make 12 to 15 movies a year for theatrical release. The combined budget will be more than $1 billion.

    The news led to a significant boost to cinema stocks, according to CNBC.

  • FTC ‘Likely’ to File Lawsuit to Block Microsoft’s Activision Deal

    FTC ‘Likely’ to File Lawsuit to Block Microsoft’s Activision Deal

    Microsoft may face its biggest challenge yet to its acquisition of Activision Blizzard, with a report saying the FTC is likely to file a lawsuit to block the deal.

    Microsoft announced a deal to purchase Activision for $68.7 billion in early 2022, one of the biggest tech acquisitions in history. The deal was met almost immediately with scrutiny, regulatory investigations, and challenges over concerns it would give Microsoft too much power in the gaming and PC market.

    According to a report by Politico, the FTC is “likely” to challenge the deal in court over concerns it would give Microsoft an unfair advantage. Nothing has been decided for certain, but the outlet’s sources say FTC commissioners are skeptical of Microsoft and Activision’s arguments in favor of the deal.

    As recently as September, CEO Satya Nadella was optimistic that the acquisition would win approval, but this latest development certainly casts doubt on that.

    As Politico points out, it would be a major blow to Microsoft’s image if the FTC manages to scuttle the deal. Microsoft has worked hard to position itself as separate from Apple, Google, Meta, and Amazon’s antitrust issues, touting itself as a company that learned its lessons decades ago and has an enlightened approach to competition.

  • Bob Chapek Is Out and Bob Iger Is Back In As Disney CEO

    Bob Chapek Is Out and Bob Iger Is Back In As Disney CEO

    Disney made waves late Sunday, announcing the ouster of CEO Bob Chapek and the return of Bob Iger in the role for two years.

    Chapek replaced Iger as Disney CEO when the latter retired, but Disney has faced multiple headwinds impacting its profitability. In the midst of increasing doubt in his leadership, the company decided to go with Iger, calling him out of retirement for a two-year contract.

    One of Iger’s main mandates will be to lower cost and improve profitability, both of which have become big issues in recent quarters. Disney+, in particular, has been a big drain on the company’s financial results, accounting for $1.5 billion in losses in the most recent quarter. That was up from $0.8 billion the previous quarter.

    Iger’s mandate will also include finding and grooming a suitable replacement for him, one that will carry on once his two-year term is up.

    Below is a full copy of Iger’s email to employees, obtained by CNBC.

    Dear Fellow Employees and Cast Members,

    It is with an incredible sense of gratitude and humility—and, I must admit, a bit of amazement—that I write to you this evening with the news that I am returning to The Walt Disney Company as Chief Executive Officer.

    When I look at the creative success of our teams across our Studios, Disney General Entertainment, ESPN and International, the rapid growth of our streaming services, the phenomenal reimagining and rebound of our Parks, the continued great work of ABC News, and so many other achievements across our businesses, I am in awe of your accomplishments and I am excited to embark with you on many new endeavors.

    I know this company has asked so much of you during the past three years, and these times certainly remain quite challenging, but as you have heard me say before, I am an optimist, and if I learned one thing from my years at Disney, it is that even in the face of uncertainty—perhaps especially in the face of uncertainty—our employees and Cast Members achieve the impossible.

    *You will be hearing more from me and your leaders tomorrow and in the weeks ahead. In the meantime, allow me to express my deep gratitude for all that you do. Disney holds a special place in the hearts of people around the globe thanks to you, and your dedication to this company and its mission to bring joy to people through great storytelling is an inspiration to me every single day. *

    Bob Iger

  • Tech News Website Protocol Is Shutting Down

    Tech News Website Protocol Is Shutting Down

    Tech news website Protocol is shutting down, with its roughly 60 staff facing impending lay-offs.

    Protocol was founded by Robert Allbritton, the former owner of Politico. The website was focused on tech news, and Allbritton hoped it would grow into a major force in the tech news industry.

    According to CNN, those hopes have been dashed, with Protocol slated to shut down later this week. The company broke the news in an all-hands meeting Tuesday. The company will cease publication on its website by Thursday, although its Source Code newsletter will continue for a few more weeks.

  • YouTube TV Is (Finally) Getting a Clock

    YouTube TV Is (Finally) Getting a Clock

    While it may be a small feature, YouTube TV (YTTV) is finally getting a feature that most of its competitors have had for years — a clock.

    As one of the most popular streaming TV services, it’s unusual when YTTV is missing a feature. It’s even more unusual when that feature is such a basic one that it’s hard to understand its omission in the first place.

    According to a post on Twitter, YTTV has finally added the lowly clock to the service’s interface.

  • EU Steps Up Its Investigation Into Microsoft’s Activision Deal

    EU Steps Up Its Investigation Into Microsoft’s Activision Deal

    Microsoft’s purchase of Activision Blizzard has hit another snag, with the EU opening an “in-depth investigation.”

    Microsoft announced at the beginning of the year that it was purchasing Activision Blizzard for $68.7 billion, making it one of the biggest deals in tech history. Almost immediately, regulators on both sides of the Atlantic expressed concern over the potential impact of Microsoft — the maker of the Xbox gaming console — owning the publisher of some of the world’s most popular gaming titles.

    Although the EU has already been investigating the deal, The Verge is reporting that it is moving to an “in-depth investigation.” The EU Commission plans to carry out its investigation over a period of 90 work days, meaning the deal could be delayed until March 23.

    The Commission said it was “concerned that the proposed acquisition may reduce competition in the markets for the distribution of console” and PC titles. The concerns don’t stop there, however, with the Commission afraid that Microsoft owning Activision could even help it shut out rivals in the broader PC market.

    “The Commission is concerned that Microsoft may reduce the ability of rival providers of PC operating systems to compete with Microsoft’s operating system Windows, by combining Activision Blizzard’s games and Microsoft’s distribution of games via cloud game streaming to Windows,” the Commission said in a statement. “This would discourage users to buy non-Windows PCs.”

    As recently as September, Microsoft CEO Satya Nadella said he was “very, very confident” the deal would be approved. Only time will tell if that sentiment proves true.

  • Alabama Media Group Goes All-Digital

    Alabama Media Group Goes All-Digital

    The Alabama Media Group is throwing in the towel on physical newspapers, instead opting for an all-digital approach.

    The internet has been the death-knell for many newspapers, especially local and smaller regional ones. The Alabama Media Group published four newspaper in Alabama and Mississippi, but the company is halting publication in favor of all-digital, according to The Houston Chronicle.

    “We remain deeply committed to serving our local communities and are producing high-quality journalism and reaching more people than ever before,” Alabama Media Group President Tom Bates said. “At the same time, we’re adjusting to how Alabama readers want their information today, which increasingly is on a mobile device, not in a printed newspaper.”

    The newspapers being retired are The Birmingham News, Huntsville Times, Mobile Press-Register, and Mississippi Press.

  • Warner Bros. Discovery Accelerating HBO Max/Discovery+ Merger

    Warner Bros. Discovery Accelerating HBO Max/Discovery+ Merger

    Warner Bros. Discovery is moving up its merger of HBO Max and Discovery+, crediting better-than-anticipated progress.

    As covered by our sister site, HiTechEdge, Warner Bros Discovery CEO David Zaslav has been working to merge the company’s HBO Max and Discovery+ in an effort to take on its larger rivals in the streaming space. Together, the two streaming services account for more than 90 million subscribers.

    According to The Verge, efforts to merge the two services are going so well that the company is moving up its targeted completion date. Whereas the initial plan was to launch the combined service in the summer of next year, the new target is the spring of 2023.

    As HiTechEdge noted, Zaslav’s goal is to have 130 million subscribers by 2025, so it certainly doesn’t hurt to get an early start.

  • Netflix’s Ad-Support Plan Has Arrived

    Netflix’s Ad-Support Plan Has Arrived

    Netflix has finally rolled out its ad-supported plan, although it won’t be free like many users may have hoped.

    Netflix has been looking for ways to jumpstart subscriber growth, with an ad-supported tier being one of the company’s biggest bets. According to CNN, the company is officially launching its ad-supported tier Thursday.

    The new plan will cost $6.99 per month in the US. The plan will also launch simultaneously in Australia, Brazil, Canada, France, Germany, Italy, Japan, Korea, Mexico, Spain, and the UK.

    Right out of the gate, Netflix is assuring potential advertisers that their values will be respected in an attempt to avoid many of the issues that have plagued other ad-supported platforms.

    “Advertisers will also be able to prevent their ads from appearing on content that might be inconsistent with their brand (e.g. sex, nudity or graphic violence),” Netflix said.

    “While it’s still very early days, we’re pleased with the interest from both consumers and the advertising community — and couldn’t be more excited about what’s ahead,” the company added. “As we learn from and improve the experience, we expect to launch in more countries over time.”

    The company’s plans will also be a big factor for Microsoft, the company Netflix partnered with to build its ads platform. Microsoft went all-in on its Netflix proposal in a successful effort to beat out Google and Comcast.