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Hollywood Drinks M'soft Koolaid
Posted by FolkTom Barger in on July 17, 2005 at 9:16 AM



http://www.latimes.com/technology/la-fi-micro17jul17,0,5340658.story?page=2&coll=la-home-headlines
Microsoft Courts Hollywood Allies
Humbled by Apple's success in music, the tech giant mends fences with the film world as it tries to conquer the home entertainment market.
By Joseph Menn
Times Staff Writer

July 17, 2005

REDMOND, Wash. — When Apple Computer Inc. transformed the digital music scene in April 2003 by selling songs over the Internet, the richest man in the world was not amused.

Microsoft Corp. Chairman Bill Gates had struggled for a decade to get his software into consumers' home entertainment systems. Now the digital media party was finally starting, and he wasn't invited.

But the blow gave Gates new insight, motivation and some needed humility — and it intensified work on what might prove the turning point in his quest to extend Microsoft's supremacy from the office into the living room.

Just weeks after Apple's seismic announcement, Gates and new AOL Time Warner Inc. Chairman Richard Parsons settled America Online's claim that Microsoft had crushed its Netscape software subsidiary with illegal monopolistic behavior.

More important, Gates and others said in recent interviews, the settlement led to a new relationship that has changed the course of Microsoft's fractious dealings with Hollywood. Since then, the Warner Bros. studio has guided its movie industry peers in quietly meeting Microsoft halfway on a range of contentious issues, setting the stage for the software giant to play gatekeeper for the home video business of the future.

The alliance with what is now Time Warner Inc. "is quite an amazing thing, given that they had a lawsuit against us and we were really mostly in conflict," Gates said in a recent interview. "We have a great, ongoing dialogue with them, including them guiding us on the concerns of other content companies."

Gates' battle to succeed in video where he failed in music is far from over. For one thing, the movie studios and television broadcasters are more prone to internal disagreement than were the record companies when Apple signed them up. That makes it trickier for Microsoft to forge content deals.

What's more, movie producers are under less financial pressure to rush to a download world: Unlike music sales, which have been declining, DVD revenue is still growing, although more slowly than it once did.

Even if they stick together, the content creators may stand pat, place their bets with multiple technology partners or choose someone other than Gates. In particular, few in Hollywood would be shocked to see Apple founder Steve Jobs pull another rabbit out of his hat, unveiling a perfectly thought-out system for moving paid video to computers and portable devices.

Meanwhile, Google Inc. and Yahoo Inc. already are getting users to contribute video to their sites for others to watch. And Time Warner's AOL is finally taking advantage of its parent's premium content, this month promising online video from Warner Bros., HBO and broadcast television.

Yet after investing billions of dollars and working doggedly behind the scenes, Microsoft executives are predicting visible results within a year.

"We'll see a broader range of movies available for both rental and ownership" via the Internet, Gates said from his corner office. And he said those movies would become available much sooner in their life cycle, "closer to the pay-per-view-type release date."

The pact with Time Warner called for Microsoft to pay $750 million in compensation for its misdeeds and for the two companies — until then mainly rivals in selling Internet access — to collaborate on ways to keep video from being copied indiscriminately. Parsons later directed Time Warner to join with Microsoft in buying a combined majority stake in ContentGuard, which holds patents on anti-copying techniques.

Walt Disney Co. was so concerned about missing out that it called Microsoft and asked for a similar alliance in writing, minus the cash. And the other studios are coming along, spurred by Gates' chats with News Corp. Chairman Rupert Murdoch and other industry captains, many of them at the annual media conference held by investment bank Allen & Co.

Hollywood negotiators say the key has been Microsoft's realization that it can't dictate terms the way it has with computer makers. After it was left in the dust by Apple's iTunes, they say, Microsoft's arrogance evaporated.

"They get it better than they used to," said one studio's new-media executive, who like others declined to be identified because of the sensitivity of negotiations. "They're trying to learn lessons from their failure on the music side, where Apple blew them out of the water."

Perhaps the most significant fruit emerged a year ago with the formation of a group that is close to finishing a rights-management system for high-definition video. Backers of the Advanced Access Content System, known as AACS, include tech firms Microsoft, Intel Corp. and IBM Corp.; media companies Warner Bros. and Disney; and consumer electronics companies Panasonic, Toshiba and Sony, which also makes movies.

Microsoft digital media chief Amir Majidimehr said AACS, which uses pieces of technology from Microsoft and other companies, would allow some content to be moved around within a home network, such as from a computer to a television.

The system would also allow the AACS group to reach into the house and change software if the system got hacked to produce unauthorized copies. That's a level of control rarely seen before the latest video game consoles.

But such control may alienate customers, analysts warn. Indeed, some consumer advocates complain that Microsoft is giving veto power over new technology to the risk-averse entertainment industry. Especially disturbing, they say, is the idea of buying a device that does something, only to have a piece of restricted content disable that feature later with a forced software "upgrade."

"The warning I'd like to see is: 'Here are all the things that can be removed from this device if someone somewhere does something naughty, and the studios decide to punish the innocent,' " said Cory Doctorow of the Electronic Frontier Foundation. "Microsoft and other technology companies are saying that the person who makes the record should be able to design the record players, and we have never given that power to copyright holders."

Gates said that such compromises were essential for drawing more content into the digital realm and that standard practices would emerge.

"Can I use it, can I lend it to my friend, can I use it in my summer home, what can I do with it? That's got to be clear," he said.

Controversy or no, AACS will be included in HD DVD, one of the two high-definition successor formats to DVDs. The competing format, Blu-ray, may follow suit.

For the negotiations with Hollywood, Microsoft last summer hired Blair Westlake, a longtime home video and television executive at Universal. Westlake advocated for some of the studios' concerns within Microsoft, said Disney Executive Vice President Salil Mehta, which made the people in Redmond "more cooperative."

Microsoft has even agreed to make architecture changes in its next-generation Windows operating system and is modifying its policy positions in Washington. Although the company previously opposed laws that would require anti-copying technology, for example, Westlake now says some might be appropriate.

Microsoft has reason to play nice. Its future depends on developing new uses for computers. As more PC users see their current machines as good enough for everyday computing needs, they delay buying new ones, which depresses Microsoft's sales. But if PCs could become true family entertainment centers, that would kick-start sales.

"It's important to us to get the content available," Gates said. Without the studios' work, "our platforms aren't very interesting."

Taking studios' copyright concerns seriously by working on AACS was one step to reassure Hollywood skeptics. Another came after Microsoft developed a technique for compressing large video files for easy transmission.

Facing suspicion that its VC-1 technology might give it too much control, Microsoft turned over the authority to license VC-1 to the same group that administers licenses for the industry-standard MPEG digital video format. That move won it enough backing from consumer electronics companies that makers of both HD DVD and Blu-ray players will support Microsoft's technology.

Another sign that Microsoft is loosening its tight control over technology has been its willingness to negotiate where consumers can move their content within the home and even how they move it within their computers.

Fashioned with considerable input from Hollywood, the forthcoming Longhorn version of Windows will allow rights-management tools made by Microsoft and others to keep video encrypted as it moves around inside the PC and stop it from leaving the home network.

"They can feel a sense of ownership of how it got pulled together," Gates said of the studios and broadcasters. "When we say to them, 'Hey, please make more content available,' obviously we need to be able to listen to what their concerns are."

Among the trickier remaining goals for Microsoft is making it easy for people to watch cable television on Media Center PCs, or computers based on a special edition of Windows that are designed to be used in living rooms as home entertainment centers. Some cable companies see Microsoft as an emerging competitor and aren't cooperating, instead offering their subscribers advanced recording functions in an effort to make cable-equipped TVs a more compelling choice than Media Center PCs.

Gates' longer-term plan involves a technology known as IPTV, or Internet protocol television. With that, Microsoft can circumvent the cable firms and deal with their rivals, the phone companies.

Some studios say they will be reluctant to give the phone companies much IPTV content if it will be locked into Microsoft's format and can't be transferred to devices relying on other protection schemes.

"I don't want my customers to have to pick a technology before they can pick content," said Mitch Singer, a Sony Pictures executive vice president and key negotiator.

Although Microsoft is seen as having a more complete technology for IPTV than rivals, the first large phone company trials of its system have been delayed because of quality issues.

But the content owners are watching IPTV's progress closely, Gates said. "They'll often say to us, 'Well, how many households, and in what year?,' and at this point nobody knows the exact number. But over the next five years, it will be definitely many tens of millions."

In the best case for Microsoft, Gates said, the phone companies will invest so much that the cable companies get nervous and invest in IPTV as well.

Whichever way it shakes out, Gates vows not to play the victim in "Son of iPod."

After learning a hard lesson in the digital music business, "we're really having to work more closely with partners in the hardware industry and content industry, to really think through the whole end-to-end experience and make it better," Gates said. "That's where we've done our mea culpa. We are fixing that."


User Comments

Advancedcaptdunsel
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 9:19 AM
so is that grape koolaid and is there some guy named jim serving it up?
DMemberJC123
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 11:47 AM
"The system would also allow the AACS group to reach into the house and change software if the system got hacked to produce unauthorized copies. That's a level of control rarely seen before the latest video game consoles."

I didn't know the latest video game consoles could come in and TELL my computer how to act. But if AACS can seriously do that, then the Big Brother idea has gotten quite a bit of steam.
AdvancedDeadMan2003
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 12:57 PM
They can suck on my yarballs
RockgdZiemann
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 3:31 PM
"The system would also allow the AACS group to reach into the house and change software..."

You know, this is what Microsoft's plan was with computer software, too. This is why every port in Windows is open by default. The end result is that people are throwing away their computers because of spyware and viruses.

If Microsoft leaves a back door open so they can "reach into the house," then so can every hacker in the world.
DMemberchrisbacke
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 4:31 PM
You know, we're all assuming that we're going to actually this piece of junk they're calling AACS. Will we have a choice? As long as there are Macs and Linux boxes...
DMemberTotallyFrust...
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 6:51 PM
One more reason to bypass Longhorn.....

I may be old fashioned, but I want my computer to simply be a computer. I have several television sets, and stereos that do what I want them to do.

As far as "missing out on the latest content"...I'm doing that anyway, and by choice. After all, that's at the heart of any boycott ;-) (Wink)
DMemberTotallyFrust...
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 7:06 PM
While I'm on this thing, I don't think we need to (once again) remind the fat cats of a few facts.

1) New technology costs too much. We as a national are at a point where the only thing stopping us from going bankrupt is our own unwillingness to admit we are broke. Take a look at DTV. All the money people as well as the government can't seem to understand why digital television is so slow to take off...Have you seen the price? Who has 8 grand to blow on a TV set? Even the projection based systems cost a grand or better when you tack on a "Digital Ready" tuner. (Wonder what that means, "Digital Ready"? Does that mean its thinking about it, but isn't quite ready to commit to the relationship?)

2) Then there are all the covert rule changes. We have seen and read testimonial after testimonial from people who found out the hard way about the DRM slipped into the content in the the middle of the night. Lincoln said it best..."You can fool all the people some of the time, some of the people all of the time, but you can't fool all the people all the time. I know more people that not who are just plain tired of stumbling over this crap after the money changed hands. Most of us (in my circle at least) have already decided that there isn't anything they can offer that will make it worth the cost of another frustrating experience.

3) Why do I need another format? All we have seen and heard so far from these "new and improved" formats is how much more "content" they can hold (and of course, as we have been pointing out, how much more DRM they will carry). Given the vast wasteland of commercials on the current format, there appears to be too much space as it is. What will be put on this additional space? More commercials that we can't fast forward through? The bottom line is simply what's in it for me to do yet another "upgrade". We have already determined that the majority have not been given a strong enough reason to lay out the dollars for the hardware so far, what could these new formats possibly bring to the average home to change this perspective?

I thing they have a bad case of clouded vision....Most likely the results of all those dollar signs in there their eyes.
Advancedawehr
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 7:13 PM
I agree.

Last year I was determined to build a DTV compatible g5.

To my dismay however, my research produced such contradiction in the standards alone (let alone the DRM concerns) that I decided I'd be waiting another 5 years.

I have uncles who add wings on their homes for fun, friends capable of the same, and NONE of them have upgraded to this crap...

It's more of a joke really. While these content cartels, bought politicians, and tech companies are stumbling over one another trying to come up with the mythical unicorn-like "unhackable drm system"... changing standards with each attempt... Consumers just sit back and scoff.
Advancedawehr
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 7:16 PM
Did I mention the DVD-A (dvd audio) standard utilizes more advanced DRM than AACS and has already been subject to initial cracks?

Apple has shown it's fairplay DRM to be dynamically updatable and "revocable"... and has been stunned as yet again and again the drm on not only the songs, but the store itself, was cracked.
Intermediatekimmylynn
Date: July 17, 2005 @ 7:57 PM
i want my computer, stereo, tv and dvd seperately. i choose it that way..... :) (Smile)
RockgdZiemann
Date: July 18, 2005 @ 12:52 AM
captdunsel -- It's Big Brother Bill's Berry Berry Blue.
RockgdZiemann
Date: July 18, 2005 @ 12:52 AM
...screen of Death
Otherindependentm...
Date: July 18, 2005 @ 8:26 AM
I have an image in my head of Cary Sue and Jack Valenti taking turns buggering a bent-over and bound Billy Gates. (It's an ugly picture and I can't make it go away no matter how hard I try.)
Otherindependentm...
Date: July 18, 2005 @ 8:28 AM
...somebody fire up photoshop!
Chief Op OfficerShadowMom
Date: July 18, 2005 @ 10:29 AM
Another axis of evil. I don't even want to think about an image like that!
Intermediatewet1
Date: July 19, 2005 @ 6:41 PM
I was shocked at what I read of the latest plans for DRM and content protection with the Longhorn coming out. I got news for them. I haven't even purchased a car player capable of playing mp3 format as my old one still works. What in the world makes them think I will purchase a new monitor solely to view protected content?

Remember all the foo-faw-raa with the broadcast flag? Everyone was going to have to buy one of the new digital receivers or a black box in order to receive digital broadcasts? Well I didn't buy one, waiting instead to see what was going to happen. I have an old tv that has worked just fine through the years, I won't buy a new one till that one doesn't work anymore. At present no one seems able to agree on standards, much less what format things will be in. We the consumer have seen this time and again. As examples, there was the 4 track, the 8 track, cassette, DAT, betamax, VHS, cd, graphic cd+, minicd, dvd, and it seems to go on and on. Everytime there is a latest greatest, they want you to go out and buy something else to play it with and half the time that new player isn't the end standard (which means you will shortly have to buy something else, yet again).

As it is, I have already started making changes to my home computers. This particular one now runs Linux with more to follow. I have found I like Linux. Not only is it fairly secure without having to buy stuff to try and protect it, but it is changeable. Meaning I don't have to buy a new OS in a few years because everyone else did. This is the oldest computer I have in my house and the one with the least resources. Yet it runs great with linux, giving no problems whatever. One of the reasons I am not here much anymore is that I have to activate receiving cookies to log in. I like not having to accept cookies for sites to go there. I do activate them solely for here and remove them afterwards.

Billy and the Boyz can lock down their content all they want, I am not playing that game. I have enough computers here I won't have to purchase one for a long time. Should upgrades be required to have the computer function on the net, I will find a new hobby. Just as I have done with pay tv. I don't buy programming anymore, in fact I rarely watch tv and when I do it is to view movies long ago paid for. I vote with my wallet and I am not a happy customer!
DMemberCritto
Date: July 25, 2005 @ 6:20 PM
I don't care a damn for the DRM (well, it rhymes:) (Smile). Those folks may lock up all their content, and they will only lock themselves out of the market, as nobody would be going to purchase it. It will meet the fate of the DAT recorders, which, totally protected against the content copying, simply went out of the market; or the Microsoft's plan (many years ago) to start a computer lease plan, which would allow them to force the customers into using DOS/Windows -- it died because of lack of the customers). And, DRM-ed or not, I would NOT use their 'precioussss' content even if it was given to me for free ... I f^^k most of the commercially made music and movies alike; in the first case I have totally embraced the INDEPENDENT music (at dmusic.com, iuma.com or vitaminic.com)m, which satisifies me so that I don't need to use the commercially created tunes. And if I do, I buy the USED CD-s only, which don't give the record labels ANY revenue.

Mind it: they would NEVER be able to forbid us from making and listening to the indy music. If they plan to lock their content up, I say "Go on" to them, as I said "good bye" to them years ago (when I started seriously BOYCOTTING the RIAA labels).

In Liberty,
Critto
liberter.webpark.pl
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