[opendtv] News: Supreme Court Allows Wider DVR Use
- From: Craig Birkmaier <craig@xxxxxxxxx>
- To: OpenDTV Mail List <opendtv@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>
- Date: Tue, 30 Jun 2009 08:45:56 -0400
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/06/30/technology/30cable.html?th&emc=th
Supreme Court Allows Wider DVR Use
By STEPHANIE CLIFFORD
Published: June 29, 2009
The Supreme Court on Monday delivered a blow to the television
networks when it declined to hear a case about a digital video
recorder technology, opening the gate for wider use of DVR systems.
The case began in 2006 when Cablevision Systems, the New York-area
cable operator, announced plans for what is called a network DVR
system. With it, a customer would use a remote control to digitally
record a program like "60 Minutes" but instead of storing the show in
the customer's at-home DVR box, the technology would store the show
on a faraway Cablevision server.
The technology would let Cablevision convert set-top boxes into boxes
with DVR capabilities without requiring an installation or new
equipment.
"It opens up the possibility of offering a DVR experience to all of
our digital cable customers," Tom Rutledge, Cablevision's chief
operating officer, said in a statement. Programmers including Turner
Broadcasting System's Cartoon Network, CNN and television networks
sued Cablevision, saying the system violated copyright law. In March
2007, a lower court agreed, ruling that Cablevision "would be
engaging in unauthorized reproductions and transmissions of
plaintiffs' copyrighted programs." The United States Court of Appeals
for the Second Circuit in New York reversed that decision in August
2008. The plaintiffs asked the Supreme Court to hear the case, but
the Supreme Court's refusal essentially reinforced the Second
Circuit's decision.
Patrick Ross, the executive director of the Copyright Alliance, an
industry group that includes the Motion Picture Association of
America and Time Warner, said a recording stored in a network was
different from one stored in a consumer's set-top box.
"This appears to be a very clever way for a licensee of creative
works to develop new distribution methods that, it would argue, do
not require licenses," said Mr. Ross, whose group filed an amicus
brief on behalf of the plaintiffs.
Besides the licensing issue, programmers are generally opposed to
anything that makes DVRs more pervasive, because consumers using DVRs
tend to skip advertisements.
Cablevision said the decision would help make DVRs more accessible.
Mr. Rutledge has argued that DVRs are not necessarily bad for
advertisers, saying programmers and advertisers could, for example,
sign agreements allowing Cablevision to insert new ads into recorded
content.
Cablevision halted its introduction of the network DVR in 2006, and
plans to introduce a preview of it this summer, when it will allow
some customers to pause live shows. It has not announced when it will
introduce the full service, or how much it will cost customers.
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