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	<title>Comments on: Web-like, broadband TV</title>
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		<title>By: Reader's Write</title>
		<link>http://www.p2pnet.net/story/6244/comment-page-1#comment-20384</link>
		<dc:creator>Reader's Write</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 20 Sep 2005 05:40:01 +0000</pubDate>
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		<description>Rock on!!

www.watchmytv.net </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Rock on!!</p>
<p><a href="http://www.watchmytv.net" rel="nofollow">http://www.watchmytv.net</a></p>
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		<title>By: Reader's Write</title>
		<link>http://www.p2pnet.net/story/6244/comment-page-1#comment-20070</link>
		<dc:creator>Reader's Write</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 14 Sep 2005 20:49:21 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">#comment-20070</guid>
		<description>Thanks to peer to peer and many other other Internet protocols, I have enjoyed a much better TV viewing experience.  I no longer have to put up with the crap that the satellite programmers  and TV broadcasters foist onto me.  Since TechTV changed its name to G4... and Leo Laporte left, it went from being a geek show to being another lamescream crap channel.  I now get my geek TV from my broaband connection at work.  I can download free (legal) programming that is more entertaining and informative than all the sex and violence laden drivel that makes up broadcast type media.  When broadband is offered where I live, I will cancel my satellite service and download my entertainment.  Choice is better for regulating TV than government rules. 

I&#039;m sure many others are going to do the same if they have not already done so.  Rather than adapt and embed advertising into scenery, make movies that are actually entertaining, and charging reasonable fees for content, the media cartels would rather quash the competition and stifle innovation.  First, they are trying to do this with frivilous lawsuits.  Next, they will go after the coders of applications en mass, and when that fails, they will do something else that will have little chance of success - they will buy out the ISP&#039;s (the ones they don&#039;t already own).  Once these cartels control the ISP&#039;s, we will see more bandwidth restrictions, monitoring, traffic blocking, and possibly even more rules, regulations, taxes, and fees on our fat (data) pipe.  

This is where people will begin to take matters into their own hands.  
People will begin to buy and use their own equipment to connect to their neighbors and share locally.  Many forms of TV entertainment will take a couple of days to fully propagate but it will propagte.  Concepts like &quot;PodCasting&quot; are beginning to catch on.  The cartels have allowed the genie to escape from the bottle, and their is no putting it back in.  The &quot;information highway&quot; will be either a bunch of small roads, or it will be several &quot;super highways&quot;.  Either way, the information will continue to flow whether the cartels like it or not.  However, the cartels will be the ones choosing what type of information highways we have.  

They can either accept the fact that we are customers instead of mindless consumers and adapt to service us, or they can continue on the same course they are on and we can service ourselves.  If the cartels shut down the &quot;superhighway&quot; or make it undesireable to travel, people will do what they always done before.  They will take the back roads.  If the cartels force us take the back ways and make us use Podcasting, FreeWan, CDR&#039;s, DVDR&#039;s, 16 Gig flashdrives and such, they will be the ones left behind.  the 16 Gig flashdrives themselves can hold 3 full ripped or full featured DVD&#039;s worth of entertainment, and they are rewritable.  Now that mass storage is so cheap, one can drive around town with an entire movie store in his or her car boot.  Combine this massive storage with a laptop computer that has wiress networking, and the cartels will have little control over the free flow of information.  Yes, these are the good ol&#039; days.    

We are the boss, and the media cartels can either adapt or they can die. </description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Thanks to peer to peer and many other other Internet protocols, I have enjoyed a much better TV viewing experience.  I no longer have to put up with the crap that the satellite programmers  and TV broadcasters foist onto me.  Since TechTV changed its name to G4&#8230; and Leo Laporte left, it went from being a geek show to being another lamescream crap channel.  I now get my geek TV from my broaband connection at work.  I can download free (legal) programming that is more entertaining and informative than all the sex and violence laden drivel that makes up broadcast type media.  When broadband is offered where I live, I will cancel my satellite service and download my entertainment.  Choice is better for regulating TV than government rules. </p>
<p>I&#8217;m sure many others are going to do the same if they have not already done so.  Rather than adapt and embed advertising into scenery, make movies that are actually entertaining, and charging reasonable fees for content, the media cartels would rather quash the competition and stifle innovation.  First, they are trying to do this with frivilous lawsuits.  Next, they will go after the coders of applications en mass, and when that fails, they will do something else that will have little chance of success &#8211; they will buy out the ISP&#8217;s (the ones they don&#8217;t already own).  Once these cartels control the ISP&#8217;s, we will see more bandwidth restrictions, monitoring, traffic blocking, and possibly even more rules, regulations, taxes, and fees on our fat (data) pipe.  </p>
<p>This is where people will begin to take matters into their own hands.<br />
People will begin to buy and use their own equipment to connect to their neighbors and share locally.  Many forms of TV entertainment will take a couple of days to fully propagate but it will propagte.  Concepts like &#8220;PodCasting&#8221; are beginning to catch on.  The cartels have allowed the genie to escape from the bottle, and their is no putting it back in.  The &#8220;information highway&#8221; will be either a bunch of small roads, or it will be several &#8220;super highways&#8221;.  Either way, the information will continue to flow whether the cartels like it or not.  However, the cartels will be the ones choosing what type of information highways we have.  </p>
<p>They can either accept the fact that we are customers instead of mindless consumers and adapt to service us, or they can continue on the same course they are on and we can service ourselves.  If the cartels shut down the &#8220;superhighway&#8221; or make it undesireable to travel, people will do what they always done before.  They will take the back roads.  If the cartels force us take the back ways and make us use Podcasting, FreeWan, CDR&#8217;s, DVDR&#8217;s, 16 Gig flashdrives and such, they will be the ones left behind.  the 16 Gig flashdrives themselves can hold 3 full ripped or full featured DVD&#8217;s worth of entertainment, and they are rewritable.  Now that mass storage is so cheap, one can drive around town with an entire movie store in his or her car boot.  Combine this massive storage with a laptop computer that has wiress networking, and the cartels will have little control over the free flow of information.  Yes, these are the good ol&#8217; days.    </p>
<p>We are the boss, and the media cartels can either adapt or they can die.</p>
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