Markey faults Hollywood on net neutrality

Congressman accuses industry of bait and switch

By Brooks Boliek
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Ed Markey accused the entertainment industry of pulling a bait and switch as Hollywood attempts to paint the "network neutrality" doctrine as a safe harbor for copyright pirates.

Markey, D-Mass., one of the primary authors of the Internet Freedom Preservation Act, took issue with the entertainment industry's arguments that Internet nondiscrimination legislation will aid bootleggers.

"It's 100% wrong," he told witnesses Tuesday during a hearing examining the bill. "It's a red herring. We ought to put an aquarium out here there are so many red herrings floating around."

Markey said the legislation would ensure that the big network companies can't take advantage of content providers of which the cable and phone companies don't already own a piece.

The network neutrality debate splits the entertainment industry. The major studios and record labels think government intervention will interfere with the anti-piracy initiatives they are developing with the network companies.

The guilds and indies think the opposite. They see it as a way to preserve their access to an audience.

Steven Peterman, executive producer of the Disney Channel's "Hannah Montana," told lawmakers that the U.S. runs the risk of creating a closed system much like the TV network world after the demise of the old financial interest and syndication rules.

"We have seen this movie before," he said. "Unless content creators and consumers have the freedom to create and access lawful content and service without discrimination by the Internet service providers who, like the television networks in 'old media,' have a choke hold over distribution, we will be doomed to repeat our own history."

But RIAA CEO Mitch Bainwol warned the lawmakers against taking a simplistic view.

"The Internet ought not to be a place where chaos in the name of freedom is allowed to reign supreme," Bainwol said. "The marketplace is generally a better mechanism than regulation for addressing such complex issues as how to address online piracy, and we believe the marketplace should be given the chance to succeed."

Markey's bill is unlikely to win approval this year, but there is a building sentiment among lawmakers, mostly Democrats, that something needs to be done.

"Make no mistake, there are huge dollars involved in this," Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., said.

Markey faults Hollywood on net neutrality

Congressman accuses industry of bait and switch

By Brooks Boliek
WASHINGTON -- Rep. Ed Markey accused the entertainment industry of pulling a bait and switch as Hollywood attempts to paint the "network neutrality" doctrine as a safe harbor for copyright pirates.

Markey, D-Mass., one of the primary authors of the Internet Freedom Preservation Act, took issue with the entertainment industry's arguments that Internet nondiscrimination legislation will aid bootleggers.

"It's 100% wrong," he told witnesses Tuesday during a hearing examining the bill. "It's a red herring. We ought to put an aquarium out here there are so many red herrings floating around."

Markey said the legislation would ensure that the big network companies can't take advantage of content providers of which the cable and phone companies don't already own a piece.

The network neutrality debate splits the entertainment industry. The major studios and record labels think government intervention will interfere with the anti-piracy initiatives they are developing with the network companies.

The guilds and indies think the opposite. They see it as a way to preserve their access to an audience.

Steven Peterman, executive producer of the Disney Channel's "Hannah Montana," told lawmakers that the U.S. runs the risk of creating a closed system much like the TV network world after the demise of the old financial interest and syndication rules.

"We have seen this movie before," he said. "Unless content creators and consumers have the freedom to create and access lawful content and service without discrimination by the Internet service providers who, like the television networks in 'old media,' have a choke hold over distribution, we will be doomed to repeat our own history."

But RIAA CEO Mitch Bainwol warned the lawmakers against taking a simplistic view.

"The Internet ought not to be a place where chaos in the name of freedom is allowed to reign supreme," Bainwol said. "The marketplace is generally a better mechanism than regulation for addressing such complex issues as how to address online piracy, and we believe the marketplace should be given the chance to succeed."

Markey's bill is unlikely to win approval this year, but there is a building sentiment among lawmakers, mostly Democrats, that something needs to be done.

"Make no mistake, there are huge dollars involved in this," Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif., said.

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DENVER -- New figures from NPD Group suggest that the Amazon DRM-free digital music service is doing more to grow the overall digital music market as opposed to simply stealing customers from iTunes.

The research group says only 10% of Amazon customers had previously bought music from Apple's iTunes service. While many tagged the Amazon service as an "iTunes killer" when it first launched, the music industry's hope all along was never to cannibalize iTunes sales but rather encourage new digital buyers. NPD's data suggest exactly that is happening.

"The fact that Amazon's early growth does not appear to be at the expense of Apple iTunes is a healthy indication that the digital music customer pool can expand into new consumer groups who have not yet joined the iTunes community," said NPD analyst Russ Crupnick in a statement.

NPD says Amazon is now second only to iTunes in the a la carte digital download category (for those keeping score). The company did not disclose how many users Amazon has attracted in total, however it did say iTunes volume is 10 times that of Amazon.

Some interesting demographic breakdown has emerged between the two services as well. NPD says 84% of Amazon customers are male, compared to 44% of iTunes, but only 3% of Amazon customers were teens, compared to iTunes' 18% (the latter attributed primarily to the popularity of iTunes gift cards.)

NPD says Amazon's growth is likely more due to existing Amazon customers adopting the new service rather than due its lower pricing or DRM-free policies.

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