Archive for the ‘television’ tag
The impact of BitTorrent on major TV networks
It has been estimated that over 50% of the total Internet bandwidth (~2 terabit) in the world is consumed by BitTorrent traffic. It has also been estimated that about 50% of BitTorrent traffic is video. That’s a whole lot of video. In fact, that’s 2tb/sec / 8bits x.0.5 x 0.5 * 3600sec = 225 terabytes of video files downloaded every hour! From my experience, virtually all video files are DivX/Xvid avi files (I have yet to see a video torrent that isn’t) that seem to average about 7-10MB/minute. This means that every hour, about 20-30 million minutes of video are downloaded. Based on these numbers, it is very reasonable to conclude that tens and possibly into the hundreds of millions of people around the world are illegally downloading video via BitTorrent.
Don’t get me wrong now, I’m not writing this to incriminate anyone. BitTorrent has been very good to me also. It has essentially saved me the cost of a Tivo every month. Any TV show I want, I have in a matter of minutes and with a little RSS magic, what I want is automatically fetched for me as it becomes available. Of course, a significant percentage of this video is movies, not TV. But let’s put that aside for now and focus on TV.
My roomate and I pay about $60 to Comcast every month just for cable television. I personally feel like that’s a good amount of coin and as such I don’t necessarily feel that horrible when I download torrents of shows that I miss. Without a doubt Comcast is getting hurt by BitTorrent. If the estimate is correct, half of their bandwidth is being used up by BitTorrent traffic so they have surely had to pay hefty amounts to accelerate the upgrading of their capacity. However, my guess is that very few consumers have cancelled their cable TV subscription due to the availability of TV content through BitTorrent. So, while the impact of BitTorrent on Comcast’s ISP business may be significant, I doubt their cable TV business has been affected much.
So who’s the big loser? The TV networks of course. Torrents of TV shows have all the commercials stripped from them to make the file smaller in size and for the downloader’s viewing pleasure. As of last fall, ABC’s Lost had an average 30-second spot rate of $328k (Ad Age chart). At that time, Lost had about 10m viewers. Back in October ‘06, it was measured that over a span of a week, torrents of the latest episode of Lost had been downloaded over 500k times and as much as 1m times. That represents 5-10% of Lost’s total viewership. A 1-hour show like Lost has about 30 30-second paid ads which at the rate of $328k per ad, ABC brings in almost $10m per episode in ad revenue. For the sake of simplicity, let’s say that the ad rate is directly proportional to the audience size. In the absence of BitTorrent, if half of those 5-10% of downloaders would have watched the regular broadcast of the show, that would haev added about $.25-.5m in ad revenue per episode. For a 20 episode season run that’s $5-10m per season in lost revenue for ABC from the show Lost alone.
It is important to point out that at the time of measurement, Lost was the most downloaded TV show on BitTorrent. Also, looking at the chart, Lost’s $328k 30-second ad rate is amongst the highest in primetime. With these two factors combined, the revenue impact of Lost is probably an order of magnitude higher than the typical show. Overall, though, I can definitely see a major network like ABC losing out on about $25m of ad revenue across all of its shows this year. And that is $25m of pure top line since the cost of that additional revenue is essentially zero.
So what can the networks do about this? Plenty. Moreover, just as p2p has sparked tremendous growth in the long-tail of the music industry and created new opportunities, the same is happening in TV and film. I’ll talk about what the networks and new industry players have been up to and sort out some of my thoughts in my next post.
New Torrent Site for TV Shows

I came across a (relatively) new torrent aggregator for TV shows called tvRSS.net. It’s pretty awesome – much better than TVTorrent.info which I used to use but one day ceased to exist a few months ago. tvRSS.net has torrent listings for just about every popular show on TV right now and seems to stay very up to date. Torrent listings appear just a few hours after the show airs. You will notice that tvRSS doesn’t really “aggregate” tv-show torrents so much as just organizes torrents that are listed on mininova, a popular torrent search engine. Even though, it’s possible that there may be more torrents out there that aren’t on mininova, I’m guessing it’s pretty rare.
It looks like Brian/alienvenom, the creator of tvRSS.net, is really trying to build a best of breed TV show torrent destination – adding such simple, but novel, functionality like parsing torrent names so that they can be searched more effectively and removing torrents that are of the same show episode (but released by different groups). I’m definltey looking forward to what else he has in the works for the site.
Oh, if you are going to download torrents, make sure you install and run PeerGuardian. PeerGuardian blocks connections to peers from IP addresses which are known to be up to no good. An example of why you should run this is there have been many reports of people receiving threatening letters in the mail from HBO after downloading torrents of various HBO shows like The Sopranos and Entourage. PeerGuardian works off of a block list so it’s certainly not foolproof but it’d be stupid not to use it.
Ballmer on Google-YouTube Acquisition and MS Strategy
The truth is what Google is doing now is transferring the wealth out of the hands of rights holders into Google. So media companies around the world are all threatened by Google. Why? Because basically Google is telling you how much of your ad revenue you get to keep.They better get some competition. Us. Yahoo! (YHOO). Somebody better break through or you can short all media stocks right now. As long as there are two, you can hold onto media stocks.
Worth reading…

