The US Silly Season and a Lesson Learned

The US Primaries are upon us and most Canadians look on with a combination of horror and amazement. For me, one of the biggest lessons is how not to b[more]

Gracie’s Marketing Wisdom

Truth is, in today’s world pretty much any new car will transport you from point A to point B in reasonable comfort and safety. Most washers wil[more]

Old School

Everybody I know, of my generation, who went to art school learned their photographic ropes using a battered and student-abused Pentax K-1000. The K-1[more]

Launching Totally Amp’d

Here’s something we’re really proud to be involved with – the launch of Totally Amp’d, as created by Shaftesbury Film and Smok[more]

What I really want for Christmas is a download code

Here’s a confession: I’ve always hated music CDs. Not for some imagined sound quality issue, I just don’t like the way they look. Th[more]

Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays

To all of our friends and clients, a Merry Christmas and Happy Holidays from everybody at fisheye. [more]

How to Seed, Feed and Weed your way into your customer’s imagination

At fisheye we often talk to our clients about the need to Seed, Feed and Weed. We find that the most successful client initiatives have a real world e[more]

Gracie’s Marketing Wisdom

The latest instalment of Gracie’s marketing wisdom. This is an important insight, and one that people get often wrong. [more]

Is the death of cable TV imminent?

The BBC has just released the iPlayer app for iPad here in Canada. Just under $9.00 a month buys you unlimited access to a vast and growing library of[more]

Battling windmills

andreas_for_pebbleHulu.com, the US based video streaming site, has been more successful than they perhaps had bargained for. Many viewers exchanged cable TV subscription for a fast internet connection and proceeded to watch their favourite shows on hulu.com, legally and ad supported.

Like iTunes did for music, hulu.com made it easier, and more convenient, to comply with the law than to break it by downloading shows from torrents or usenet.

hulu-logo-300x300Officially hulu.com is available to residents of the US only. Try to log onto the site from Canada for example and you’re informed that the service isn’t available up here.

Of course, in the age of the geek such obstacles are relatively minor and easily overcome. VPN service providers with servers in the US have seen a considerable upswing in business as viewers from outside the US clamour to use the service.

For hulu, this creates a problem. Their income model relies on guaranteeing their advertisers a certain number of viewers. Viewers who spend their cash in the US, not the UK or Canada or wherever else they might live. And unlike a traditional TV station broadcasting over the air, where the amount of viewers doesn’t affect operating cost, hulu.com has to pay bandwidth cost for every show or movie streamed. Bandwidth cost that’s paid for by targeted advertising. You can see the dilemma.

Hulu has reacted to this problem in ways that are as predictable as they are unsustainable. Recently VPN using viewers found that they were getting a message asking them to disconnect from the service before they could watch any content streamed by hulu. This move is designed to make sure that only bona fide residents of the US will watch the content and in turn be exposed to ads.

Unfortunately for hulu, this will not work. VPN providers aren’t going to let their new found customers cancel their contracts and drift away, viewers will not just return to the dark days of cable bundles that few people need or want.

The VPN companies have already started rotating IP numbers, making it almost impossible for hulu.com to keep track of who is a local user and who isn’t. Add to this the simple fact that many US based viewers use VPN services for perfectly legitimate reasons – you should never use public wireless without being protected by a VPN – and the battle hulu faces is lost before it has even started.

So what should they do? Hulu needs to make money to survive and it can’t sell non US viewers to their advertisers just yet. The solution seems easy to me. If I am logging in from outside the US, just sell me a monthly pass. I’d willingly pay 10 bucks a month to access hulu, just as I willingly pay iTunes to watch a show or purchase a movie.

Make it easy for people to support you, and stay within the law, and they generally will as services like pandora, last.fm and  Apple have proven. Exclude people from content they want to access and they will find ways around the obstacles you’re putting up.

Hulu cites licensing agreements as the main reason why it can’t serve content to viewers outside the US. Local licensing agreements are of course completely irrelevant in today’s day and age.  Whatever is published anywhere, is published everywhere, we might as well get used to it.

Life, live at fisheye

There's always a lot of cool and interesting stuff happening here at fisheye. Whenever possible, we try and catch it on video.

The t-shirts have arrived. Check the store to get your own.

Chris Fonseca creates a mural for us

Smokebomb's Jay Bennet introducing Totally Amp'd, an app based show we're helping to launch.

At the launch of the 2011 Princess Margaret Welcome Home Sweepstakes.