Google's nineteen-month experiment in selling online video ends in a few days, as the company shuts down Google Video and all of the videos purchased from it by consumers.
Oh No, There Goes Google Video!"They are more like us than anyone else we have ever competed with." -- Bill Gates on Google, from a 2005 Fortune Magazine interview.Digital rights management (DRM) will bite trusting buyers in a few days as Google revokes the playback ability for clips bought on its AP report should prove illuminating to people who are not familiar with how remote management of DRM works. Content they thought they owned, but didn't under Google Video's terms of service, will simply go away this week. Author and blogger Cory Doctorow posted a copy of the email being sent to Google Video buyers. His
Notice that Google called these videos "purchased" and "download to own" -- as though by buying them, they became your property. Funny kind of property, that. Imagine if these were DVDs: one day, a man from Virgin Megastore shows up at your door and says, "We're taking away all your videos. Sorry! But we'll give you a credit to spend at a different store. Not a credit for videos, though. Also: it expires in 60 days." This is a giant, flaming middle finger, sent by Google and the studios to the customers who wereGoogle's decision on Video now gets lumped in with an ill-advised company post ondumbtrusting enough to buy DRM videos. How many of these people will trust the next DRM play from Google (no doubt coming soon from YouTube) or the studios?
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