March 19, 2008 9:12 AM PDT

Canadian public TV to try out BitTorrent

Update at 10:10 a.m. PDT: The titles for Tessa Sproule and Guinevere Orvis have been tweaked.

Following closely on the heels of Norway, Canada's public broadcasting service is adopting DRM-free BitTorrent distribution for a major prime-time show.

On March 24, CBC will use BitTorrent to distribute this year's broadcast of Canada's Next Great Prime Minister. This will make Canada the first country in North America to release high-quality, DRM-free copies of a prime-time show using the popular P2P file-sharing technology.

(Credit: CBC)

Canada's Next Great Prime Minister, an annual competition in which young adults propose ways to improve the country in hopes of winning 50,000 Canadian dollars, attracted more than 1 million viewers in 2007. While broadcast shows in the United States regularly reach more than 8 million viewers, for a Canadian broadcast program, 1 million is a huge success.

Tessa Sproule, the CBC manager in charge of the show's digital outreach, is a regular reader of the BoingBoing blog, which earlier this month highlighted the use of BitTorrent by Norway's public broadcaster for one of its most popular shows. Sproule was inspired by the Norweigan experiment and pushed for something similar at CBC.

While plenty of TV networks have experimented with offering shows online for free, it is CBC's use of DRM-free BitTorrent downloads that is the most interesting. Guinevere Orvis, one of the interactive producers on the show, told me that the motivation for this choice was their desire for the "show to be as accessible as possible, to as many Canadians as possible, in the format that they want it in." As for DRM, she said: "I think DRM is dead, even if a lot of broadcasters don't realize it." She added that "if it's bad for the consumers, it's bad for the company."

Michael Geist, a copyright guru and law professor at the University of Ottawa, hailed CBC's move, writing on his blog that "this development is important not only because it shows that Canada's public broadcaster is increasingly willing to experiment with alternative forms of distribution, but also because it may help crystallize the net neutrality issue in Canada."

Rogers Cable, one of Canada's largest Internet providers, has adopted Comcast-style BitTorrent filtering, so CBC's use of the technology is sure to heat up the debate.

CBC is conducting the entire BitTorrent effort in-house. The show will be encoded into multiple formats (including an iPod-friendly version), Orvis said, and the BitTorrent server will be running on a CBC server.

The BitTorrent version will be available for download to anyone in the world, which is a significant change from previous online TV efforts. The iPlayer platform made by England's BBC is only available to consumers with U.K. network addresses. Similarly, Hulu, the joint effort between Fox and NBC, blocks Net users who are outside the United States. Orvis told me that BitTorrent made the global distribution possible, as it meant that Canadian taxpayers were not subsidizing the cost of delivery to foreign viewers.

Sadly, here in the U.S., TV networks are nowhere nearly as enlightened. NBC and Fox have some of their shows available for free via low-quality streams online. Comedy Central, seemingly tired of sending take-down letters to YouTube, made its entire archive of The Daily Show and The Colbert Report available online, via low-quality, free streams. Even PBS provides streams for some of its content.

The only way for U.S. consumers to download high-quality shows is, unfortunately, via iTunes, which charges $1.99 for a DRM-locked copy of the show. Linux users need not apply.

Of course, Net users can always turn to BitTorrent for DRM-free, high-quality downloads. It's is easy to use--easier than iTunes in many cases--and offers a wider selection. However, it remains, for now, illegal.

When will U.S. broadcasters get a clue, ditch DRM, ditch iTunes, and adopt BitTorrent?

Originally posted at Surveillance State
Christopher Soghoian, a graduate student in the school of Informatics at Indiana University, delves into the areas of security, privacy and e-crime. He is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.
Recent posts from News Blog
End of Intel, AMD duopoly near? Via readies Isaiah chip
Google Translate speaks 10 new languages
Yahoo investors begin to weigh in on Icahn proxy fight
Hacker confab 'Last HOPE' to track attendees with RFID
Can the Feds enforce Net neutrality? Maybe not
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 11 comments (Page 1 of 1)
BitTorrent: Yesterday's Black Sheep
by umbrae March 19, 2008 10:02 AM PDT
With all the bad-rap BitTorrent has gotten, it is the best way to transfer large files. Vuze is a good example of tons of HD content delivered over BT. BT is fast and easy with a ton of different clients. Media companies need to lighten up that the only way to protect their content is to make it easily available.
Reply to this comment
"England's BBC" ?
by SteveFerson March 19, 2008 10:13 AM PDT
"England's BBC"??? When will Americans learn that the words England and Britain are NOT interchangable and British does not mean "from England". British Broadcasting Corporation - the clue's in the name. Jesus wept. Anyway, DRM has it's uses. In the case of the BBC, shows are restricted in how long you can keep them (7 days after watching or 30 days after broadcast, whichever comes first) for fear of the publicly-owned BBC distorting the market and damaging commercial competitors. The problem is that the DRM technology they use is proprietary, locks out non-Windows platforms from downloading and prevents shows from being re-encoded at a lower bitrate/in a different format that devices like Buffalo's LinkTheater can handle.
Reply to this comment View reply
The details
by sanenazok March 19, 2008 11:30 AM PDT
This would be awesome if there was a way to calculate things like residuals for the actors, the writers, and everyone else involved. I guess for a Canadian reality program where the top prize is CA$50K these things don't matter but have to be decided before large broadcasters like NBC can consider this method. If it's DRM-free then there's no way to account for viewings or number of downloads and that's where the problem for big broadcasters. I think they would love to stop having to pay for the bandwidth for people to watch their goshawful shows.
Reply to this comment
It's one thing for a public broadcaster to give away free content for free
by streamOG March 19, 2008 11:40 AM PDT
It's entirely another to question why mainstream networks that have revenue mandates don't give content away for free. If they did they would not do very well with their businesses now would they. Free things will stay that way. The author of course doesn't take into account the much more complex issues about generating revenue which he should. Regards, Christopher Christopher Levy, CEO BuyDRM
Reply to this comment View reply
No surprise . . .
by fokwp March 19, 2008 11:59 AM PDT
I always new Canada was a terrorist nation, but I never realized they would go THIS far . . . who's gonna pay Ted Turner his salary if this stuff spreads?
Reply to this comment
Not one single Canadian can enjoy this
by steveb5 March 19, 2008 1:26 PM PDT
You've got to love the fact that no Canadian will actually be able to enjoy the CBC's Bittorrent programming as almost ALL Canadian ISPs THROTTLE Bittorrent traffic down to a point where it would take 15 days to download one episode. Now if only the CBC addressed that issue...
Reply to this comment View reply
Another DRM-Enabled Model Comes to Market
by streamOG March 19, 2008 1:55 PM PDT
http://www.msnbc.msn.com/id/23711545/
Reply to this comment
If your ISP throttles BitTorrent, get a new provider
by Kraatus March 21, 2008 6:48 AM PDT
I also live in Winnipeg, and I have been regularly been able to download popular TV quickly, often in less time than it takes to watch the show. I experience no throttling of any kind ... as long as I don't upload too quickly. From my experience that is my isp's only concern, upload traffic has to stay relatively low and slow, which means seeding takes time. Way to go CBC, lead the way to a more integrated global community, where media and file sharing is open to all, without fear.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software
advertisement
  • About News Blog

  • Recent posts on technology, trends, and more.

Add this feed to your online news reader
Google
Yahoo
MSN

Most popular stories

  1. CBS to buy CNET Networks

  2. Images: Microsoft telescope puts universe on your desktop

  3. Intel Germany executive reportedly confirms Atom-based iPhone

  4. Xbox 360 hits 10 million sold in U.S.

  5. Photos: Microsoft previews 2008 Xbox games

Latest tech news headlines

Featured blogs

Beyond Binary by Ina Fried

Coop's Corner by Charles Cooper

Defense in Depth by Robert Vamosi

Geek Gestalt by Daniel Terdiman

Green Tech

One More Thing by Tom Krazit

Outside the Lines by Dan Farber

The Iconoclast by Declan McCullagh

The Social by Caroline McCarthy

Underexposed by Stephen Shankland

Resource center from News.com sponsors

advertisement
On TV.com: MILEY CYRUS photographs
Advanced
search
Advanced
search
Visit other CNET Networks sites: