Web TV wins media Olympics; mobile TV gets silver
LONDON (Reuters) - Doomsayers predicted it would be the Olympics of piracy.
But instead, law-abiding consumers are turning on to Internet video on PCs -- and even on mobile phones -- in unprecedented numbers as the maturity of Web television coincides with one of the most highly anticipated summer Olympics ever.
With free Olympics video in abundance on the Internet, viewers have little incentive to seek out grainy pirate images.
Even viewers in such countries as Iraq and Afghanistan, where there are no national broadcasters posting Olympics video on the web, can watch official clips on YouTube under a first-of-its-kind deal with the International Olympic Committee
(IOC).
"We look at the deal as historic, at least for YouTube," says a spokesman for the three-year-old video-sharing phenomenon owned by Google (GOOG.O), which did not yet exist at the last summer Olympics.
In Britain, the BBC's live video service has attracted record interest, with 3 million page impressions on the middle Saturday when U.S. swimmer Michael Phelps won his seventh gold and British swimmer Rebecca Adlington won her second.
"It's obviously been really popular due to the success of Team GB (Great Britain). I've been watching at work on the iPlayer," says Paul, a 40-year-old London investment banker, referring to the BBC's popular Internet catch-up service.
Broadcasting giants such as the BBC or NBC, the rights holder for the United States, have a number of popular properties on in the Internet and have played a big role in moving viewers online.
Almost 10 million viewers have watched more than 6 million hours or more than 56 million online videos of its NBC's Olympics coverage so far, 20 times as many as were accessed during the entire Athens 2004 Olympics, according to NBC.
ENLIGHTENED VIEW
Ben Wood, research director at Britain-based CCS Insight, says the explosion in demand has been helped by an enlightened IOC view of how the Internet is changing viewing patterns, in contrast to that of other sports bodies such as Formula One.
"The IOC has taken a more liberal approach, allowing reuse on the Internet," he says.
An IOC spokesman said the Olympic Charter compels the organization to ensure the widest possible audience and that digital media is increasingly important to reach that goal.
For these Games, digital rights were mainly awarded to broadcasters as part of larger TV broadcast rights deals, and accounted for a tiny proportion of the $1.7 billion the IOC estimates it will make in broadcast rights for Beijing. Continued...





