By: Andrew L
Sad that nobody from the BBC’s rights group is going along to the Techcrunch thing and point out that lots of this just isn’t financially possible. I wonder if Azeem Azahar will talk about where all...
View ArticleBy: Michael Walsh
Andrew, Get on to Tony Ageh, Jem Stone and James Cridland and get them to represent the rights argument (which they are more than adequately familiar with btw!) or see if they feel like smuggling you...
View ArticleBy: Andrew L
Actually, unless you’re able to successfully lobby the government for a vast increase in the licence fee or explain to the general public why they only get one tenth of the programming they used to,...
View ArticleBy: Michael Walsh
Andrew, I know where you’re coming from in terms of the market value of rights but you have to factor in the “do something” versus “the do-nothing” commissioning process. Staying with the “do nothing”...
View ArticleBy: Andrew L
As far as the rights holder is concerned the game grid looks very different. The BBC is in many cases a tiny source of revenue, that wants rights that threaten licences to other people worth hundreds...
View ArticleBy: Michael Walsh
Andrew, Will reply directly to your comment later - just responding between meetings - but you'll be glad to know that I raised the rights issue (and not in a give them all away manner!) last night -...
View ArticleBy: BBC - a Digital Commons redux « digitalrightsmanifesto.com
[...] Steve Bowbrick, Tom Loosemore, Tony Ageh I posted a long comment, which expands on the Digital Commons idea I was proposing, on Steve Bowbrick’s post disciussing freeing content at the BBC....
View ArticleBy: Michael Walsh
Andrew, Apologies for the delay in getting back to you but I was patiently waiting for the updates from Mike Butcher and Ian Forrester. There is <a...
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