EspadaStclair822

From eplmediawiki
Revision as of 15:35, 18 April 2013 by 173.237.181.27 (Talk)

(diff) ← Older revision | Latest revision (diff) | Newer revision → (diff)
Jump to: navigation, search

You're watching TV one evening checking through the reruns thinking it is pathetic how little there's to watch anymore when a wonderful movie truck comes on. It's anything you love - the best actors, the wit, the activity - and your heart beats a little faster in anticipation - only if you can watch it RIGHT NOW!

Well, the movie industry has heard you. Combined with the rate of the net, customers have now come to a brand new point of need. It was previously that we WANTED everything quickly - today we EXPECT it.

This is not the type of thing that goes unnoticed by industries that cater to public reception. And now it's been declared that individuals might not be a long way away from getting the modern releases and just walking over to our computer.

During a conference at the Cannes Film Festival, Culture Ministers from across Europe, movie industry representatives and Websites Providers were among those who met to discuss the possible procedures needed to distribute movies online.

BBC news reports European Union media commissioner Viviane Reding as stating: "In Europe, as in other continents, the opportunities for individuals to take pleasure from films on the web are set to increase tremendously within the next few years."

Naturally there are still many issues to be solved before films are easily obtainable to the public on the web. Broadband and piracy abilities continue to be being asked.

Piracy became the prominent matter when music records were being illegally discussed on the internet. They're still far from recovering their industry income, whilst the music industry struggled such companies as Napster and the movie industry isn't anxious to join them.

What can maybe not be discussed is that there IS market, and no industry loves to bypass that as a result of possible problems.

Right now European broadband might not be around the task of getting such big documents but has plans to proceed with distribution quickly.

In America there's been already film distribution with the inevitable legal actions against individuals assisting unauthorized downloads.

It's still parents who're at the forefront of setting the example and instructing children on the ethics of installing such material, while the fight against piracy will be taken quite seriously by the market. Responsibility is learned.

The point is, next time you visit a great film promoted and you're helpful to the web, maybe you should remain in, avoid the traffic and the lines and look it over online! high speed internet

Personal tools
Namespaces

Variants
Actions
Navigation
extras
Toolbox