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Hollywood wants to use BitTorrent, says Cerf
Although they don't know how the internet works...
By Renai LeMay
Published: Monday 18 April 2005
Hollywood is anxious to embrace BitTorrent as a method of movie distribution, according to 'the father of the internet', Vinton Cerf.
Cerf, who co-created the original TCP/IP protocol suite and is currently chairman of the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (Icann), told a roundtable on internet governance in Sydney this week that he had recently discussed peer-to-peer file-sharing program BitTorrent with at least two interested movie producers.
"I know personally for a fact that various members of the movie industry are really getting interested in how to use the internet – even BitTorrent – as a distributed method for distributing content," Cerf said. "I've spoken with several movie producers in the last month."
Cerf was adamant, however, that the entertainment industry still does not understand the online environment.
"They are only just now starting to come to honest grips with the possibilities of using the internet," he said.
The Icann chairman was particularly enthusiastic to point out what he said is a flawed perception about how movies can be delivered via the internet.
"People think of video and they think of real time, watching it as it's coming out [downloading]," he said. "But most video doesn't have to be watched in real time. With TiVo and those other things, it doesn't have to be watched in real time.
"It doesn't matter whether it's delivered by a real-time video stream, or a triple-charge thing that drops packets into a file like BitTorrent. Who cares? At some point, you get the whole file and then you watch it. You don't care how long it took to get a file before you watch it."
Only a very small number of internet applications actually needed real-time capabilities, Cerf said.
Renai LeMay writes for ZDNet Australia.
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