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INTERNET SPACE
TV of the future may be a sphere
by Staff Writers
Las Vegas (AFP) Jan 9, 2015


Interactive Spherical Display with Gesture Control

Pirates plundering streaming television market
San Francisco (AFP) Jan 9, 2015 - While stunning televisions and sizzling content services starred at the Consumer Electronics Show, not far away a light was shined on cable service plundering pirates.

"Pirates closely follow legitimate technology innovations," Irdeto senior security director Mark Mulready told AFP while demonstrating streaming television piracy gear and tactics in hotel suite not far from the CES show floor that closed on Friday.

"Pirates are moving to rebroadcast over set top boxes."

And piracy has become such an established and lucrative business that it can be challenging for consumers to figure out which streaming television services are legitimate, according to Mulready.

Irdeto, an arm of South Africa-based Internet services titan Naspers, specializes in hunting down and sinking pirates.

"Set-top box piracy is really a global problem that is growing very fast," Mulready said.

Manufacturers in China openly hawk set-top boxes that pirates can distribute to subscribers, according to Irdeto. The set-top boxes themselves are legal, the trouble begins when pirates rampantly restream cable programs without permission.

"They basically take what's coming through a legitimate set-top box and restream it," Mulready said. "Unfortunately, it is terribly easy."

The top show on pirated boxes last year was "Game of Thrones," followed by "The Walking Dead" and "Breaking Bad," according to Irdeto data.

An aspiring pirate can buy 500 boxes for less than $21,000 and bring in $173,000 in annual subscription revenue from customers who pay an average of $390 for 12 months of access, according to Irdeto, which buys boxes under cover in its investigations.

In 2013, Google searches for set-top boxes allowing access to pirated content surpassed online hunts for legitimate boxes, Mulready said.

The TV of the future may not be a rectangle, but a sphere.

Some visitors to the 2015 Consumer Electronics Show got a peek at this new way to view 360-degree video.

The new viewing experience was shown as part of a collaboration among several partners including French video software firm Ateme and British-based Pufferfish Displays, which makes the spherical projection module.

Although 360-degree video can be viewed on a standard television or tablet, the spherical module adds a new dimension, said Mike Antonovich, the Ateme general manager for the Americas.

This "can augment the experience of viewing a live concert or sporting event," Antonovich said.

Using the sphere makes the viewing an interactive and collaborative experience, said Geoff Kell of Pufferfish.

"It will be an addition to the viewing experience, but it also has great value as a data visualization tool" for research or other purposes, Kell said.

Ateme and its partners recently produced the first live 360-degree broadcasts using the trademark LiveSphere.

"You can view from different angles, so if you are watching a concert you might want to be part of the audience, and then switch to be part of the band," Antonovich said.

While 360-degree imaging has been around for several years in services such as Google Maps, Ateme said it is far more challenging to produce this for live television.

It "is completely different to do 360 degrees for live TV, and making it seamless," said Ateme research manager Jerome Vieron.

Other partners in LiveSphere include the Finnish technology group Finwe and France-based Kolor, which specializes in "image-stitching."

The partners are working with broadcasters around the world to produce live events, using the 360-degree interactive format.

The navigation on the Pufferfish display is done by hand, while remote control can be used for viewing on a television screen.


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