There is a site out there – I won’t tell you what it is but you can probably find it – that offers every just about every live sports game there is, whether or not the respective television networks have allowed it, whether or not the respective sports league have given express consent for rebroadcast, whether or not the sports game is only televised on Indonesian TV. I’d tell you what the site is, but I think it might be illegal, and besides, it’s not like it’s hard to find through Google.
But what’s intriguing is the way in which these rebroadcasts are being done.
Similar to the Slingbox, end-users are using TV capture cards and simply streaming, through P2P technologies, the TV shows live from their home computers (with a slight delay) as they’re broadcast. Unlike the slingbox, which is a device that controls your home TV and lets you change channels as you watch TV over the net, the service I’m referring to records only one channel. Interested in seeing another channel? Find a different user with a different TV and a different stream.
There’s a certain similarity between this and other projects like Babelgum, Joost, and my personal favorite, the academic-only ACTLab.tv. And we’ve covered them before in this blog.
What makes this particularly interesting is that this is standard TV being encoded in real time into little bits and bytes, and illegally bypassing distribution restrictions.
For example, there are national distribution lines. I can’t get BBC Three legally, no matter how much I like Torchwood, because I live in Texas. (Even the BBC’s legal streaming service filters based on IP/location, so as not to tick off British taxpayers.)
There are also other distribution lines that we rarely think about. I can’t get cable TV at work – not only is there no cable running to my office, but it would also be rather conspicuous to bring into the office, to set up, and to watch. (“Wait, how is Days of Our Lives relevant to network latency ping times?”) But, with something like this illegal solution, (or the much more legal Slingbox) I could get live TV on my computer here. Or at least I could for about a day and a half before NetQoS IT had a strong talk with me about acceptable internet use policies.
Recreational network usage – especially video – has been a problem for IT departments. That’s not news. What is news is that the idea of an always-on, streaming service for all live events, not just the ones lucky enough to be locally broadcasted. I mean, look at what happened when it became popular for other media – music and movies – to be copied illegally and shared via the Internet. There would be no iTunes without Napster, no Netflix OnDemand without the Pirate Bay. And just like an old cyberpunk novel from the eighties, illegal solutions where no legal solutions exist are a harbinger of a vast untapped demand. It may take a few years, but eventually someone comes along with a legal supply to answer that demand.
Live TV streaming isn’t likely to go away. The good news, however, is that live TV streaming is distinctive as a traffic pattern – an anomaly detector with good baselines can, for example, pinpoint exactly when and where abnormal traffic usage is occurring. Unlike most viruses, streaming live video sticks to a schedule. No need for live TV when the Dodgers aren’t playing.
A 50% increase in throughput from 10pm-11:30pm indicates the Dodgers went into overtime: Live TV on the net.
About Brian Boyko
Subscribe
Leave a Reply Click here to cancel reply.
- The Paradigm Shift: Software Defined Networks, Software Driven Networks and OpenFlow March 20, 2012
-
Bringing Innovation Back to IT
April 30, 2012
- Rolling Out a New App? How to Avoid 3 Performance Pitfalls April 11, 2012
- More Tech Jobs Coming to a City Near You? March 21, 2012
- Invest in End-User Education, Save Time and Money March 22, 2012
-
Is Your Network Ready for the Video Deluge?
May 16, 2012
-
IT is the Best of Times and the Worst of Times
May 15, 2012
-
Letting You In On The Best Kept Technology Secret
May 14, 2012
- Service Assurance Weekly Reading List May 12, 2012
-
IT Employees Engaged But Not Married to the Job
May 11, 2012
- Cloud Impairs App Troubleshooting, survey says | Service Assurance Daily: [...] The poll conducted by Network Instruments (a...
- APM is King in 2012 | Service Assurance Daily: [...] results of this survey reflect a recent IDG ...
- Bringing Innovation Back to IT | Service Assurance Daily | InovaTrail | Scoop.it: [...] background-position: 50% 0px ; background-co...
- Bringing Innovation Back to IT | Service Assurance Daily: [...] than driving innovative projects. Add to tha...
- Finding the Right Solution for your Application Performance Needs | Service Assurance Daily: [...] Sargeant outlines the various options –fre...
APM
Application Management
Application Performance
application performance management
Ask the Service Assurance Expert
Bandwidth Issues
Business Service Management
Capacity Planning
CA World
cloud
Cloud Computing
Commentary
Daily Links
Data Center
Editorial
Infrastructure Management
IT Careers
ITIL
IT Management
IT Management & ITSM
ITSM
IT Spending
Just Too Cool
Miscellany
Mobile
Network Engineering
Networking Tools
Network Management
Network Monitoring
Network Performance
Networks
Network Utilization
Risk Management
Service Assurance
Social Networking
Tech Media Critique
Vidcasts
Video IP
Virtualization
VoIP
WAN Optimization
Web Services
Weekly Reading List
Whiteboard Series
WLAN Performance
Recent Tweets From @CAsvcAssur
Follow @CAsvcAssur on Twitter



No comments yet.