Mobile Video Content: The need to simplify Intellectual Property Rights Management and the U.S. Mobile Video Industry.PALO ALTO Palo Alto, city, California Palo Alto (păl`ō ăl`tō), city (1990 pop. 55,900), Santa Clara co., W Calif.; inc. 1894. Although primarily residential, Palo Alto has aerospace, electronics, and advanced research industries. , Calif. -- With growing utilization of voice calls and declining average revenue per user (ARPU (Average Revenue Per User) A calculation often used to determine the overall value of an application. It is also used to rate particular customers, especially in the wireless space, by comparing someone's account to the overall average. ), mobile video services expects to become the mainstay of the U.S. mobile operators' 3G services. Booming demand for quality streaming and video download services, secure protection and distribution of intellectual property (IP) rights remain prime concerns for video content owners, providers, and aggregators alike. New analysis from Frost & Sullivan (www.wireless.frost.com), U.S. Mobile Video Services Market, reveals that service revenue in this market totaled $28.8 million in 2004 and is projected to grow to $1519.6 million by 2009. If you are interested in a virtual brochure, which provides manufacturers, end users, and other industry participants an overview of the latest analysis of the U.S. Mobile Video Services Market - then send an e-mail to Mireya Castilla - Corporate Communications Corporate communications is the process of facilitating information and knowledge exchanges with internal and key external groups and individuals that have a direct relationship with an enterprise. at mireya.castilla@frost.com with the following information: your full name, company name, title, telephone number, fax number, and e-mail. Upon receipt of the above information, an overview will be sent to you via e-mail. Though content providers may have already assigned rights to established distributors in specific countries and regions, obtaining amendments to existing licensing agreements remains a much complicated process for content aggregators. In some cases, content providers assign exclusive distribution rights to established distributors in these regions, which further complicates the process of introducing video services over mobile networks. "While the whole rights issue is not a deterrent in itself, the industry can surely benefit from the presence of a single organization that could act as a clearinghouse for mobile video rights clearance," notes Frost & Sullivan Industry Analyst Vikrant Gandhi. "This presents an opportunity for organizations to specialize in such clearance." Along with the need for speedier IP rights clearance, the issue of digital rights management (DRM (1) (Digital Radio Mondiale) A digital audio broadcasting (DAB) system for AM radio in Europe. See HD Radio. (2) (Digital Rights M ) is another cause of worry among content aggregators and mobile operators. To ensure larger participation of mobile content providers, the U.S. mobile industry will have to introduce strict DRM controls that address their concern. Nevertheless, increasingly sophisticated DRM versions are being deployed in the U.S. mobile industry with the predominant DRM specifications coming from Open Mobile Alliance (OMA (1) See Object Management Architecture. (2) (Open Mobile Alliance Ltd., La Jolla, CA, www.openmobilealliance.org) An organization formed in June of 2002 by the consolidation of the WAP Forum group and the Open Mobile Architecture Initiative. ), a consortium of over 300 companies. Further, a majority of DRM related concerns are addressed when content is streamed over mobile network due to the fact that the content is not actually stored on the handset. Although mobile video content is not targeted at any particular demographic segment, entertainment-related content still leads in terms of number of offerings. With the introduction of advanced networks, capable handsets, and compelling content, the mobile video industry is expected to witness a greater uptake among a broader demography demography (dĭmŏg`rəfē), science of human population. Demography represents a fundamental approach to the understanding of human society. . As a step in this direction, multicast networks-led mobile TV services will be offered in the near future. While mobile operators would endeavor to provide streaming services over their own networks as well as multicast services, providing a combination of these services at an acceptable price band is expects to be a challenge. While having to decide upon the right balance between pricing and the range of content, the U.S. mobile operators should have a data strategy targeted at increasing the average revenue per mega byte (ARMB ARMB Army Requirements and Management Board ). Since a large and attractive content portfolio could actually result in lower ARMB, it may be more profitable to offer compelling content, whose variety is determined by ARMB considerations. "Mobile content aggregators should treat multicast networks as an opportunity and strive to partner with the multicast network operators for developing future multicast content," says Gandhi. "With the imminent launch of high-quality live mobile TV services through digital video broadcast-handheld (DVB-H See mobile TV and DVB. ) and forward link only (FLO See MediaFLO. ) platforms, revenue from mobile video multicasting services is expects to overtake that from streaming and download services." U.S. Mobile Video Services Market, part of the CTIA (1) See CompTIA. (2) (Cellular Telecommunications & Internet Association, Washington, DC, www.ctia.org, www.wow-com.com) A membership organization founded in 1984 that is involved with regulatory and public affairs issues in the wireless industry. Wireless (9755) subscription, examines different applications, platforms, business models, and revenue-sharing agreements in the industry. It also looks at the critical issue of intellectual property (IP) rights associated with the service. It further studies the yet to be launched multicast mobile video service and presents an objective viewpoint in this regard. Executive summaries and interviews are available to the press. Frost & Sullivan, a global growth consulting company Noun 1. consulting company - a firm of experts providing professional advice to an organization for a fee consulting firm business firm, firm, house - the members of a business organization that owns or operates one or more establishments; "he worked for a , has been partnering with clients to support the development of innovative strategies for more than 40 years. The company's industry expertise integrates growth consulting, growth partnership services and corporate management training to identify and develop opportunities. Frost & Sullivan serves an extensive clientele that includes Global 1000 companies, emerging companies, and the investment community, by providing comprehensive industry coverage that reflects a unique global perspective and combines ongoing analysis of markets, technologies, econometrics econometrics, technique of economic analysis that expresses economic theory in terms of mathematical relationships and then tests it empirically through statistical research. , and demographics. For more information, visit http://www.frost.com U.S. Mobile Video Services Market F297 Keywords in this release: mobile video services, video streaming See streaming video and video stream. , video download, multicast networks, mobile operators, content providers, content aggregators, content owners, 3G, ARMB, digital rights management, DRM, intellectual property, IP, codecs The following is a list of codecs. Audio codecs Non-compression formats
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