Boxee Routes Around Hulu Ban

from the this-ought-to-be-fun dept

We were among those surprised and confused by content providers trying to prevent Boxee from accessing Hulu content. If you don’t know, Boxee is basically an interface for watching video content from the internet on your TV. You hook up a computer to your television and effectively use Boxee as a more TV friendly browser. As part of the list of internet content you could view, Hulu was a popular option, but Hulu’s content partners protested — perhaps because they’re negotiating with cable companies on exclusive internet rights. But, there seemed to be absolutely no legal reason to stop Boxee from offering the content. After all, Boxee was just a browser for the content, like Firefox or IE or Safari.

Well, now it looks like Boxee is trying to push the matter a bit. It hasn’t re-enabled access to Hulu exactly, but it has launched an RSS reader that will handle video, including Hulu’s own RSS feeds. It’s not a perfect solution, but effectively Boxee is pointing out to Hulu and its content partners, that they’ve made the content available for consuming, and all Boxee users are doing is consuming it as offered. It will certainly be interesting to see how Hulu responds…

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Companies: boxee, hulu

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Comments on “Boxee Routes Around Hulu Ban”

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13 Comments
Joe (profile) says:

The tug of war

Hulu put the content out there for free and is scrambling like made to monetize it. I feel for hulu … but I’d also like to boxee or some similar service to succeed because I hate my cable company (charter). They might just push me over the edge and I’ll cancel them then resort to watching reruns of all of my shows on the tv through an internet hookup. This is going to happen eventually. If I were Hulu, I’d go all in and be part of a boxee solution rather than fight it.

Anonymous Coward says:

“We were among those surprised and confused by …”
“….perhaps because they’re negotiating with cable companies …”
“But, there seemed to be absolutely no legal reason to…”

So why exactly are the Masnicks so confused – are you under the impression that because something might be legal you are obliged to include it in your business model ? !!!

elduderino (profile) says:

Re: please read, but also COMPREHEND the blog, thanks!

>>”But, there seemed to be absolutely no legal reason to…”

>>are you under the impression that because something might be legal you are obliged to >>include it in your business model ? !!!

I believe that he’s referring to the legality of monopolized content being discriminately offered.

That is to say it raises the legal issue of whether or not this content IS monopolized to the point that CERTAIN “viewing options” are discriminated against arbitrarily (or worse).

Mike (profile) says:

Re: Re:


So why exactly are the Masnicks so confused – are you under the impression that because something might be legal you are obliged to include it in your business model ? !!!

Well, I never said, nor implied that. I’m not sure how anyone could read the post above and interpret it that way unless they were a bit behind on their reading comprehension skills… or they were paid to be willfully ignorant.

Which is it?

David T says:

More than meets the eye, or...

I don’t understand this.

I have a Samsung HD TV with really nice input port for my computer so I can watch Hulu and Netflix over that line quite nicely. Boxee sounds like the exact same thing, only with a bit more polish so the non-geek can use it.

How could the studios tell them they can’t feed on Hulu content any more than they could tell me not to output to my TV? And if the device just pulls content over the standard web interface, how did they shut Boxee out?

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