Online video moguls team up to set standards, meet growing demand
Some of the most powerful companies in video networks and delivery plan to define an open architecture for streaming video as part of a new alliance that includes Cisco Systems, Comcast, Ustream and Yahoo, but not Netflix or YouTube.
The Streaming Video Alliance, announced Friday, says it wants to help scale the infrastructure for online video and make it more efficient while maintaining the quality of the viewer experience. To do that, it plans to “redefine the way online video is streamed across mobile and fixed networks” while fostering deeper collaboration and speeding up innovation.
Streaming video is growing fast and taking up an increasing share of network capacity as consumers turn to online sources of entertainment instead of, and in addition to, broadcast TV and traditional cable. It’s also a hotly contested area where broadband providers and over-the-top Internet video companies such as Netflix have clashed over the business side of delivering large amounts of content to consumers. Much of the debate over net neutrality centers on whether service providers can sell network priority to streaming video companies.
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