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BitTorrent eyes Chinese films with great hunger
May 23rd, 2006

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Flush with success from sealing a deal with Warner Bros. to sell movies using its Internet file-sharing software, BitTorrent has turned its sights on China.

The company is in talks with several Hong Kong and Chinese movie studios about offering its software for legal distribution of Chinese-language films by the end of this year, according to Lily Lin, BitTorrent’s director of communications.

The discussions highlight a move by makers of file-sharing software to promote themselves as a legal way to distribute large files such as movies and TV shows online. To seal deals, developers have been forced to prove they’re part of the solution to Internet piracy, instead of part of the problem, by finding ways to promote legal downloads.

But the strategy could prove difficult in East Asia, where most people share files freely, and where DVDs of the latest movies can be had for as little as a few dollars in most major cities. BitTorrent was short on specifics about how such deals might generate revenue for film studios, saying it expected users to take some time to get used to the system.

Earlier this month, Warner became the first major studio to sign a deal with BitTorrent to sell movie and television content in the U.S. The studio, famous for Bugs Bunny and other cartoon characters along with the Matrix trilogy, said an agreement BitTorrent made with anti-piracy watchdog the Motion Picture Association of America last November was key to their deal. The agreement to help curb the use of BitTorrent as a medium for illegal movie distribution involved removing links to unauthorized content from the software company’s site.

Japan, South Korea and Taiwan also boast major film studios with which BitTorrent could cooperate in Asia. Lin said her company was in talks in several countries across Asia, but declined to name them.

BitTorrent’s file-sharing software is designed for speed, maximizing available bandwidth by breaking files into bits and sending them to multiple users at the same time, who then share those bits to reconfigure the file.

Dan Nystedt (IDG News Service)

07:46 PM Steve Trautlein • Permalink
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