Comments on: MLB aims brushback pitch at Slingbox
Sling Media says there's nothing illegal about its set-top box, but baseball's honchos want it out of the game.
Sling Media says there's nothing illegal about its set-top box, but baseball's honchos want it out of the game.
January 2, 2010 4:56 PM PST
January 2, 2010 4:16 PM PST
January 2, 2010 3:30 PM PST
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The Slingbox is another way consumers are using the Internet to enjoy the content they paid for in a manner they find convenient to use it. This of course, hurts their subscriptions to MLB.tv, but instead of changing their business model to attract customers back, they decide to sue whoever they can to keep things they way they are.
Yawn.
The location of the consumer, verus geographic location or the time of the content's original broadcast, is becoming increasingly irrelevant, and will continue to do so regardless of what MLB and other outfits may want. Consumers want flexibility, they want choice, and they want low prices. They want, in short, whatever will allow them to do what they want, when they want, for as few bucks as possible. Trying to stand in the way of that demand will drive customers away from your store, not towards it, regardless of what business you're in.
my 2c.
What is next for MLB? Go after Tivo users? And then any you-tube users who clip a baseball goof or rant?
MLB- your attorneys have you looking very ignorant of modern media. This will alienate you from the coming generation of MLB fans, not smart. Meanwhile, your attorneys will reap big fees from you for this foolishness. Muzzle your mouthpieces and go back to the dugout with a little humility before you strike out.
I do hope it goes to court and MLB and others in the big boys media get shafted.
Here's one for the little guy.
The sad truth for this case is that slingbox users may not be using it to watch MLB programming. But the "idea" that they can seems to be justification enough.
If anyone should be first to file a lawsuit here, it should be Slingbox CEO Blake Krickorian. He should file a defamation suit against the MLB stiff that accused him and his company of marketing a "not legal" product.
and advertisers already payed for the advertisement on the tv if its local
if your sending a book through the mail then should you pay the author
no
not if he already got payed for it
the only thing your doing here is sending the content you or someone payed for you to a more convenient location
if mlb was smart they would have made their own setup with tivo or cable companys or struck a deal with the company to make a little side cash
instead of using a competitive service
no one is going to pay that much a month for one type of show sport or not
and I dont watch baseball so I couldnt care less about them wanting to sqaush a legal competitor
MLB makes millions on all their mediums, and they're worried about people switching their content they already paid for, well we better hide our dvr's and vhs's.
When I bought my Cingular Nokia 6682 some 2 1/2 years ago, it included a package whereby I could listen to major league games for a low fee. Also, Yankee games were TELEVISED through mobiTV! These services were canceled soon after I bought the phone because of MLB greediness and, at present, only Sprint subscribers (with the right handset) can see and here games. There is no reason for this! I have purchased a Gameday audio subscription, and MLB actively prevents me from listening via my phone, and actively prevents me from doing so by other means. Thank Goodness for Slingbox! If MLB sues, I'll never subscribe to there crappy, outdated internet service again.
"I-Chi-Ro" . . . "I-Chi-Ro"!
But I swear it's time to give MLB a quick smack to the back of it's
head and bring it back from it's long standing "Paris Hilton"
position of being too privilaged to be more important than
anything else.
Recently they sued "Fantasy Baseball Leagues" because they
contended that the MLB "Owned Players Stats"
Now they want to sue a company for allowing someone to watch
programing they have already paid for?
Here's some ideas:
Let's strip the MLB from it's exclusive "Antitrust Exemption"
No other proffesional sports organization has one.
Let's sue the MLB for their "Blackout" rules for home games.
Let's sue the MLB for "Price Gouging" since they are a "Monopoly"
$10.00 draft beers? . . . *** is that?
(Oh yeah . . . the tickets are too expesive also ;-) )
I say "Class Action Suit"!
Anyone else have any ideas?
And the MLB lost their suit on claiming the "Exclusive Rights" to use
the players stats
Aloha :-)
- Argh, when AIR for free will be ruled ILLEGAL?
- by t3st3r` June 2, 2007 1:31 PM PDT
- Well, time shifting is illegal, place shifting is illegal, let's free AIR to be illegal as well!So those who did not payed for air should die by horrible death.
- Like this Reply to this comment
-
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