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June 1, 2007 3:59 AM PDT

Perspective: The 'lords of baseball' strike out

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The original Napster is long dead and buried but, like Banquo's ghost, continues to haunt the tech landscape.

The unsettled legacy of the file-sharing technology Shawn Fanning and Sean Parker released on this date in 1999, still informs the spats that periodically crop up between content owners and technology providers. Unfortunately, the lessons learned are usually the wrong ones.

So it is that the giant moneymaking complex which goes by the name of Major League Baseball is hinting about turning its lawyers loose on Slingbox over a dispute that professional baseball would love to portray as a struggle over copy protection.

A lawyer representing the league recently questioned the legality of Slingbox's "placeshifting" technology, which lets people access their cable or satellite TV boxes from remote locations on a computer or mobile device.

This is more than an errant brushback pitch. Baseball's displeasure first came to light a year ago when MLB came up with the novel idea that subscribers who wish to watch games on multiple devices should pay multiple times.

You don't need to be Nostradamus to forecast the outraged fan reaction that would follow a lawsuit.

"Of course, what they are doing is not legal," says Michael Mellis, general counsel of MLB Advanced Media, the division responsible for MLB.com and its MLB.TV package. He added that while the league has not yet decided upon its next step, "there's no guarantee that Slingbox will be around next year. It's a start-up."

Indeed, it is--and a start-up that invented an ingenious product that qualifies for the "ain't this cool" tag. To be sure, there's no way of knowing whether Slingbox is destined to become the next Apple or ReplayTV. But even if Mellis' sniffy putdown comes true and Slingbox fails to survive, the technology it helped pioneer is here to stay.

I'm reminded of the music industry's refusal to acknowledge the game-changing impact of peer-to-peer file sharing technology until it was too late. The studios finally won their court battle against Napster, but it was a pyrrhic victory. The music industry suffered a more grievous wound when it failed to find a way to profit from the new digital technologies that would ultimately undermine its established business model.

You'd think MLB and its hired hands would have learned from recent history, but don't overestimate the insight of the lords of baseball. Baseball thinks of itself as America's national pastime, but the game's well-chronicled troubles make you wonder how long it will command that moniker--especially when episodes like this one erupt.

By contrast, the National Basketball Association doesn't have any problem with Slingbox. In fact, the NBA's marketing-savvy commissioner, David Stern, went so far as to invite Sling to demonstrate its product a year ago at the league's NBA Tech Summit. He sees it as just another marketing tool to strengthen existing fan loyalties.

Someone should get MLB Commissioner Bud Selig to pay closer attention. Instead of spending his time fretting about the day Barry Bonds hits his 756th homer, Selig should dread the blowback that will result from any move against Slingbox. I can't predict which teams will play in the World Series, but you don't need to be Nostradamus to forecast the outraged fan reaction that would follow a lawsuit.

So far, there's no legal precedent to suggest that Slingbox violates the law. As more fans pay for cable or broadband packages and then install these set-top boxes to watch their local team play, the league is one step behind the people who pay its salary. Baseball may sell transmission rights to specific geographical locations, but if fans pay local programmers for the content, where's the harm? We're hardly talking about the second coming of Napster.

As always, the real issue here is money. Major League Baseball sells a television package, ranging in price from $80 to $110 a year, which lets viewers watch any out-of-market game on the Internet. In an interview with my colleague Erica Ogg, MLB.com's chief executive Bob Bowman questioned the legality of transmitting TV channels over the Internet, saying he believes the Slingbox is a "delivery-shifting" device.

If Bowman truly thinks the league has a case, then he should demand his day in court. It wouldn't be baseball's biggest-ever mistake. It would rank as only one in a long list of unfortunate blunders.

Biography
Charles Cooper is CNET News.com's executive editor of commentary.

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Slingbox, MLB, league, baseball, P2P file sharing

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screw 'em
by skeptik June 1, 2007 8:05 AM PDT
Let the MLB blowhards sue. Let them lose so we can get on with life.
Let them also rot in hell with the RIAA if they think multiple purchases of the same content is a reasonable business model for consumers.
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MLB = Greedy and Slow
by deggie June 1, 2007 9:52 AM PDT
This approach by MLB isn't new, it is just a continuation of their
slothful ways. They sat back while players grew miraculously
(loved that big head on Barry) and hit huge numbers of home
runs in their late 30s, something that had never happened
before. And too late they cry, hey, we'll fix the problem.

Next they are going to market an "exclusive" package to
DirecTV. Senators yell and they offer it to others at a ridiculous
price. Dish Network won't play so those subscribers are left out
(and I paid for it every year it was offered). You can buy our
Internet package instead. Um, no. And now the Slingbox suit.

I no longer watch or pay for their product, not even one time. I
think I'm not going to be alone in the future with this type of
activity by MLB.
Reply to this comment
Not surprised
by kribor June 1, 2007 12:23 PM PDT
I stopped MLB after the strike in '94. When that bunch of overpaid knuckleheads took the series away from the fans, I washed my hands of baseball. I don't watch it, follow it, or read stories in the paper. When SportsCenter covers baseball I change the channel. Sounds like MLB is working on creating a new generation of ex-fans who feel just like I do.
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Lawyers
by Aardasp June 1, 2007 2:37 PM PDT
Baseball probably thought about this course of action, then went to their Lawyers to ask their opinion [first mistake], then [of course] their legal staff said yes, and then they listened to their legal persons = 3 strikes and you're out!!!
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