August 31, 2007 6:41 AM PDT

NBC says bye to iTunes, hello to piracy and lost revenue

In news that comes just weeks after iTunes' loss of Universal Music Group, NBC has officially canceled its contract with iTunes, citing the need for stricter piracy controls and higher pricing that Apple was unwilling to provide. That said, NBC will still continue to sell its programming on iTunes until its contract runs out in December.

In other words, January will be the month that NBC sees a severe increase in the piracy it's trying to so hard to curb.

NBC logo

Bozos of the month

(Credit: NBC)

I'm not quite sure what any of these companies are thinking. First, Universal Music Group steps away from the third-largest music retailer in the world because it thinks iTunes is suffocating it, then NBC walks away to make more money and stop people from stealing its media. But what both companies don't understand is that they need Apple far more than Apple needs them.

Let me paint a scenario for you of what happens as soon as NBC pulls its programming off iTunes.

First, the company will tout its new video service, Hulu, as the savior for this generation. After that corporate-speak is completed, it will begin telling the world about the issues with iTunes in an attempt to downplay its importance. First, NBC will use the line, "Well gee, shouldn't we be allowed to make some money too?" And after that doesn't work, the company will resort to the classic, "Well, look at all of these pirates! It's the actors who are getting hurt by this. Think of them!"

After this new PR campaign is complete, NBC executives--obviously without any grasp on reality--will sit there and expect their assistants to bring them financial numbers that show exploding growth in programming sales. With cigars firmly in place, the big shots will open up the revenue reports and come to one damning conclusion: revenue from programming has gone down, yet piracy has increased tenfold.

Meanwhile, back in Cupertino, Steve Jobs and company are left counting their iTunes revenue with nary a blink at the modicum of lost revenue they experienced from the NBC move. Give it about six months and NBC will be calling back with an olive branch in hand, hoping to get back onto iTunes. Only this time, NBC will have an even worse agreement with Apple.

How many times do I have to say it until someone at NBC finally hears me? There is no way you can benefit from leaving iTunes. People who would normally have purchased shows like The Office are now going to their favorite torrent site and downloading each episode to their hearts' content. From there, they'll be adding those illegally downloaded songs directly to their iTunes account and will enjoy them on their Apple TV or iPod.

It's about time that NBC, Universal and the rest of these bozos realize that without iTunes, their online presence is nil. Sure, Universal can sell its music to Wal-Mart or the Zune Marketplace and do um, fine, but is it really willing to lose all of the revenue iTunes has provided for it? I guarantee it'll be back. Right now, Universal is a lone duck on an empty pond--it's in for trouble.

But more than anything, this NBC move really baffles me. If you want to stop piracy of your programming, why would you take it off legitimate services? Am I missing something here? Is it the company's greed or belief that it can go it alone? Either way, it's a dumb move.

Sad as it is, there's no way to fully eliminate piracy. Whether you want to believe it or not, the best way to stop piracy is to give people most of what they want: no DRM, an affordable price and ease of purchase. NBC wants stronger DRM and higher prices and it's making its product less available. Sounds like a recipe for trouble.

NBC is in for a rude awakening. Because it currently can not see through its greed and short-sightedness, its goals will be trumped by its biggest fear.

Get ready, NBC, because a flurry of piracy, lost revenue and eventual Steve Jobs genuflection is on your 2008 calendar.

Nice move.

Originally posted at The Digital Home

Don Reisinger is a technology columnist who has written about everything from HDTVs to computers to Flowbee Haircut Systems. Don is a member of the CNET Blog Network, and posts at The Digital Home. He is not an employee of CNET. Disclosure.

Recent posts from Webware
Why can't they fix the Flash/Firefox bug?
Get remote file access, management on your iPhone with Sugarsync
Patents.com lets you search through ideas (good and bad)
Exploring Internet Explorer 8
Accounting on the go: Quickbooks for iPhone and Blackberry
Add a Comment (Log in or register) 3 comments
Why NBC Left
by gsybloke August 31, 2007 8:49 AM PDT
It seems to me that the primary reason that NBC is leaving Apple has to do with the company we all love to hate i.e Microsoft. Do they not have significant share in NBC and would therefore want to influence them coming to a platform (XP/Vista/whatever is next) where they believe they can lockdown the DRM at price that is good for everyone but the consumer. Apple has created a way for people to purchase the media (whether it be music or video) and now MS is realising that if they don't do something now they are going to lose this war just like they lost the digital music player war
Reply to this comment
Sorta........
by jeffreymcmanus August 31, 2007 9:31 AM PDT
"Modicum of lost revenue?" You're aware that NBC programming represents 40% of the video sales on iTunes, right?
Reply to this comment
Simplistic post
by helio9000 August 31, 2007 7:12 PM PDT
The situation is not as cut and dried as you presume and going for the easy explanation of this being a pure greed is silly. There is way more going on here than that. iTunes video store didn't take off until NBC signed on and, as pointed out, it represents 40% of the it's business. It real dollar sales it isn't a ton of "lost revenue" for NBC (yet anyway) but it is a massive loss of content for iTunes. It simply makes no sense for people like NBC who typically control content and distribution to give up that control a find themselves beholden to a single company. If the content isn't there people will lose interest. It also hurts apple because other companies won't feel they need to be on iTunes if their competitors aren't.
Reply to this comment
Powered by Jive Software

About Webware

Say No to boxed software! The future of applications is online delivery and access. Software is passé. Webware is the new way to get things done.

Add this feed to your online news reader

Webware topics

Inside CNET News

Scroll Left Scroll Right