Embracing Piracy

Erica Naone recently wrote about “Embracing Piracy” on the MIT Technology Review

Embracing Piracy
How to make money from online content, even after it gets loose on third-party website

Trying to control how articles, videos, and video games spread online could be the definition of a losing battle. One unauthorized video comes down, and two more spring up in its place. But some companies are giving up the fight and looking for ways to embrace the phenomenon of online piracy. They have tools to get money from advertising even when content ends up in unexpected places.

At a recent panel at South by Southwest Interactive, a Web conference in Austin, TX, panelists suggested that the creators of online content need to use the wide distribution of pirated content, instead of trying to stop the piracy. Some companies are doing this by making it easier to use third-party content with permission, while others are working on technologies that can find content wherever it ends up, and sometimes serve ads along with it.

“For every article, we typically find 20 copies around the Web, some full and some partial,” says Rich Pearson, vice president of marketing for Attributor, a company that specializes in identifying text and video that appears online for its customers. After breaking a customer’s content into small chunks, Attributor creates digital fingerprints for each chunk. Its system then crawls the Web and searches for matches for those fingerprints, notifying the owner of the results.

But content creators are already changing their attitudes toward the piracy they discover. Matt Robinson, Attributor’s vice president of business development and partnerships and a speaker at South by Southwest Interactive, noted that, two years ago, most of Attributor’s customers used the technology to serve takedown notices. Today, he said, most are using it to gather statistics on where their content is appearing.

Attributor is addressing the problem in two ways. First, the company is working with online ad networks to share revenue with the owner of any content that appears on an ad-supported site. Attributor is also testing code that attaches ads to articles, no matter where the article appears. A site can grab an article with permission, as long as the code that handles the ads is in place. Robinson noted that there’s still a lot to work out, such as figuring out the minimum amount of compensation that the content creator should accept.

[Read the full post at Technology Review: Embracing Piracy]

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