Netflix, YouTube line up original content

While royalty rates may be the first thing you think of in the face-off between Hollywood’s major content creators and outlets such as Netflix and YouTube, there’s a much bigger battle brewing under the surface.

Online video, historically, has not been something that compares well with film or television. Production budgets, if they exist at all, are lower — and due to differences in the ad model, there hasn’t been a lot of incentive to create programming that’s on par with what the studios and networks regularly release.

That’s changing, though, with both Netflix and YouTube taking tentative steps into the original content business. And while both are just beginning to explore the field, the moves already have network and studio brass on high alert.

Read more at Daily Variety

L.A. Noire taps acclaimed thriller writers for book

L.A. Noire may be a video game, but it sure does have its toes in a lot of ponds.

One week after being showcased at the Tribeca Film Festival, the game is exploring the literary world, gathering a collection of noted crime novelists to contribute short stories set in the game’s universe for an eBook that will come out next month.

Read more at Yahoo! Games

Sony to pair game demo with Battle: Los Angeles Blu-ray

For all the talk of film and video game synergy, you don’t see a lot of real world applications. Now, Sony’s putting its money where its mouth is.

The company will include a demo for the upcoming “Resistance 3” in the Blu-ray release of “Battle: Los Angeles”. The game is expected to hit store shelves in September.

Read more at Variety’s Technotainment blog

Sony PlayStation Mess: What Should It Do to Recover?

As the repercussions and scope of recent cyberattacks continue to grow,Ā Sony’sĀ problems are mounting.

Not only does the company have to rebuild its network infrastructure and continue to inventory what data was taken, but the revelation that another 25 million accounts were hacked will further tarnish Sony’s image — something that could impact long-term sales.

Read more at CNBC.com

Sony suffers second major security breach

The data breach into the PlayStation Network continues to worsen.

Sony announced Monday it had discovered another 24.6 million accounts had been hacked, this time in the company’s PC online gaming division. The intrusion is on top of the 77 million accounts that Sony has previously acknowledged were breached.

Read more at Yahoo! Games

Google TV 2.0 en route?

Google TV hasn’t exactly taken the world by storm, but the search giant isn’t giving up on it.

Google is expected to showcase a second generation of the device next month at its I/O developer conference. Whether the company has mended any fences with the networks, however, is less clear.

Read more at Variety’s Technotainment blog

Game Review: Conduit 2

Conduit 2Ā is hardly perfect, but it’s much better than most shooters on the Wii. The action is fairly well paced and the boss battles are fun. More importantly, though, the game never takes itself too seriously, injecting humor into the action — such as an enemy who shouts, after you’ve been shooting him for quite a while, “That’s it! I’m through negotiating!” The story, though, is pretty thin and some moments will have you wondering what the heck is going on. The multiplayer mode is a welcome addition, given the natural fit between online play and shooters. For parents, this is an example of the Wii’s limited online capabilities working in their favor, as they can easily monitor who children are playing with.

Read more at Common Sense Media

Technology Is Changing How Consumers Spend and Save

You never see disruption coming. Often you don’t even realize when you’re in the middle of it.

The banking crisis of the last few years has certainly changed the way people think about their money, but even before that things were starting to change. Some people believe at this point conditions are ripe for aĀ full-scale paradigm shift in the way consumers spendĀ and save money.

Read more at CNBC.com

10 Products and Companies That Changed the World

It takes a lot to shift the course of an industry. For every truly disruptive company, there are dozens that try and fail – and plenty of copycats that follow, but fall short of the new model.

Being disruptive doesn’t always mean being first to the market with an idea. It’s about executing it better than any competitor – and staying ahead of the curve from there.

Read more at CNBC.com