Title: IPTV missed expectations. Can regulation do the trick
1IPTV missed expectations. Can regulation do the
trick?
- Guido Tripaldi - Consorzio Voipex and Equiliber
Scientific Board - g.tripaldi_at_equiliber.org - Vincenzo Visco Comandini - University of Rome
Tor Vergata and ISIMM - v.visco_at_unitus.it
Eugenio Prosperetti - University of Rome Tor
Vergata - e.prosperetti_at_studioprosperetti.it
Società Italiana di Diritto ed Economia - Italian
Society of Leaw and Economics III Annual
Conference Bocconi University, Milan 9-10
November 2007
2What is IPTV
- It is the modern version of the cable television.
IPTV is the name we use when an IP broadband
network is used to deliver both traditional,
on-demand, interactive contents and services to
the customer premise. - IPTV is different from webtv because IPTV
guarantees the same quality and user experience
of traditional tv, on the same tvset. Web tv
instead, is trasmitted "over the internet" with
best effort quality, and in general is designed
for a "snack fruition", typical of pc use. - IPTV isnt just another platform to deliver the
traditional tv channels (like satellite and DTT)
but it allows to do a much more advanced form of
television thanks to the bidirectionality and
possibility of unicast trasmissions. - There are few doubts that IPTV is the natural
evolution of television and will therefore
replace also its traditional application and form
for the most advanced users. - There is less certainty as to the validity of
IPTV as a replacement technology when it comes to
a very basic use of television, as there are
several other competing standards, including
DVB-T and satellite all of the basic standards
may serve the general needs of most television
users
3Triple Play in US
- IPTV and TriplePlay was born in USA, when cable
tv operator updated from the old analog
technology to IP, in their access networks. - US Cable tv company discover that with a little
incremental investment, they can use the renewed
network to offer two more "play" in addition to
the paytv offer voice services and internet
access. And so, the TriplePlay was born - As these networks were already entirely repaid by
the tv subscriptions, and voice and internet use
very little bandwidth (less than a magnitude
order) than IPTV, the supplemental income is very
profitable.
4Triple Play in Europe
- In Europe the triple play model is adopted by
telecom operators, not by TV companies - Telecom operators offer double-play services
(voice and internet), but their revenue is
falling because of strong competition, the shift
from fixed to mobile voice services, etc, so they
are in search of an alternate source of revenue
and hope that IPTV the service will increase the
average revenue per user (ARPU) and to keep
customers from churning to other carriers.
5In Europe is still a niche service
- In France, where the service has the highest
penetration in Europe, only 13 of broadband
customers use it. - In Italy Fastweb reaches about 170,000 IPTV
active users (2Q 2007) with a penetration (18 of
the retail customer base) almost stable over past
quarters. - Telecom Italias Alice Home TV has just started
(summer 2007) to promote the IPTV service and
estimate in 2009 just a 14 penetration on
consumer broadband users
6Why current Triple Play is not the right model
- Telcos act as a content reseller
- Telcos compete on contents aquisition, but most
of the best premium contents (Sky) are already
delivered trough other platforms (satellite, dtt) - people not perceived in current IPTV services
enough significant added value (with respect to
traditional TV) such as to justify higher total
costs
7TV Broadcasters are (for now) out of the IPTV game
- At present time, complete vertical integration is
the only model accepted and implemented by the
telcos who run IPTV services. - Both the business model and the technology are
built exclusively around the telcos competition
needs, relegating the television industry in a
secondary position. - TV Broadcasters need to address the biggest
possible audience, they cannot care about the
small niches constituted by the various IPTV
gardens, and they cannot produce innovation if
the required technical functionalities are not
uniform among platforms. - The production of next-generation TV contents and
services, those who attract the main audience in
the future, requires a pervasive and common
standard along the IPTV technology chain.
83 causes of insuccess
- First, the IPTV platforms which have been rolled
out insofar, are proprietary - Second, IPTV has failed mainly where a specific
regulation has been absent or unclear - Third, IPTV is currently focused only on telecom
operators, playing both the content
provider-aggregator-reseller role and the carrier
role, therefore forcing traditional broadcasters
out of the game, or using them just as a third
party content providers with a completely passive
role and no real added value in terms of
innovation.
9IPTV is a two-sided market
- IPTV, like ordinary TV, fits well with multisided
markets definition - a multi-sided market structure is based on a
platform enabling interactions with different
groups of customers (sides) - each side is get on board by an appropriate
charging structure - prices reflect externalities enjoyed by each
side, either direct or indirect - for a market to be two-sided, the two sides
shall not be able to directly and efficiently
bargain the price the Coase Theorem must not hold
10IPTV generates large value for advertisers
- as for traditional TV, the Broadcaster the
platform side 1 TV viewers side 2
Advertisers - In IPTV, interactivity may generate some value
for viewers, but surely a very large value for
advertisers dramatic cost reduction for
customers profiles gathered by the platform - The choice between interoperable technical
standard (for set top box, contents, software,
and the like) and incompatible competing
proprietary standards seems to be crucial
network externalities will very likely to boost
the market growth
11Incompatible vs interoperable standards
Dominant firms in the close related market for
broadband services (Telcos) are not necessarily
in favor of the standard competition option
Shapiro and Varian (1999) show why Your value
your share total industry value
The IPTV market is not tippy (e.g. when the
winner-takes-all-the-market because of technology
reasons)
12The Anticommons Tragedy analogy
In IPTV market players have incentives to start
negotiations, but each player prefers a standard
to no standard, but each prefers its own standard
to the others
Heller and Eisenberg (1998) call Anticommons
Tragedy when an excess of property rights
enforcement does not give the parties the right
incentive to maximize their welfare people
underuse scarce resources because too many owners
block each other and no one has an effective
privilege of use
The Anticommons tragedy may apply to IPTV, the
risk being an exile as niche value added service
regulatory incentives to stimulate standard
setting agreements may be a decisive boost for
the market to explode
13A content provider is a publisher
- Efficient content providers should act to
maximize distribution of its editorial product - To reach the maximum possibile number of viewers
- Acting to artificially limit the number of
viewers limits the content providerss ability to
recover the initial investment - A content provider has editorial responsibility
14A service/network provider is a carrier
- its core business is providing user with access
to network and to carry third-party services and
content to users - an efficient network provider tries to increase
the number of deliverable content and services to
include every deliberable content and service to
any reachable user - the principle of mere conduit no provider
normally desires editorial liability for its
online activity (Peppermint case, Scarlet case,
Promusicae/Telefonica case)
15Regulation and IPTV
- The key to a new IPTV business model is a
regulation providing an incentive for content
providers and network providers to avoid hybrid
business models - Clear rules for editorial responsiblity on
content providers - Mere conduit for network operators who offer only
a content delivery service - A clear definition of scope and range (i.e. what
is IPTV?)
16New Media without frontiers directive proposal
- Seems to be on the right track
- In its implementation on-net content providers
(e.g. YouTube) will have to choose between the
role of mere conduits for UGN and entities able
to control editorial choices (therefore liable) - IPTV Content Delivery Networks are mere conduits,
therefore able to maximize efficiency in building
an open standard
17Editorial responsilbility and role in the value
chain
- Whereas 17 The notion of editorial
responsibility is essential for defining the role
of the media service provider and thereby for the
definition of audiovisual media services. - Editorial responsibility means responsibility
for the selection and organisation, on a
professional basis, of the content of an
audiovisual offer. ... an individual content or
a collection of contents. ... composition of
the schedule, in the case of television
programmes, or to the programme listing, in the
case of non-linear services. ... without
prejudice to Directive 2000/31/EC
18Future scenario
- Content providers responsible from an editorial
standpoint vis-à-vis the user providing content
to - Content distribution networks, providing access
to users, and providing transport to content
providers investment/competition in services
related to interactivity and transport quality - Choice, interoperability, efficiency