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January 28, 2005

Michael Bazeley in today's San Jose Mercury News: Google to offer TV search.

Google is again expanding its technology to enable people to search for information beyond the Web, announcing a service Monday that hunts for content from television news, sports and entertainment shows.

With Google Video (www.google.com/video), Google is indexing the closed-caption transcripts from PBS, C-SPAN, Fox News, the NBA and others. Closed captions, originally intended for people with hearing impairments, are the text translations of program that typically scroll across the bottom of TV screens.

For now, the Mountain View search engine will not link directly to video content. Instead, when users click on a search result, they'll be taken to a ``preview page'' that will show excerpts of the closed-caption text alongside relevant still images from the video program. ...

ting stuff.

One thing that leaps to mind (from the POV of a content provider rather than a reader), which the story doesn't address, is this:

There's only one (or perhaps two) closed-caption company doing this, right? How are they able to get away with this under their contracts with PBS, C-SPAN, Fox News, the NBA and the major networks?

This is private, proprietary content. PBS, for instance, sells transcripts of the NewsHour, Frontline and other programs.

And now users will be able to get the (admittedly unpolished) transcripts for free through Google? That will completely gut those services.

What am I missing?

Via New Media Musings


Originally posted by JD Lasica from New Media Musings, remediated by yatta on Jan 28, 2005 at 07:00 AM