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February 01, 2007

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felix

While I too enjoyed Blinkx' presentation, I have a serious question about the economic value of video search as a whole. What is the dollar value (if I can be so blunt) of someone searching for something which ultimately will be consumed in a passive way vs. someone who is actively PULLING data from the web. I would argue that a user who actively looking for things is a more valuable customer - or in other words, in a mode which is more immediately monetizable.

yes, the media industry has shown that there is money to be made interspersing ads into content streams or product placement. BUT Television programming has been polished and selected based on the type of content that makes people want to buy. e.g. Friends, Cosby Show, etc. The narrative is not in conflict with consumer behavior / state of mind. That is why Noam Chomsky and Howard Zinn while enormously interesting speakers (to some) do not tend to put their users into modes which advertisers find particularly receptive to ad messaging.

Therefore, undifferentiated video search seems useful to the end user, but merely a feature in a suite of features that are only monetizable by a company who, like Yahoo, has many other things to keep you hanging around.

Gary A. Bolles

Felix: Long term, I'd agree; it's the larger platforms that are the most likely to (someday) offer the best experience for video search. But in the near term, it's also likely that a startup will find the best combination of reach and ease that will capture a large chunk of attention. MySpace and YouTube have yet to generate significant ad dollars for their owners, but that didn't stop them from being valuable properties...

gB

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