There are several reports that the HBO unit of Time Warner Inc. (NYSE:TWX) might launch an Internet TV channel. In fact, some HBO content is already available online. Some of it is legal, but much of it is not.
The
Financial Times noted that the Internet channel would be available only to broadband subscribers and would allow customers to click a branded menu and download the HBO content they wish to view. The article also noted that HBO's CEO Chris Albrecht said the company was in talks with cable operators.
MarketWatch has also reported this, although it cites the
Financial Times. Business Week too ran an online story discussing the opportunity for AOL's In2TV, along with other online video providers, to do this.
CNNMoney.com, a Time Warner property, also used this same
Financial Times reference. CNNMoney looks like it was running this from Reuters, but as it is the legitimate arm of TWX in the online financial news (along with AOL Money & Finance) and not a blogger site, this report could have more credence.
Whenever you see reports like this, what you usually think is that the company has decided to leak some potential news to see how it is received. That is one of the oldest and cheapest ways to see the reaction to a product launch or initiative, and it costs the company next to nothing. If something is getting rotten feedback, they can kill the initiative and then say they didn't have any formal plans; if the reaction is strong and suggests the initiative will be a revenue generator, then the company moves ahead with a focus group.
If you think of the potential advertising revenues that HBO could take in incrementally for nearly free, this makes sense. Now the real question is just what the actual content would be. As long as they don't cannibalize new content, this makes perfect sense and could be another incremental income source.