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Movie downloads are latest entertainment advance
We keep gaining more power to be entertained when and how we choose. First came legal music downloads, followed by the sale of TV episodes for $1.99 by Apple’s iTunes Music Store. Now two Web-based movie services are selling digital movies to consumers via broadband Internet connections. Feature film downloads came on the market this month, offered by Movielink.com and CinemaNow.com – which previously provided limited-time “rentals” online. Now customers can buy movie files that won’t expire on a certain date, though they’re still copy-protected to combat bootlegging. Prices are comparable to DVDs: $18 to $28 for new flicks, and $10 to $20 for older ones. Buyers can copies downloads onto two additional computers, which is handy for travelers with laptops. There will be no cost to see fresh episodes of the four popular ABC shows during the two-month trial that may become permanent. Ten advertisers have signed up to sponsor the experiment. Viewers will be able to pause and move between "chapters" in an episode, but won't be able to skip embedded ads. As for movie downloads, new films will be available the same day DVD versions are released. Movielink, owned by major studios, offers 300 films already -- including recent titles such as Walk the Line, King Kong and Harry Potter and the Goblet of Fire. It stocks films from MGM, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures, Twentieth Century Fox, Universal Pictures and Warner Brothers. CinemaNow has about 85 titles from the Sony, MGM and Lions Gate libraries.
Front Page Talking Points is written by
Felix Grabowski and Alan Stamm for NIEonline.com, Copyright 2013
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