"F_Zero45" wrote:
I get ya and that's what I'm wanting to do. I 've seen lots of channels that I don't believe have the streaming rights. I want to avoid any legal problems. How do I get the rights to show a program?
Find out who the copyright holder is. Depending on the content, this may be an individual or corporation, or even a government. Some rights holders expressly give permission for certain uses of their content by assigning it a permissive license, such as some of the
Creative Commons licenses. Other rights holders will want to negotiate a fee in exchange for a license for specific uses of the content, such as streaming to a secured set-top box like Roku. Still other rights holders will not want to license their content for any third party use whatsoever.
There are other rights acquisition wrinkles that may have to be addressed as well, such as the content being used at the international level. The rights holder may themselves only be able to assign you streaming permissions for the US, or for another country or set of countries, but not world-wide. Navigating international Intellectual Property laws can be tricky.
On the other hand, if this is content you've produced yourself, without relying on other people's copyrighted material, you're free to do as you wish, as you are the copyright holder.
Remoku.tv - A free web app for Roku Remote Control!
Want to control your Roku from nearly any phone, computer or tablet? Get started at http://help.remoku.tv
by Apps4TV - Applications for television and beyond: http://www.apps4tv.com