YouTube Might Get Costlier With Paid Subscriptions
Online, July 4, 2012 (Newswire.com) - YouTube, is gaining new grounds by exploring new memberships or subscribers to valuable video published content. Google has again provided a 100 million dollar fund for premium video channels on YouTube. As part of their effort in exploring for YouTube the 'cable network providers' are looking at syndication outside from the traditional 'cable service operators'.
YouTube is a new venue for cable networks for offering content on a separate basis for each new program, channel or video content. YouTube and the gains from the syndicated video content are expected to render generating a sufficient amount of new video content creation. The video content exploration and subscription to be taken from YouTube channels and videos, needs to be taken seriously and planned carefully as stated by the company officials at their headquarters.
World Wide Web offers a range of planned video sharing applications, services and changing consumer dynamics to online published content especially videos. This is specifically important for the cable companies whether the online video content from the firms would degrade or diminish in their quality. These cable network companies online are negative in their apprehensions as to the published online videos appreciated by YouTube. Much as a new breakthrough, comes the package for 100$ million programs from YouTube for owning premium channels, while the company Google came up further about reinvesting 200$ million amount for YouTube based videos without any new need for paid subscriptions.
Thus the subscriptions for the YouTube channels, extend more a pattern of published new paid videos that might create or lengthen cable network companies issues. Syndicated content outside from cable service operators might be a solution so as to build an easier market development of the original content. Cable services already known or traditional based have a developed market or customers. They might not consider sharing members with services like those from YouTube.