Entries categorized "Telecom2.0"

July 11, 2009

EU Telecom Commissioner Reding: "Failed business model is causing online piracy"

economic egoism gerd leonhardImage by gleonhard via Flickr

EUobserver / Brussels claims failed business model is causing online piracy. Read & smile:

 "It is in this new generation that there is real growth potential for Europe," says Ms Reding, describing the age group as "digital natives." The commission believes that as these individuals grow older and their purchasing power increases, greater internet use has the potential to create around one million jobs in Europe and generate €850 billion in economic activity. The claim is supported by a recent World Bank study that estimates every 10 percent of additional broadband penetration yields 1.3 percent in economic growth"

Nice to hear that.

Piracy is result of failed business model (Vivan Reding)
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

June 11, 2009

My presentation at the ASUT Swiss Telecom Summit (Broadband Culture & Future of Telecom)

Picture 7 I was invited by Nokia Siemens Networks to present my views on "Broadband Culture" at the 2009 ASUT Swiss Telecom Summit.

Here is the PDF (16MB PDF), Slideshare preview to follow!
Download ASUT Bern Broadband Culture and Telco2.0 Gerd Leonhard Futurist Public (PDF 16MB)



Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

June 05, 2009

The Future of Content & Telecoms: new video of my presentation at the eComm Conference (March 2009)

Picture 34 Video: The Future of Content & Telecoms: Flat Rate Content Bundles and Social Media (Gerd Leonhard) via the eComm blog. Note that eComm Europe was just announced, as well (Oct 28-30, in Amsterdam).


And here is the PDF with my slides (summarized version) at the eComm Conference in San Francisco

Download Future of Content & Telecom Gerd Leonhard @ eComm Conf 2009 PDF

Summary of topics: " Imagine a world where unfiltered and limitless access to content is bundled directly into your access to the networks. A world where 'your cloud' holds all kinds of content, your social network connections, your community, and your context (i.e. meta-content), your meta-data and your interaction-trails, and where access to all of this is feels-like-free, legal, always-on and fully mobile, on any and all platforms. This is the future we are heading into, and telecoms, content-owners and brands / advertisers must forge entirely new partnerships.  We are starting to see content creators and rights-owners aborting their long-standing quests for total control, and instead looking to build their audiences and share revenues. So where is this trend going to take us, what do we need to do in order to turn content (music, video, TV, news, games, books...) into a new and truly growing business that is really web-native, where are the big opportunities for telecoms, operators, social networks and rights-holders, and what will the new business models look like? In this context, Gerd will also address topics such as the flat rate for digital music, ISP/Operator + Content bundling examples in Europe and Asia, copyright 2.0 and the future of content commerce, the shift from control-economy to attention &  trust economy, the latest developments in next generation advertising, and the growing economic power of those 'new generatives' (> Kevin Kelly)..."

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

April 17, 2009

Cool Sprint 3G network commercial with some interesting statistics (video)

Write text here...

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

April 08, 2009

The Future of Content & Creativity: my presentation at the RSA in London (April 8)

Picture 23 Here is the PDF (incl. some slides I did not actually get to show due to time restraints;) of my presentation at the RSA: download Future of Content and Creativity Gerd Leonhard at RSA London PDF 16MB

About the event (tweets here)

"The internet is radically disrupting most of the traditional content distribution and selling models, starting with music and games, followed by TV, film, books and print publishing. Once everyone is always-on, mobile and hyper-connected, and everything is available everywhere, how will content be created, distributed, marketed, consumed, and paid for? Who will do what, for whom, and how will the traditional players such as broadcasters, record labels, publishers and distributors adapt? If new players, starting with telecoms, device makers, advertisers and brands, indeed move into the content business, what will be their challenges and opportunities?

Picture 22 Given the challenging financial climate, how do we reconcile the need to reward enterprise and secure sustainable revenue streams, with the expectations and demands of the “freeconomics” generation? What kind of legal, regulatory and cultural framework do we need to ensure that this new eco-system of creators, consumers and intermediaries generates more benefits for all involved?

Speakers: Gerd Leonhard, media futurist, author and blogger; Richard Titus, Controller of Future Media, Audio, Music & Mobile, BBC; David A. Smith, chief executive of Global Futures and Foresight (GFF).
Chair: Ralph Simon, CEO, The Mobilium Advisory Group and Chairman Emeritus & Founder, Mobile Entertainment Forum - Americas.

Twitter logo Suggested hashtag for Twitter users: #rsamedia

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

April 07, 2009

8 key trends and some foresights for the next 5 years

Every now and then I get tempted into actually formulating some fore-sights. This time, the preparations for my upcoming speech on "New Media Futures" at the RSA in London have egged me on to share a few key points with you:

Connected world mobile network IS devices Netbook 1) We will soon see the emergence of many different kinds of iPhone-influenced Netbook-like devices; some will be Apple-made but most will not. These devices may be 2-3 times the size of an iPhone and will connect to the Internet in every conceivable way, i.e. 3G/4G, LTE, Wimax, Wifi etc.  They will be touchscreen, zoom-interface enabled, cloud-computing, speech-controlled, location-aware, mobile-money equipped, socially hyper-networked, always-everywhere-on, HD-camera equipped and possibly project images and audio or even support basic holography.

In addition to the high-end, fully-loaded and perhaps still rather expensive versions that many of us in the so-called developed countries will gobble up, low cost and more basic editions for the developing markets will be sold in the 100s of millions (think India, China, Indonesia...). These smart gadgets will have very low energy consumption and therefore extremely long battery life, may even sport basic solar-power options, and may ultimately cost less than 30 USD, or even be 'free' (why bother to sell the box if you can make a lot more $ with selling services.... Nokia?).

It is these mass-market yet very smart and networked devices, together with cheap or free wireless broadband that will really revolutionize reading, newspapers, books and education; not to mention our music, TV and film consumption habits. Content commerce will be completely redefined as a consequence. As BTO told us a loooong time ago: "You ain't seen nothin' yet"

Connectivity plus filter gerd 2) Very cheap or free wireless broadband - at fairly high speeds, i.e. at least 2MB / sec - will be available in most places, particularly in the booming new economies of Asia, India, Russia and South-America, and a bit later, in Africa. Funded by the likes of Google and by the future 'telemedia' conglomerates, governments, cities and states, wireless broadband will probably reach 3-4 out of 5 people on the globe within 5-8 years. User-generated & derived content (UGDC for those of you that must have an acronym ;), virtual co-production, mobile editing and instant network sharing will explode by a factor of 1000, making control of distribution a very distant concept of the past. UGC or UGDC may make up to 50% of the global content consumption by 2015. Consumers will be (co)-creators, marketers, sellers and buyers, and come in a hundred variations, from totally passive to totally active. Then, indeed, filtering, culling and curation will be the key to success.

License the network money in 3) Collective blanket licenses that legalize and unlock legitimate access to basic content services via any digital network will emerge, and are likely to take over as the primary way of content consumption, around the world (but in Asia, first). Just like water or electricity which is readily available when moving into a new home, the basic access to content will be bundled into access to digital networks, i.e. via ISPs, operators, telecoms, portals etc. This shift is starting with music (as already done by TDC in Denmark, and Google in China), and will be quickly followed by films, TV, books and newspapers. Access may often - but in local variations - 'feel like free' to the user but will in fact generate 10s of Billions of $$ via blanket licensing fees (yes... those pools of money), next-generation advertising and branding, data-mining & sharing, up-selling, re-packaging and many other new generatives. This topic will, btw, be the gist of my RSA presentation tomorrow - if you can't be there in person, you may want to listen to the live audio, via this link.

I think that governments around the world will call for and / or support the implementation of collective content licenses that wil finally legalize content usage on the Internet, similar to how governments pushed for the radio and broadcasting licenses  approx. 100 years ago. Whether these blanket licenses will be voluntary or compulsory remains to be seen - in any case the only alternative is to perpetuate a severely dysfunctional telemedia ecosystem that criminalizes almost all users and stifles innovation while generating virtually zero new revenues for the creators.

4) Fuel-cells and other next-generation mobile energy sources are a certainty. A serious increase in mobile device power (and therefore, its use) will be achieved by employing next-generation technologies such as fuel cells that could provide for up to 500x the usage time that we have today. This is likely to become a reality in 3-5 years and will revolutionize how we use - and how much we rely on - our mobile devices, especially in countries where there the fixed-line power infrastructure is much less developed or non-existent.

Advertising future 2.0 gerd leonhard futurist 5) Completely targeted and personalized advertising, delivered largely on totally customized mobile computing & communication devices, will turn the the $ 1 Trillion USD advertising and marketing services economy upside down. Behavioral targeting and user-controlled advertising will, of course, become an even hotter potato and a much discussed challenge, but the good old deal of 'I give you attention & personal data and you give me value e.g. content' will be even more pronounced on the Net. In fact, advertising as we knew it is already more or less outmoded and will, during the next 2-3 years, be completely reinvented. Privacy and Trust are the #1 issues here.

The implication is that if your data (within your specific sets of permissions and opt-ins)  is used to bring you perfectly synchronized advertising, than advertising really becomes more like content, too. Watch this play out in the mobile advertising space, starting this year, and quite possible boost the global value of advertising-content by more than 100% by 2015. Google will be the main driver here, plus Facebook, Nokia and yes... Twitter (soon to be = Google).

Value trends gerd leonhard 6) We will witness the more or less complete decline of most forms of physical media within 7-10 years. The very definition - and thus the core economic business models - of newspapers, magazines, CDs, DVDs and books will be completely re-written, and new forms of content packaging will rapidly emerge. We can already see a preview of how this may work in the current mobile applications boom: content as part of software packages; paying for the packaging, the curation, the bundling, the personalization - not just for the zeros and ones that are 'the copy'. This trend is important not just because it will reflect the users' (or better... followers') new consumption habits but also because because of the increasing need to save energy and material costs - and moving from content products to content services will certainly go a long way in this regard. The total decline of printing in people's homes, and for personal use, will commence, as well.

Privacy keyhole peek IS 7) Paying for privacy will become a distinct option. Today we pay to go online and connect; in the future we may end up paying for the luxury to go offline, disconnect, enjoy the quiet, and give our brain some rest. Maybe if we don't want to share our click-trails and usage data, we will be able to make cash payments instead - and the more you pay, the more private you can be..?

8) Travel 2.0: alternatives to 'actually going there' will explode: immersive, 3D video, virtual rooms, holography. This is a key development that will nurture new forms of entrepreneurship, education and group working.

Please talk back!

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

March 30, 2009

Mobile Content Futures: my presentation at Mobile Monday Amsterdam (March 30)

Picture 11Download Mobile Content Future Gerd Leonhard Momo Amsterdam Public 15 MB PDF

Great event in Amsterdam today - Mobile Monday rocks! Event details here. Twitter back-channel here.  New: the Video is here!

New content new data economy gerd leonhard

Some predictions: the next 18 months
• Twitter will reach 50 Million + Users  • Facebook will become the default social utility - and the biggest global Content Broadcaster  • Google will double it’s Advertising revenues  • The RIAA and the IFPI will run out of cash  • Telecoms will get flat-rate content licenses  • Skype will re-emerge as content player

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

March 27, 2009

The Future of ICT / TIME: my presentation at the NSN Transformation Forum in Cologne

Picture 47  I had the great pleasure to speak at Nokia Siemens Networks' Transformation Forum in Cologne yesterday (March 26, 2009). I really enjoyed the event and had lots of great conversations; and some Koelsch, too!  Rolf Hansen, CEO of SIMYO, was there as well, and delivered a very interesting presentation on 10 imperatives of success, which miraculously synced very nicely with own speech.

As promised, here is the PDF (creative commons-non-commercial + attribution licensed, as usual): NSN Innovation Forum 2009 Cologne Gerd Leonhard Futurist PDF 16MB

My topics included:

  • The consequences of what I call 'Broadband Culture'
  • Why and how digital content, UGC and Social Media are the biggest growth factors for the ICT industries, going forward
  • Why telecoms and ICT companies need to get involved with Content, and move up the foodchain
  • Why content flat-rates, starting with music, are the way forward, and need to be regulated
  • The copy economy vs the access / usage / sharing economy

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

March 10, 2009

What will drive growth in Telecommunications...? A quick answer

Digital content telco media growth social net gerd leonhard

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

March 05, 2009

The Future of Content & Telecom: my presentation at the Emerging Communications Conference in San Francisco

Picture 23 As promised, here is the PDF with the slides from my presentation at today's eComm Conference in San Francisco (sorry for the delay in posting this - had to have dinner first;)

Download Future of Content & Telecom Gerd Leonhard @ eComm Conf 2009 PDF

Summary: " Imagine a world where unfiltered and limitless access to content is bundled directly into your access to the networks. A world where 'your cloud' holds all kinds of content, your social network connections, your community, and your context (i.e. meta-content), your meta-data and your interaction-trails, and where access to all of this is feels-like-free, legal, always-on and fully mobile, on any and all platforms. This is the future we are heading into, and telecoms, content-owners and brands / advertisers must forge entirely new partnerships.  We are starting to see content creators and rights-owners aborting their long-standing quests for total control, and instead looking to build their audiences and share revenues. So where is this trend going to take us, what do we need to do in order to turn content (music, video, TV, news, games, books...) into a new and truly growing business that is really web-native, where are the big opportunities for telecoms, operators, social networks and rights-holders, and what will the new business models look like? In this context, Gerd will also address topics such as the flat rate for digital music, ISP/Operator + Content bundling examples in Europe and Asia, copyright 2.0 and the future of content commerce, the shift from control-economy to attention &  trust economy, the latest developments in next generation advertising, and the growing economic power of those 'new generatives' (> Kevin Kelly)..."

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

March 04, 2009

Norwegian ISP Telenor Rejects Demands to Block The Pirate Bay (via Digital Media Wire)

Telenor ASAImage via Wikipedia

Norwegian ISP Telenor Rejects Demands to Block The Pirate Bay | Digital Media Wire.

"Norway's Telenor has rejected a demand from record label and movie studio trade groups that its ISP service block access to Sweden-based file-sharing hub The Pirate Bay, Billboard reported. "Asking an ISP to control and assess what Internet users can and cannot download is just as wrong as asking the post office to open and read letters and decide what should and should not be delivered," the company said in a statement..."We comply with all relevant laws and regulations and can see no legal basis for any ISP to act in the interests of digital intellectual property rights holders by blocking individual websites," said Ragnar Kaarhus, head of Telenor Norway"

I don't think PirateBay is defensible but it's good to see that someone can still lay it out like it is: controlling what people do with their Internet connection amounts to Censorship.

Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

February 27, 2009

Interview & Podcast on Telcos/ISPs and Content 2.0 (prior to speaking at the Emerging Communications Conference next week)

Picture 10 Media Futurist on Telcos/ISPs and Content 2.0 - Emerging Communications Blog.

A week last Monday Lee Dryburgh, Founder of the eComm Conference interviewed me via Skype. You can download it as a 96kbps MP3 via the event's blog, above (24.1 meg, 37 minutes). Additionally the full transcript is there as well. I am speaking at this conf on WED March 3, 4.30 pm, and will be posting my presentation shortly afterwards -stay tuned.

The Future of Content & Telecoms: Flat Rate Content Bundles and Social Media - the Next Big Thing?

Gerd Leonhard, Media Futurist, MediaFuturist.com

Date: Wednesday, March 4  Time: 4:30 - 4:50 PM Location: Salon E

Imagine a world where unfiltered and limitless access to content is bundled directly into your access to the networks. A world where 'your cloud' holds all kinds of content, your social network connections, your community, and your context (i.e. meta-content), your meta-data and your interaction-trails, and where access to all of this is feels-like-free, legal, always-on and fully mobile, on any and all platforms. This is the future we are heading into, and telecoms, content-owners and brands / advertisers must forge entirely new partnerships.  We are starting to see content creators and rights-owners aborting their long-standing quests for total control, and instead looking to build their audiences and share revenues. So where is this trend going to take us, what do we need to do in order to turn content (music, video, TV, news, games, books...) into a new and truly growing business that is really web-native, where are the big opportunities for telecoms, operators, social networks and rights-holders, and what will the new business models look like? In this context, Gerd will also address topics such as the flat rate for digital music, ISP/Operator + Content bundling examples in Europe and Asia, copyright 2.0 and the future of content commerce, the shift from control-economy to attention &  trust economy, the latest developments in next generation advertising, and the growing economic power of those 'new generatives' (> Kevin Kelly).
Reblog this post [with Zemanta]

February 22, 2009

IBM: Telecoms will need to do more to prosper in the emerging 'TeleMedia' chain

IBM's Institute for Business Value has published a brilliant new study entitled  A future in content(ion): Can telecom providers win a share of the digital content market?  A lot of what they are saying in this study is amazingly close to what I have been trying to tell the telcos for the past 2 years: you MUST get involved with content and media, no 2 ways about it.  Read this study!   The 3 biggest eye-openers:

 
IBM telecom will need to do more Picture 106

February 17, 2009

FT.com Report from the 3GSM show in Barcelona - The world in your pocket

Great read:  FT.com / Digital Business / Digital Britain - The world in your pocket.

3-INQ1-Facebook-Phone “In 2009, mobile phone users are expected to download more than 10bn applications to their mobile phones – the majority from sites managed by mobile device manufacturers, consumer electronics firms and software houses.”

"After years of disappointment and false starts, mobile data and the “mobile internet” it enables, finally seems to be taking off. “Global sales of mobile broadband ‘dongles’ [plug-in gadgets that control wireless signals] exceeded 4m a month during 2008 and are expected more than to double in 2009,” says Deloitte. “The resulting stress on networks, particularly backhaul connections, could be significant..."

“We do expect to see a proliferation of music, video and gaming applications being consumed on mobile devices...In all of these cases, next-generation services utilise the broadband networks from the mobile operators, but importantly bring together the capabilities of the communications network and the web to create next-generation experiences"

Marty Beard: “We will see voice over the internet (VoIP), video messaging, streaming, cross-operator presence and other new and innovative services. The expansion towards an all-IP mobile economy has begun.

February 12, 2009

Compensation not Control - The Future of Music: video & audio versions of my presentation at MidemNet 2009 (*one of my best ;)

Finally, here is the video and audio version of my presentation at MidemNet 2009, in Cannes France. I put a ton of work into this presentation and, well, honestly... I think it's one of the best I have ever done on this topic.  Hope you enjoy it - and please comment, below, and / or spread the word!  Thanks to the Midem organization for providing the DVD with this video.

The topics: why the music industry needs to license the Internet just like it has licensed Radio (i.e. with a collective license), why criminalizing the users & fans will not work - and why those efforts should be re-directed to the creation of a new 'Music 2.0' ecosystem that actually produces growing revenues, where those new revenues will come from, and how the music flat rate - aka music like water - would work. See my previous blog post for more details and the PDF of this presentation. The MidemNet blog is here. My free book, Music 2.0, is here, btw;)

Youtube versions here.  MP3 file download: Compensation not Control Futurist Gerd Leonhard MP3

Audio via Soundcloud, below  

My Photo

Contact

Get my posts via eMail

On the road

Search this site

  • Google

Search all of Gerd's sites

Widgets

Video Player

Translate


  • For more widgets please visit www.yourminis.com

    View gleonhard's profile on slideshare

Categories

Follow me on Twitter

FriendConnect

Music2.0 - The Book!

  • Now only Euro 19.95! To order the book,
    or download the pay-what-you-want pdf,
    visitmusic20book.com

    Music2.0: Gerd Leonhards Essays on the Future of The Music Industry

My videos


Share!

  • Share on Facebook Add to Netvibes

My Flickr Pics

  • www.flickr.com
    Go to gleonhard's photos

July 2009

Sun Mon Tue Wed Thu Fri Sat
      1 2 3 4
5 6 7 8 9 10 11
12 13 14 15 16 17 18
19 20 21 22 23 24 25
26 27 28 29 30 31  

QR Code for Mobile

BlogRoll

Blogged

  • Multimedia Blog Directory
    Loading...

Clicky

  • Clicky Web Analytics