The site is currently in beta and will be launched to the full public in October. Making the site more interesting is that it will not be web streaming but instead users can download the movies and TV shows and share them freely. Yes, you read that write, the files can be shared freely, because they are hard-wired with DRM and advertisements.
Programming will be available from Russia's Star Media, TV Scope, TNT, NTV and CTV networks.
"By the middle of 2009, it will contain approximately 2,000 hours, all premium TV series as well as full-length Russian feature films and TV movies," Rambler's sales and strategic partner director Anna Znamenskaya said "The television channels rarely hold non-linear rights so we are dealing directly and only with the content owners who hold the relevant rights for our use."
Thanks to falling prices for broadband connections, Russia is widely expected to become Europe's second largest online population by next year. "We are going to further develop the video part of the portal and Kinozal (name of the service) is one of the steps in this direction," Znamenskaya added. "Any service that is attractive for the user makes Rambler more competitive. Our video service is the first of its kind in the Russian market and we expect great traction."
The video DRM is powered by Hiro Media which "bundles a multi-platform video codec and advert in with a movie file, while a second layer adds a geolock and temporal control to ensure the file can be viewed only in certain territories and will expire after a set time". People can share the content but Rambler will know who and when the video was watched if the watcher is online.
Written by: Andre Yoskowitz @ 22 Jul 2008 14:40