ZDNet News is reporting that MSN Soapbox is being closed
to new users for up to 2 months as Microsoft sorts out piracy issues.
ZDNet quotes Adam Sohn, a director in Microsoft's online-services
group, as saying that no new subscribers will be accepted, but anyone
who has already signed up for Soapbox can continue to access the
site. According to the story:
Sohn said the changes
were not forced on Microsoft by its new partners, although he
acknowledged that some of the content providers were very interested in
how his company planned to clean up Soapbox.
"This software
company is aligned very closely with the notion of
intellectual-property rights," Sohn said. "We feel this is the right
time to make these changes and stand up to do the right thing."
The news comes on the heels of an announcement
between NBC Universal, News Corp., and AOL, Microsoft, and Yahoo! to
create "the largest Internet video distribution network ever assembled
with the most sought-after content from television and film. ...The
video-rich site will debut this summer with thousands of hours of
full-length programming, movies and clips, representing premium content
from at least a dozen networks and two major film studios."
Lots
of interesting positioning going on as the battle for video
distribution rights begins to play out. Should be quite an interesting
space to watch in the coming months.