This story appeared on Network World at
http://www.networkworld.com/columnists/2009/051909bradner.html
Sony:
wishing to be in a different world?
Sony Pictures' CEO seems to not want to deal with the world
that includes the Internet
'Net Insider By Scott Bradner ,
Network World , 05/19/2009
Clearly
there are many places that are essentially Internet-free, but the Internet is a
major factor in most of the developed world. Not everyone is all that happy
with the impact. Dictators are threatened by the Internet as an information
channel, moralists decry the availability of porn, regulators are scared of the
unpredictability of innovation and some businesses have trouble understanding
or dealing with the shifting technology.
High-profile
examples of the latter are the big media companies that seem to be genetically
incapable of developing business models that leverage the power of the
Internet, and instead cling tenaciously to models developed half a century ago.
They will lose in the long run, but they sure are making things hard on
themselves in the meanwhile.
Sony
is a company that both understands and laments the Internet. In mid-May Sony
hired George Bailey away from IBM to oversee its transformation management
division (By the way, every company should have a division with a name like
this.). Sir Howard Stringer, Sony's chairman, CEO and president said: "We
are fundamentally transforming Sony into a more innovative, integrated and agile
global company."
A
lot of Sony seems to be part of the transformation, but not Sony Pictures.
Michael Lynton, CEO of Sony Pictures, was recently on a panel focusing on the
"Future of Filmmaking." He was quoted as saying, "I'm a guy who
sees nothing good having come from the Internet, period."
Looks
to me like one of Bailey's early tasks is to apply a clue-by-four to Lynton.
It
is strange for Lynton to have said what he is quoted as saying -- he was
formerly CEO of AOL Europe, and AOL owes its very existence to the Internet.
Maybe
Lynton was thinking only about the impact of the Internet on media companies
and spoke more broadly than he meant. If that is true then I could understand
it better considering that industry's aversion to any new technology from audio
tape and VCRs to portable media players. Maybe Lynton has done us a favor and
exposed the media industry's feeling that the future is always to be feared.
The movie industry publication Variety
said it best in a headline about how Lynton an others on the panel were
"wary of the future."
What
would today look like in a parallel universe that never developed the Internet?
Networking
pundit David Isenberg explored this question in a
recent talk, "Broadband without Internet ain't worth squat."
I'm
just as glad to live in a universe where there is an Internet. A world without
it would not be enough for the media people like Lynton -- just about all
media-related technology that gives a user some degree of choice would also
have to be missing. Remember, a representative of the same media industry told
a Senate hearing that, while it was OK for a user to record some songs off the
radio, the user should be forced to play them back exactly as they were
recorded -- skipping a song you did not like should not be allowed. I wonder if
these people are the obedient robots in their private lives that they want us
to be on ours.
Disclaimer:
A university that turns out obedient robots would not be called Harvard, but
the university has not expressed any opinion on the private lives of media
lobbyists, so the above musing is mine alone.
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