
LAS VEGAS, January 6, 2011 – Six of Hollywood’s largest studios including Lionsgate Entertainment, Paramount Pictures, Sony Pictures Entertainment, Twentieth Century Fox, Universal Pictures and Warner Bros. Entertainment Inc. today announced their support for the UltraViolet service and format created by the Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (DECE). Complementing the physical DVD and Blu-ray home entertainment markets, studios will begin offering UltraViolet content this year through digital online retailers and digital rights that come with packaged media, giving consumers the ability to watch digital entertainment across multiple platforms such as connected TVs, PCs, game consoles and smartphones.
Through UltraViolet, consumers now have greater choice and freedom to purchase, manage and watch digital movies, TV shows and other entertainment. The UltraViolet experience is powered by a cloud-based UltraViolet Account, which includes a Digital Rights Locker and account management functionality. Consumers can create an UltraViolet account, free of charge, via one of the many participating UltraViolet service providers or through the UltraViolet website. Once created, this account will allow consumers to easily access and manage all of their UltraViolet entertainment, regardless of where it was purchased.
Consumers will also be able to register up to 12 devices so UltraViolet content can be easily downloaded or shared between them. In addition, UltraViolet streaming access will enable consumers to enjoy their collections via set-top boxes and the Internet including computers, Internet-connected home video devices such as Blu-ray players and Internet TVs, and mobile apps for smartphones and tablets. The UltraViolet Account will also enable retailers to provide consumers with a copy to use on DVD players or other physical media such as portable flash memory.
“These six major Hollywood studios were a driving force in creating UltraViolet, and their plans to make films and television shows available through the UltraViolet ecosystem cements a milestone union among the content, technology and retail services industries,” said Mark Teitell, General Manager of the Digital Entertainment Content Ecosystem (DECE). “In 2011, UltraViolet will substantially raise the bar on the electronic home entertainment experiences in-market today.”
UltraViolet titles will be announced by individual studios as they become available and will feature the distinct UltraViolet logo, making it easy for consumers to identify entertainment products and services designed to work together seamlessly.


Fasten your seat belts, kids!
Been waiting for what feels like an eternity for this to materialize.
Shits about to get real!
I wonder how the Disney execs felt when Chairman Jobs said “we are not doing this”!!
welcome to the interwebz hollywood
This is the same concept as Disney’s Keychest, right? How long does Disney try to go it alone? I suppose they’ve got the catalog to sustain an independent effort but still.
Yes. Let’s give Hollywood MORE control over how we watch their product.
Downloading isn’t a product of necessity. It’s a product of greed and control.
Like supplementary material? Gone. Like playing titles anywhere at anytime? Gone. Like having a library of movies to choose from at a moment’s notice? Gone.
Like supplementary material? Gone. Like playing titles anywhere at anytime? Gone. Like having a library of movies to choose from at a moment’s notice? Gone.
This isn’t true…
This is likely to be as not-a-big-deal as Digital Copy was. The studios are trying to enter a market that is already hyper-saturated – between the iTunes store, Hulu, Netflix, Amazon, Zune, and the PS3 store, there are already more digital video platforms than make sense for the number of customers. And the reason they’re entering it is because they want more control – which is to say, because they want to offer an inferior product.
The level of “this is not going to work” here is staggering.
I like the idea of an always available library of purchased electronic content that you don’t have to worry about backing up. I wonder if it’ll be exclusively streamed or will you be able to download the video and maintain a local copy… I would hate to be limited to the necessity of a constant high-speed internet connection at every possible place I may want to play a movie. No if an e-copy license accompanies a hard copy (DVD, Blu-Ray, etc)…