martyn_williams
Senior Correspondent

Sony moves on Web video with Grouper acquisition

news
Aug 23, 20062 mins

Sony's $65M purchase could enable users to combine Sony-owned content with their own video material

Sony Pictures Entertainment is making a foray into the fast expanding world of Web video sharing by acquiring Grouper Networks, the privately held operator of the grouper.com Web site.

The Sony Corp. unit will pay $65 million to acquire the company, which counts itself as No. 2 in the Web video market behind YouTube, said Jonathan Shambroom, vice president of product development, at the Sausalito, California-based company in a telephone interview.

Like competing services, grouper.com allows users to upload their own videos and watch other videos through a Flash player. In addition the site also allows users to download videos to the desktop and offers versions formatted for viewing on Sony’s PlayStation Portable and Apple Computer’s iPod with video. The site also makes it possible for video material to be integrated into a user’s blog and lets users append video comments by webcam to existing material.

Grouper also offers a software tool that allows users to edit video, add soundtracks and captions, and produce finished video pieces. As a result of the acquisition by Sony, it’s possible users could bring in Sony-owned content and combine it with their own material to produce new videos that can then be further shared online, said Shambroom.

The various copyright and digital rights management issues required should Sony add its own material to the site have yet to be fully worked out but the possibility of Sony content coming to Grouper was a major attraction in acquisition talks, he said.

Under the terms of the deal with Sony, the current management of Grouper Networks will remain in place.

The acquisition comes at a time when Web video sharing sites are booming. In July for the first time a video-sharing Web site broke into the top 50 most popular sites as ranked by comScore Networks’ Media Metrix. YouTube entered the monthly chart at position 40 with 16 million visitors, a 20 percent increase versus June, the research company said.

Grouper claimed 10 million unique visitors to its Web site in July.

The popularity of online video also helped push up traffic to the video sections of portal sites. MySpace Videos, which had 20 million visitors, saw traffic double in July and top-ranked Yahoo Video recorded a 28 percent jump in visitors to 21.1 million visitors, comScore Media Metrix said.