Tag: Streaming

  • Live streaming of court proceedings has flipside, judges need to be trained: CJI

    Live streaming of court proceedings has flipside, judges need to be trained: CJI

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    Cuttack: Chief Justice of India (CJI) D.Y. Chandrachud on Saturday said live streaming of court proceedings has a flipside, adding the judges need to be trained “because every word that we say is up in the public realm”.

    Speaking at the Neutral Citation for the Indian Judiciary and National Conference on Digitisation, CJI Chandrachud said: “Today, most of the High Courts are doing live streaming on YouTube. You have those little clips about a judge in the Patna High Court asking an IAS officer why he was not appropriately dressed, or somebody in the Gujarat High Court saying something about why a lawyer is not ready with her cases.

    “A lot of funny stuff is going on YouTube, which we need to control because this is serious. What happens in a court is extremely serious stuff. Live streaming we are doing has a flip side. We as judges need to train ourselves as we are now working in the age of social media,” said the CJI.

    MS Education Academy

    Chandrachud said he realised this during the live stream of constitution bench arguments.

    “Very often, citizens don’t realise that what we say in the course of hearing is to open up a dialogue. What you said does not necessarily reflect what you have decided in a case. But, people don’t understand this at large,” he said.

    “So, live streaming or interface with social media places new demands on us as judges. We need to create a robust cloud infrastructure for live streaming,” the CJI said.

    He further said there is a need for creating cloud infrastructure for live streaming and it is perhaps one way to have a central national cloud infrastructure and additional hardware for courts.

    Next important area is technical advancements which the third phase envisages and this will refer to software developments, the use of artificial intelligence, blockchain, and digital accessibility, he added.

    Stating that artificial intelligence has a flip side as well, Chandrachud said: “For instance, it would be very difficult in allowing artificial intelligence to tell us what sentence to hand down following a conviction in a criminal case.”

    Speaking about his vision to create paperless and virtual courts, the CJI said: “The Supreme Court is not the Supreme Court of Tilak Marg, it is for India, of India, by India. Likewise, each High Court is not the High Court of the capital of the state, but the citizens across the state.”

    “Odisha has opened virtual courts in 22 districts. We cannot have benches of the High Court in as many districts as we have set up virtual courts. The opening of virtual courts will ensure access to justice for all those who don’t have access to the High Court,” he pointed out.

    “Some of the finest lawyers are not only confined to the capital city of states. Many of them don’t even move to the capital cities for lack of resources and family reasons. For a variety of reasons, they are confined to their own districts. So why cannot they present their cases before the High Court?” wondered the CJI.

    He further said that the purpose of pitchforking technology is not to place it away from citizens but to reach out to the common citizens of the country. The total outlay for Phase II is Rs 7,210 crore, which is going to be executed between 2023-27.

    While Rs 2,024 crore was provided for 2023-24, Rs 1,906 crore earmarked for 2024-25, Rs 1,523 crore for 2025-26 and Rs 1,552 crore for 2026-27.

    “When we pitched for this budget, not a single rupee was cut by the Union government,” he added.



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    #Live #streaming #court #proceedings #flipside #judges #trained #CJI

    ( With inputs from www.siasat.com )

  • I’ve rented DVDs from Netflix for half my life – streaming is a poor substitute | Zach Schonfeld

    I’ve rented DVDs from Netflix for half my life – streaming is a poor substitute | Zach Schonfeld

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    Red Rock West, a twisty thriller from 1993 starring an uncommonly subdued Nicolas Cage, is one of the best neo-noirs of the 90s. But you won’t see it mentioned much on social media or included in what-to-stream lists, because Red Rock West is unavailable on streaming platforms – a fate that now renders it all but nonexistent. Even many Cage fans haven’t seen it.

    In 2021, when I needed to watch Red Rock West for a book I was writing about Cage, I accessed it the same way I would have a decade before: I rented the DVD from Netflix. Not only did I get to see it without crawling around sketchy torrent sites, I also got an insightful director’s commentary.

    I’ve been getting Netflix’s red and white envelopes in the mail since 2007 – half of my life – and, surprisingly, I’m not the only one still holding on. The company’s DVD arm reportedly generated $145.7m in revenue last year, with more than a million American subscribers. (Its DVD rentals were never available in the UK, where people may instead recall services such as LoveFilm, which stopped posting discs in 2009.) All that will be left behind at the end of September, when Netflix finally kills the DVD-by-mail service that once comprised its business model.

    While it may go unmourned by most of Netflix’s 230 million streamers, this amounts to a slow-motion murder of the greatest resource the early internet offered cinephiles. I’m only 32, but I feel like the grandma from the let’s-get-you-to-bed meme when I try to convince Zoomers that Netflix was once a boon for discovering classic films. It was a virtual video store with an enviably vast selection, but its transformation into Hollywood’s leading manufacturer of mediocrity (with the occasional Roma or The Irishman thrown in for prestige points) is now complete. Netflix is now in its austerity era, cracking down on password-sharers and Nancy Meyers alike.

    I’m not quite as sentimental for Netflix DVDs as I am for the suburban video stores of my youth, but I’m pretty nostalgic for the service’s golden era. When I first signed up I was still in high school, and Netflix’s offerings helped expand my still-burgeoning taste in film. I remember ordering Akira Kurosawa’s Ran (1985), which amazed me with its gargantuan scope, because someone had recommended it to me on the Flaming Lips message board. I remember using Netflix to explore Pedro Almodóvar’s dazzling filmography – All About My Mother (1999), Talk to Her (2002) – after seeing Volver (2006).

    In 2009, I went off to college, and my Netflix subscription became a reliable lifeline now that I was no longer within driving distance of those floundering video stores. I remember receiving Stanley Kubrick’s brutal Paths of Glory (1957) during freshman year and watching it with my roommate on a dorm-sized TV, bonding over a shared interest in movies from before we were born.

    Look, I rented tons of crap from Netflix, too. In 2015, when my girlfriend and I were on a Winona Ryder kick, I rented long-forgotten duds like Square Dance (1987) and Boys (1996). Even now, plenty of the beloved and dated trash of yesteryear has fallen between the streaming cracks. “My dad can’t get his favourite comedy series (Police Academy), Steve Martin’s bombs [flops] or Charles Bronson’s oeuvre,” a fellow journalist told me when I began writing this piece. “Those – and other more valuable dated films – had huge audiences who would surely like to see them again.”

    A closing down Blockbuster Video shop in Sidcup, Kent.
    A Blockbuster Video shop before it closed down in Sidcup, Kent. Photograph: UrbanImages/Alamy

    By the mid-2010s, as streaming options such as Prime and Netflix supplanted physical media, I began to sense that the central promise of streaming – every movie or show ever, available at your fingertips – was false. Too many great films are inaccessible. In 2017, I wrote about Netflix’s abysmal catalogue of classic films to stream. As of 2023, the US service offers just 35 movies released before 1980. Far more are available to rent on Amazon, but certainly not everything. Many culturally significant films, like Pink Flamingos (1972) or Rebecca (1940), remain mysteriously unstreamable.

    Speciality services such as the Criterion Channel in the US are wonderful and smartly curated, but it’s not a replacement for breadth. Besides, the ghettoisation of classic cinema as a separate service means it’s only available to those who deliberately seek it out across multiple platforms, and not the curious kid who, 25 years ago, might have stumbled upon Mean Streets (1973) on a Blockbuster shelf.

    Meanwhile, streaming content seems increasingly disposable because the corporate powers treat it as such. In the US, HBO Max (soon to be Max) recently removed a handful of its own original films and shows, including The Witches (2020) and An American Pickle (2020), starring Seth Rogen. If HBO Max can’t even be trusted to care for and preserve its own original movies, how can it be trusted to care about anyone else’s?

    Netflix likes to cosplay as a home for film lovers, but it’s a hollow claim. When you’re lucky enough to stream a classic film, they vandalise the end credits with a pop-up ad. Compared with that indignity, watching a DVD feels weirdly luxurious these days: you don’t need to worry about intrusive ads or the wifi cutting out, no one’s shouting at you about what to watch next.

    We were told that “everything’s on streaming now”. We thought we’d have access to 120 years of cinema history. Instead, we have access only to the content that can be readily and easily monetised, trapped in garish and unreliable platforms. There’s no guarantee your favourite movie will still be streaming next month. It feels as if the internet’s vast early possibility has shrunk.

    DVDs won’t die out. They’ll probably go the way of vinyl – overpriced boutique items prized by stans and collectors, and cherished by canon-building organisations like the Criterion Collection. You’ll be able to find mainstream DVDs at the public library (for now) and the rarer ones on eBay. As for me, I’ll cling to my modest personal library of about 130 DVDs. A few years ago, during the streaming boom, I thought I might eventually get rid of them. Now I expect to carry them to the grave.

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    #Ive #rented #DVDs #Netflix #life #streaming #poor #substitute #Zach #Schonfeld
    ( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )

  • Fire TV Stick Lite with all-new Alexa Voice Remote Lite (no TV controls), HD streaming device | Now with App controls

    Fire TV Stick Lite with all-new Alexa Voice Remote Lite (no TV controls), HD streaming device | Now with App controls

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    ISRHEWs
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    Access to more than a million movies and TV show episodes from Prime Video, Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, ZEE5, SonyLIV, Sun NXT, ALT Balaji, Discovery+ and many other apps. Subscription fees may apply.
    What’s free – YouTube, YouTube Kids, MXPlayer, TVFPlay, YuppTV and many more.
    Easily search, play, pause, rewind, or forward content with just your voice. Simply say “Alexa, find comedies”.
    Watch movies, web series, news, sports & kids content on your TV. Comes with parental control. Subscription fees may apply.
    Easy to set up and stays hidden – plug in behind your TV into an HDMI port, turn on the TV and connect to the internet to set up.

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    #Fire #Stick #Lite #allnew #Alexa #Voice #Remote #Lite #controls #streaming #device #App #controls

  •  JK High Court Notifies Rules For Live Streaming

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    SRINAGAR: The High Court of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh on Monday issued regulations governing the live broadcasting and recording of proceedings in courts and tribunals in the Union Territories of Jammu and Kashmir and Ladakh.

    The High Court Registrar General, Shahzad Azeem, released the rules on Monday under the title “Live Streaming and Recording of Court Sessions Rules of the High Court of Jammu & Kashmir and Ladakh, 2023.”

    Per rule 5, it is strictly forbidden to record proceedings on audio, video, or by any other method than what is required by the regulations.

    The laws further state that live streaming is prohibited during court procedures involving marriage, gender-based violence against women, sexual offenses, and instances covered by the Protection of Children from Sexual Offenses Act (POCSO Act).

    Also, cases that the bench believes may incite animosity among communities and perhaps lead to a breakdown of law and order will not be streamed live.

    Furthermore, cases that the bench believes may incite animosity among communities and perhaps lead to a breakdown of law and order will not be streamed live.

    Moreover, live streaming will not be available for any other matters in which the Chief Justice or the bench has given a special directive.

    Any individual or organization is prohibited under Rule 9 from recording, distributing, or transmitting live-streamed proceedings or archival data through print, electronic, or social media.

    It further states that any unauthorized usage of the live stream will be punishable as an offense under the Indian Copyright Act of 1957, the Information Technology Act of 2000, and other provisions of law including the law of contempt of court.

    Without the prior written consent of the Court, the live stream cannot be reproduced, copied, transferred, uploaded, posted, edited, published, or reprinted in any way.

    As per the Rules, court proceedings in matrimonial matters, cases concerning gender-based violence against women, cases concerning sexual offences and cases under the POCSO Act would stand excluded from live streaming.

    Read Rules Here / Live_Streaming_Rules

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    #High #Court #Notifies #Rules #Live #Streaming

    ( With inputs from : kashmirlife.net )

  • Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote (includes TV and app controls) | HD streaming device

    Fire TV Stick with Alexa Voice Remote (includes TV and app controls) | HD streaming device

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    ISRHEWs
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    Less clutter, more control – All-new Alexa Voice Remote (3rd Gen) lets you use your voice to search and launch shows across apps. All-new preset buttons get you to favorite apps quickly. Plus, control power and volume on your TV and soundbar with a single remote.
    Home theater audio with Dolby Atmos – Feel scenes come to life with immersive Dolby Atmos audio on select titles with compatible home audio systems.
    Tens of thousands of movies and shows from Prime Video, Netflix, Disney+ Hotstar, Zee5, SonyLIV, Sun NXT, ALT Balaji, Discovery Plus and many other Apps. Subscription fees may apply.
    What’s free – YouTube, YouTube Kids, MXPlayer, TVFPlay, YuppTV and many more.
    Enjoy Full HD Picture quality and Dolby Atmos Audio. Mirror content from phone & laptop to the TV. Pair with compatible Bluetooth headphones.
    Alexa voice search – Easily search, play, pause, rewind, or forward content with just your voice. Simply say “Alexa, find comedies”.

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    #Fire #Stick #Alexa #Voice #Remote #includes #app #controls #streaming #device

  • Home Sparkle Engineered Wood Set Top Box Stand Wall Mount for Home Wall Shelf for Holding Speakers WiFi Router Game Console Remote Streaming Device (Black)

    Home Sparkle Engineered Wood Set Top Box Stand Wall Mount for Home Wall Shelf for Holding Speakers WiFi Router Game Console Remote Streaming Device (Black)

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    ISRHEWs
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    Product Description

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    PRODUCT DIMENSIONS : 25.5 x 19 x 6.5 cm
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