18 Jan 2023 08:42 PM
So last night I added a film to my playlist on my Sky Glass tv. The film was being shown on free to watch film4 channel. As we know, if the same film is also available on demand within another platform, then the playlist will default to that platform. That in itself is a bit odd, but when you find that the platform, is not necessarily free but subject to subscription such as in my case (Disney) then it adds insult to injury. It is widely recognised that sky glass has come up short against sky q, plus etc whereby recording films programs etc is very straightforward but this really takes the biscuit. SG has some good features but this is one area that should be worked on immediately and at least ensure that adding to a playlist should not entail downloading from a third party platform. Why does it not do this already? If it were not available on a third party platform, then I'm sure it would add directly from the the original channel.
18 Jan 2023 09:18 PM - last edited: 18 Jan 2023 09:28 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@howardo as it's a rights issue I don't think sky can do anything about it, it will simply default to the app or service that currently has the on demand streaming rights to the program/film in question (where as film 4 only had the as live broadcast rights) at the time if that app/ service requires a subscription then unfortunately that's how it is
18 Jan 2023 09:18 PM - last edited: 18 Jan 2023 09:28 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more@howardo as it's a rights issue I don't think sky can do anything about it, it will simply default to the app or service that currently has the on demand streaming rights to the program/film in question (where as film 4 only had the as live broadcast rights) at the time if that app/ service requires a subscription then unfortunately that's how it is
18 Jan 2023 10:02 PM
Hi thanks and on reflection I agree it's probably due to rights, as otherwise it's totally illogical, although you are able to "watch these films from the start" direct from the channel, providing the film hasn't finished playing in real time. Is that not streaming ? Regardless, my wider point is how inferior this element of SG is to Sky Q and other older systems where you just press a button to record when the film or program plays. It's not upfront how inferior SG is in this respect in their marketing pitch either, quite the opposite in fact !
18 Jan 2023 10:08 PM
Posted by a Superuser, not a Sky employee. Find out more
@howardo wrote:Hi thanks and on reflection I agree it's probably due to rights, as otherwise it's totally illogical, although you are able to "watch these films from the start" direct from the channel, providing the film hasn't finished playing in real time. Is that not streaming ? Regardless, my wider point is how inferior this element of SG is to Sky Q and other older systems where you just press a button to record when the film or program plays. It's not upfront how inferior SG is in this respect in their marketing pitch either, quite the opposite in fact !
@howardo Yes its streaming but the rights for broadcasting as live on a regular channel and watching on demand are sold separately