Obama’s Nobel speech, other footage from ceremony controlled by single Swedish company

By Ian Macdougall, AP
Thursday, December 10, 2009

Swedish company controls Nobel ceremony footage

OSLO — When President Barack Obama accepted his Nobel Peace Prize on Thursday, a single Swedish company controlled the dissemination of his words.

Obama’s speech was recorded exclusively by Norwegian national television and distributed by Nobel Media AB, a company formed by the Sweden-based Nobel Foundation in 2004 to strengthen control over its intellectual property.

In previous years, independent media could record the first five minutes of the ceremony. Nobel Media did not allow that this year because, the company said, it would conflict with Obama’s security requirements.

The limitations did not impede the distribution of Obama’s speech: Media around the world could broadcast as much as they wanted live. But any outlet that wanted to play a recorded snippet was limited to a maximum of three minutes that had run consecutively and uninterrupted.

All footage was emblazoned with the Nobel Media logo.

Nobel Media also barred Web sites from live streaming of the ceremony, limiting live online coverage to the Nobel Foundation’s Web site, nobelprize.org.

Nobel Media charges a relatively small fee to media outlets, several thousand euros in many cases. CEO Camilla Hylten-Cavallius told The Associated Press that the primary goal of its restrictions on the footage was not making money but making sure coverage of the Nobel ceremony was not manipulated or abused.

The company doesn’t “primarily do this in the interest of profiting off of it, but in order to know where the material is spread,” Hylten-Cavallius said.

However, Hylten-Cavallius also acknowledged that the three-minute restriction helped the company retain “exclusivity” on the Nobel Foundation’s Web site. The site contains full-length, on-demand videos of Nobel lectures.

She said streaming the ceremony only on the Web site was an experiment to see if it would drive more traffic there.

“The goal has been to gain control over these rights that have previously been free for everyone for so many years,” she said. “We have to evaluate it and see how it works and perhaps we’ll do it differently next year.”

Entertainment events like the Oscars generally have far more broadcast restrictions, as do virtually all top-tier sports like the Olympics and soccer’s World Cup. None can be aired live, unlike the Nobels, unless costly TV rights are purchased.

In both Norway, where the peace prize is awarded, and Sweden, where the other five awards are given out, the national broadcaster films on the company’s behalf.

Sweden’s TV4 had the rights to film Nobel events in Sweden on behalf of Nobel Media but the company canceled the contract in 2008 after China Central Television and Shanghai Media Group cut out parts of a speech by Nobel Foundation Chairman Marcus Storch. The excised section mentioned an exhibition in Norway about the importance of freedom of expression in democracies.

TV4 blamed it on Chinese media and said Nobel Media was violating the spirit of the award.

Associated Press Writer Louise Nordstrom contributed to this report from Stockholm.

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