Hey MILC,
How specific do you intend to become?
How do you deal with imposts and restrictions concerning all sorts of things... lets say (for instance) advertising? If I want to sell content that persuades people to quit smoking can I prevent the buyer from putting Marlboro ads next to it? And if he does anyway, how is that claim made? Its not like the blockchain would be preventing or punishing him.
But anyway: Thank you for showing those lovely screenshots!
http://welt-der-wunder.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/ico/images/Media%20Hub/1_MediaHub-SWISSTXT_4.jpghttp://welt-der-wunder.s3.eu-central-1.amazonaws.com/ico/images/Media%20Hub/1_MediaHub-SWISSTXT_3.jpgNow, how do I understand your model right? You create smart contracts that cut the cost of fees and intricate legal aspects of selling video content from creation to consumption by implementing a platform with the good folks of Swisstxt that functions basically like a VOD for VODs, TV and other sorts of video publisher?
To get it going you try to sell your own content to show how well it works
you only do that in Germany (at first) so that there is not so much trouble with licensing issues and what not (at first).. By the time you are ready to expand to other juristictions you hope to have worked out how to make your content legal enough and maybe create so much impact that it simply becomes standard procedure for video publishing?
I'm not sure how much middle man is cut out by that approach, but if cost is just right and you provide and present the necessary legal standarts brilliantly enough, this might work just wonderfully.
Still I'm not conviced: In Germany, how many creators and publishers of the video content you are looking for as users of your platform are one and the same entity? Surely companies like Walt Disney Company that at the same time produce and sell don't mind high lawer fees and strict copyright agreements. I would even argue that its pretty much in their interest because owning exclusive rights to their content is their bread and butter. On the other hand Germany with its laws recognizing "Urheberrecht" being different from copyright might even be a rather good place to start (being ignorous to the fact that copyright laws in Germany have gotten increasingly stricter (and worst for that matter) since time immemorial).
At first I thought that you just aimed at implementing a smart contract that legally required people to transfer content from creation to consumption (a bit like paypal). I didn't know that you wanted to be the netflix of netflix.
Didn't you use to prefer crypto currency over physical currency? Why the change of heart?
Btw: Do also you sell tokens to Hong Kongers?