Google's video content will not be free, Google Video head Jennifer Feiken said recently. At the Digital Living Room conference in Foster City, Calif., Feiken said the next step for Google's broadband
video project is to charge users for downloading content, while letting content owners set prices. The company, which makes 99 percent of its revenue from search and contextual advertising, is
currently working on its advertising strategy for Google Video. Feiken said this will be simple and unobtrusive to the user, like Google's other ad products. She said Google Video will be very
different from Apple's iTunes, which has recently secured content from several big media firms.
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