There will be no streaming bubble. That said, once all video content goes online, the revenues for each content provider will drop some. Bigger pie, smaller slices. There will still be key players, like Google (YT), Netflix, and Amazon. Those three are already key TV players, because -- increasingly -- "TV" is now online.Fox (the company not the news network) did the right thing at the right time. They have their piece of the pie with Hulu. The Murdochs should be lighting their cigars constantly over the smart moves they made. I’m surprised people keep thinking Netflix, Amazon, Apple will be major tv players. Why would they make the same mistakes tv companies have made? Buying tv networks does nothing for them except add eventual unnecessary debt. No one else thinks the streaming bubble will burst?
But streaming isn't really a bubble that will burst. It's rapidly become the defacto way of consuming content, be it music, games, or video.
I'm not sure broadband should be 'given away', but internet access is a requirement anymore for a lot of things, even things relating to government or government services.If you mean that the government should guarantee such service to everyone, thing about this: telephones were never a "basic service" nor was cable. Nor radio, or TV.
Yes, there should be a basic service at a reasonable price, maybe even with a low-income subsidy. But there are many areas, particularly rural ones, where the cost of installation is so high at this time that free enterprise can not provide such service.
But nobody provided cable for free. Why should broadband be given away?
Banking is going online with the increased reduction in branches, branch hours, and ATMs disappearing due to their becoming liabilities (maintenance costs, theft, break-ins, etc.). The government now expects you to log in to services like the IRS, SocSec, and many states (like mine) expect you to create an account if you get state funded services.
Need to deal with a local utility? They expect you to "Go Online".
Need a job? Potential employers tell you to "Go Online".
It's not 1991 anymore. The internet is not a playtoy or luxury like it was back then. It's become a necessity.