A startup called Aereo is promising customers access to live broadcast television on their computers for $12 a month — or just $80 per year. Not everyone is happy about that. If you're used to ...
The US Supreme Court rules against the streaming-TV service, in a 6-3 split opinion that effectively requires Aereo to pay copyright fees or shut down. Joan E. Solsman was CNET's senior media reporter ...
Covering home audio and video, Matthew Moskovciak helps CNET readers find the best sights and sounds for their home theaters. The future of over-the-air TV is in the cloud. Or at least that's what ...
Posts from this author will be added to your daily email digest and your homepage feed. is The Verge’s executive editor. He has covered tech, policy, and online creators for over a decade. The Supreme ...
An antenna or a provider: For nearly all Americans, those are the only two ways to access live network TV. Anyone within range of a transmitter can hook up rabbit ears to tune in to ABC, NBC, CBS, Fox ...
ABC v. Aereo, which the Supreme Court decided on Wednesday, is a lesson in the power and limits of analogy. Aereo developed a system that allows customers to watch free, over-the-air television ...
Aereo was a startup that allows people to view and record over-the-air television broadcasts over the Internet. First launched in New York in 2012, the company provided service in about a dozen metro ...
In an emergency motion (PDF) filed Friday, TV-over-Internet startup Aereo submitted its most detailed legal arguments yet as to why it should be allowed to be a cable company. It also asked, based on ...
Today the Supreme Court of the United States issued a ruling in the legal tussle between streaming TV service Aereo and major network broadcasters. SCOTUS ruled that the decision of the second circuit ...