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 streaming-TV startup's new legal tack embraces the ruling against it, arguing that the decision means Aereo deserves the same copyright license cable companies get. Dara Kerr was a senior reporter ...
It's a sad day for Aereo. The two-year old startup, which allows people to stream broadcast television on their computers and mobile devices, has been fighting major broadcasters in court almost since ...
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 ...
It's a sad day for Aereo and all those who believed in it. The startup, which allowed people to stream live broadcast television to their computers and mobile devices, has filed for Chapter 11 ...
When Chet Kanojia came up with the idea of Aereo, I'm sure he never dreamed that broadcast TV networks, such as Fox, would threaten to shutter their local stations and move their content exclusively ...
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 ...
Aereo (formerly Bamboom Labs) announced a new Internet based, $12/month subscription television service allowing consumers to view live or recorded local TV over the Internet on their HDTV, iPad, ...
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 ...
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 ...
Aereo, a service that lets you stream live broadcast networks like NBC, CBS, and ABC, is the focus of a big Supreme Court case today that could determine the future of TV. The networks are suing Aereo ...
Aereo, the company that lets subscribers watch TV stations' video that it routes onto the Internet, violates U.S. copyright law, the Supreme Court has ruled. The court's 6-3 decision reverses a lower ...