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 Post subject: Aereo, FilmOn, etc...
PostPosted: Wed Oct 09, 2013 1:12 pm 
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In my determination to rid myself of the evil that is Comcast Cable Television service, I have been looking into alternatives to get local television channels.

I've tried indoor OTA DTV antenna, but I live in a Condo, and live in an area with terrible reception (due to geography and interference from the local FEMA facility down the road). I also live in the middle of a metroplex, and the broadcast transmitters are spread out around me in about 280 degrees, which means I would need an expensive roof mounted auto-rotating antenna system to pick up most of the channels in my area. Not really feasible. The indoor antenna gives me marginal reception for the three major network broadcast signals, which is better than nothing.

In my searching for new technology to solve my problem, I ran across Aereo.

Here is a description of the service they provide (from Wikipedia).

Wikipedia wrote:
Aereo's technology allows subscribers to view live broadcast content and/or record live broadcasts for viewing later.[4] As of October 2012, Aereo can be used on Windows, Mac, and Linux PCs [5][6] with a compatible browser or iOS devices including the iPhone, iPad, iPod Touch or Apple TV (2nd & 3rd Gen) via AirPlay.[1] As of January 2013, Aereo can be watched on Roku without the use of iOs device. Aereo launched a stand-alone Roku app on the January 21, 2013.[7]

As of June 2012, the service offers 28 channels, including all major broadcast channels. In August 2012, the company announced new monthly and yearly pricing options, $1 a day and 'Aereo Try for Free.' Monthly plans start at $8 for 20 hours of DVR storage, there are also yearly subscriptions.[8]
Aereo provides this service by leasing to each user an individual remote antenna. [4][9][10] This distinguishes Aereo from purely internet-based streaming services.[11]



Basically, they are providing access to a local antenna in several major cities (sadly, none on the West Coast). They provide this for about the same price a a Netflix subscription.

The downside is, they are on shaky legal ground, and have been sued by major cable providers, and local and national networks.

They managed to have a judge rule in their favor in July in a suit brought by a 'coalition of broadcasters' in an attempt to shut them down.

Here is an article at ARS Technica
http://arstechnica.com/tech-policy/2013 ... own-aereo/

The lawsuits contend that Aereo is unlawfully rebroadcasting protected content without a license (or approval).

Aereo contends they are just selling access to local antennas that are receiving signals that are broadcast freely over the air.

Frankly, I can see both sides. But I have zero sympathy for big cable, and the big national networks, and really hope Aereo prevails and continues to provide their service.

I will probably subscribe to this and watch via my Roku 3 for a few months, just as a part two of my 'vote with your wallet' protest against comcast and big cable. Even though they aren't in my area, at least I can still watch live sports and other non-local shows on these networks.

Edit: You can see a coverage map of sorts at their website. Per the wiki page linked above, here are some of the cities that are currently serviced, or have plans for the near future.

Wikpedia wrote:
Atlanta
Austin
Baltimore
Birmingham (AL)
Boston (also services southern Vermont and New Hampshire)
Chicago
Cleveland
Dallas
Denver
Detroit
Houston
Kansas City
Madison (WI)
Miami
Minneapolis
Philadelphia
Pittsburgh
Providence (RI)
Raleigh-Durham (NC)
Salt Lake City (also services entire state of Utah)
Tampa
Washington D.C.


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PostPosted: Fri Oct 11, 2013 6:13 pm 
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CBS, ABC, NBC, Fox all file supreme court petition to shut down Aereo: http://mashable.com/2013/10/11/nbc-supreme-court-aereo/


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PostPosted: Sat Oct 12, 2013 7:15 pm 
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Nice. When I was last looking at these guys they were in beta with only access to new York.

I too hope that the little guy prevails over the mega corps.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 12, 2013 8:26 pm 
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Yeah, the networks need to lose that appeal.

They'd be laughed out of court if I strung a wire to an antenna from out of their broadcast range.

It's none of their business if I decide to convert transmission formats on my private equipment mid-way. They'd lose that one, hard, though they might try to take it to trial.

Likewise if I leased the transmission line from somebody else.

They need to lose this thing hard. I'd give them a case if it were a matter of the feed being modified or tinkered with in the process, but it's not, from my understanding of the service.

Or, you know, better yet -- get with the times and offer competitive streaming options of their own. CBS's service is a joke, for instance. The encoding quality is terrible, the bandwidth is underpowered, and they try to stick you with a full set of commercials despite the ability to make them unskippable and much more finely market-targeted.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 12, 2013 9:21 pm 
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Last edited by Kairtane on Sat Oct 12, 2013 9:24 pm, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Sat Oct 12, 2013 9:21 pm 
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Ive pretty muh quit watching cbs for that reason.

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PostPosted: Fri Oct 18, 2013 3:26 pm 
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Damn it all to hell and back again.

I've had two beta invites from Aereo sitting in my inbox since June. Thanks gmail,for doing your weird sorting.

Of course, the page I need to access is now not working. Thanks lawsuit. The god of Irony (Ironicus) is happy to hear that cable companies got their start by taking free television antenna airwaves and cabling them for rebroadcast into people's houses.

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PostPosted: Mon Oct 21, 2013 9:04 pm 
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Yay. Aereo is officially here, apparently. I was on the fence about signing up until a friend mentioned one perk is adding to consumer demand and sticking it to the cable companies. That was the correct button to press.

So, essentially, I am paying 8 dollars a month for a co-location of a tv antenna along with some DVR services. I am cool with that.

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PostPosted: Sun Mar 09, 2014 2:42 pm 
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Aereo forced to shut down in SLC and Denver.

http://www.engadget.com/2014/03/08/aere ... -shutdown/


Last edited by Midgen on Mon Mar 10, 2014 11:37 am, edited 1 time in total.

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PostPosted: Mon Mar 10, 2014 11:28 am 
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Yeah, I read about that a week or two ago. Got the official email just the other night. Utah courts piss me off.

I hope it gets overturned at some point. It was a wonderful service that I was happy to pay for.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 22, 2014 11:51 am 
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The outcome of this will likely have a monumental impact on the future of how television is watched, for better or for worse...

I am not all that hopeful...

http://www.foxnews.com/tech/2014/04/22/ ... p=features


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PostPosted: Tue Apr 22, 2014 3:14 pm 
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WTB Judges and congresscritters that actually understand Technology.

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PostPosted: Tue Apr 22, 2014 5:18 pm 
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I dream of a world where, regardless of whom my internet provider is, I can pay a-la carte for any channel or show I want to watch. It is going to be tough to get very rich people who hate change to enter that world.

But I will say stepping into that world would net them 1000% more profit from me than they already have.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 11:47 am 
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Wow, I guess wishes do come true... Mostly.

Amazon Prime and HBO agree to exclusive deal to bring HBO shows to Amazon

Most of them anyway. No Game of Thrones. Yet. Considering it's the most pirated show of all time, I can't see why they wouldn't take my money if offered.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 11:52 am 
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Numbuk wrote:
Wow, I guess wishes do come true... Mostly.

Amazon Prime and HBO agree to exclusive deal to bring HBO shows to Amazon

Most of them anyway. No Game of Thrones. Yet. Considering it's the most pirated show of all time, I can't see why they wouldn't take my money if offered.

Hoooooooray! The online streaming game becomes further fragmented! **** them all, I am switching to pirating.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 12:19 pm 
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Numbuk wrote:
Wow, I guess wishes do come true... Mostly.

Amazon Prime and HBO agree to exclusive deal to bring HBO shows to Amazon

Most of them anyway. No Game of Thrones. Yet. Considering it's the most pirated show of all time, I can't see why they wouldn't take my money if offered.


There are probably some exclusive distribution rights agreements with "Big Cable"....


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 12:49 pm 
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Here are some trial updates from a few major "news" outlets.

http://www.latimes.com/business/la-fi-s ... z2ziPLEKjS

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/04/23/busin ... media&_r=1

http://online.wsj.com/news/articles/SB1 ... reno64-wsj

http://www.washingtonpost.com/business/ ... story.html

http://recode.net/2014/04/22/heres-what ... own-words/

The recode article in particular has some very interesting outtakes...

recode.net wrote:
Here’s Paul Clement, the attorney representing ABC (and the other broadcast networks), making his central argument — Aereo doesn’t have the right to transmit TV programs because it doesn’t have a license for them — and answering queries from Chief Justice John Roberts, Justice Samuel Alito, Justice Anthony Kennedy and Justice Stephen Breyer about the difference between Aereo and other services. Note Breyer’s concern about cloud services.
supreme court dialog wrote:
CLEMENT: I do think that in all sorts of places, including the real world there’s a fundamental difference between a service that allows — that provides new content to all sorts of end-users, essentially any paying stranger, and a service that provides a locker, a storage service.

And I think if you want a real world analogy off of the Internet, I think it’s the basic decision — the difference between a car dealer and a valet parking service. I mean, if you look at it from 30,000 feet, you might think, hey, both of these things provide cars to the public. But if you looked at it more closely, you’d understand, well, if I show up at the car dealership without a car, I’m going to be able to get a car. If I show up at the valet parking service and I don’t own a car, it’s not going to end well for me. And so –

ALITO: What is the difference –
(Laughter.)

ALITO: I didn’t mean to interrupt your –

CLEMENT: Well, I was just going to — so I think there is a very real way in which you would say, you know, at the end of the day, the car dealer’s providing cars to the public, the valet parking service is not. It’s providing a parking service.

ROBERTS: Why isn’t — and I don’t want to stretch it too — but why isn’t it like a public garage [and] your own garage? I mean, you know, if you — you can park your car in your own garage or you can park it in a public garage.

You can go to Radio Shack and buy an antenna and a DVR or you can rent those facilities somewhere else from Aereo. They’ve — they’ve got an antenna. They’ll let you use it when you need it and they can, you know, record the stuff as well and let you pick it up when you need it.

CLEMENT: Mr. Chief Justice, that’s not an implausible way to look at this. That’s exactly the way that this Court looked at it in the Fortnightly decision. But Congress in 1976 decided it was going to look at it differently, and it said that if you are providing a service, even if you are providing a service that one could reconceptualize as just renting out antennas that somebody could put on their own house, the person that provides that service on an ongoing basis and in the process exploits the copyrighted works of others is engaged in a public performance.

That is clearly what they were trying to do in the 1976 Act by adding the transmit clause.

ALITO: Well, the Second Circuit analogized this to its CableVision decision. So maybe you could explain to me what is the difference, in your view, between what Aereo does and a remote storage DVR system.

Is the difference — does the difference have to do with the way in which the cable company that has the remote storage DVR system versus the way Aereo acquires the program in the first place? Does it have to do with the number of people who view this program that’s been recorded? What is the difference?

CLEMENT: I think the potential difference, and it’s both the cloud locker storage and this example, I don’t think this Court has to decide it today. I think it can just be confident they are different. Here is the –

ALITO: Well, I don’t find that very satisfying because I really — I need to know how far the rationale that you want us to accept will go, and I need to understand, I think, what effect it will have on these other technologies.

KENNEDY: I had the same question.

Just assume that CableVision is our precedent. I know that it isn’t, but let’s just assume that it is. How would you distinguish the CableVision from your case and how is it applicable here? Assume that it’s binding
precedent. Just that’s a hypothetical.

CLEMENT: Okay. But, Justice Kennedy, I would like to answer both your questions by assuming that the result in CableVision is right, but I don’t have to necessarily buy the reasoning, because I think the reasoning of CableVision is profoundly wrong, so let me circle back to that.

But the reason there’s a fundamental difference between the RS-DVR at issue in CableVision and what Aereo provides is, as Justice Alito alluded to, the fact that there’s a license in the CableVision context to get the initial performance to the public.

And so then I think appropriately the focus in the CableVision context becomes just the playback feature and just the time-shifting that’s enabled by that. And in that context, if you focus only on that, then the RS-DVR looks a lot like a locker service where you have to come in with the content before you can get content out and you only get back the same content.

And here is what really I think Aereo is like. Aereo is like if CableVision, having won in the Second Circuit, decides: “Whew, we won, so guess what? Going forward, we’re going to dispense with all these licenses, and we are just going to try to tell people we are just an RS-DVR, that’s all we are, and never mind that we don’t have any licensed ability to get the broadcast in the first instance, and we’re going to provide it to individual users, and it’s all going to be because they push buttons and not because we push buttons.”

If that were the hypothetical, I don’t know how that wouldn’t be the clearest violation of the 1976 Act.

BREYER: That’s exactly our problem I’m hearing everybody having the same problem, and I will be absolutely prepared, at least for argument’s sake, to assume with you that if there were ever anything that should be held to fall within the public performance, this should be.

All right? I will assume that. I’m not saying it.

But then the problem is in the words that do that, because we have to write words. Are we somehow catching other things that really will change life and shouldn’t, such as the cloud? And you said, well, as the government says, don’t worry, because that isn’t a public performance. And then I read the definition and I don’t see how to get out of it.


There is a lot more at the link above...


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 2:07 pm 
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"Gosh. You've worked so hard to design a service that is legal. How can phrase things to ensure that it's illegal?" is what I keep hearing the justices say about this.

**** it. Declare it's legal. The broadcasters are free to remove their public broadcasts from the airwaves in protest. They can keep licensing their content to cable and satellite companies, that way, instead of having them bail and follow suit along Aereo's tech model (assuming they haven't patented the **** out of it).

But you know what? That **** over a lot of non-subscribing TV watchers who watch your shitty network content because its free. Say goodbye to your market penetration, and have fun explaining that to your advertisers and sponsors. By the way, there are some other companies that will be chomping at the bit to buy spectrum you're no longer using, I'm sure, so thanks for getting out of the damn way.

Or, you can do the rational thing, and realize that Aereo's giving your network WAY more geographic reach than your own antennas, at no cost to you. Gosh, the nerve of them. If it's worth sending your **** out to one city for free, why isn't it worth sending your **** out to one city, plus some subset of the rest of the country at no additional cost to you, even if somebody else makes a little money along the way to enable that?

Or, you know, we can just **** over entire other tech sectors that are actually doing innovative, progressive things with their technology so you can throw your little tantrum and pretend it's still 1983.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 2:46 pm 
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Sigh. Two things I hate and distrust mixing together in a blender: Cable Companies and the Judicial System.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 3:00 pm 
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OTA is not really an option for me. There are dozens of channels in my region, but geography prevents me from watching them.
Aereo, or a similar service would give me more access to more networks paid advertising.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 3:41 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
Aereo, or a similar service would give me more access to more networks paid advertising.

Yeah. I don't think I've ever heard of a broadcast service complaining about free (to them) expansion of their service area.

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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 6:01 pm 
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They seem to be mostly worried about their contracts with "Big Cable"


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PostPosted: Wed Apr 23, 2014 7:08 pm 
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Midgen wrote:
They seem to be mostly worried about their contracts with "Big Cable"

So stop broadcasting and become subscription only stations to be carried by cable and satellite providers. Oh, wait. Then they'd have to put effort into their programming instead of producing local news nobody watches anymore and sitting a bunch of shovelfare as 90% of their content that only gets viewers because it's free or in the bottom tier of the subscription plans.

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PostPosted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 7:11 pm 
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Well, Aereo is dead.

http://www.theverge.com/2014/6/25/58425 ... television


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PostPosted: Wed Jun 25, 2014 7:19 pm 
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On the one hand, that's unfortunate.

On the other hand, the director of networking for Aereo was an imbecile who annoyed me for something like 3 weeks straight about traceroutes.

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