Remember Aereo, the now-defunct company that set up a warehouse of TV antennas that let people get over-the-air TV broadcast via the Internet? A pair of court decisions put that company out of ...
Streaming video company FilmOn lost a major court battle late last week. Since that event, though, reactions and comments haven’t really focused on FilmOn, a company that has gone through multiple ...
Long after the demise of Aereo, FilmOn is still fighting to broadcast local TV channels over the Internet—despite repeated court losses. With FilmOn’s latest defeat, US District Judge Rosemary Collyer ...
FilmOn X founder Alki David may have been upset after two courts issued unfavorable rulings in suits brought against him by broadcasters — but he is irate over an erroneous report that he reached a ...
CBS’s attorneys did not immediately respond to a request for comment from TheWrap. In Washington early Wednesday, FilmOn X filed court papers saying it would appeal a judge’s ruling barring it from ...
BENKELMAN, Neb. (AP) -- As the television-over-the-Internet service Aereo squared off against broadcasters over copyright claims in the Supreme Court, a similar startup called FilmOn stood on the ...
You're currently following this author! Want to unfollow? Unsubscribe via the link in your email. FilmOn, a free TV streaming service highlighted this week by Forbes as one of the 10 companies ...
Siding with TV broadcasters, a federal appellate court said Tuesday that online video distributor FilmOn X is not entitled to a compulsory cable license that would enable it to stream TV programs. The ...
Aereo competitor FilmOn, with help from its outspoken CEO Alki David, managed to dig itself into an even deeper hole when the service was hit with a $90,000 contempt order last Friday. U.S. District ...
Our technology looks to be different, says the TV digital distributor. By Eriq Gardner Former Legal Editor-at-Large A week ago, a federal judge in D.C. granted TV broadcasters’ motion for an ...
After suing Alki David for using "BarryDriller" and "AereoKiller," Aereo is now suing him for using "Aero." By Eriq Gardner Former Legal Editor-at-Large Time will tell if the millions of dollars that ...
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