If Aereo wins at the supreme court and broadcasters pull TV off the air, so be it | Dan Gillmor

Current Berkman People and Projects 2014-04-22

Summary:

Sure, the streaming service and companies like Airbnb and Uber skirt the law, but that's better than the old-school cartel hording a public service

Plus: Aereo squares off with broadcasters at US supreme court

Explainer: why the Aereo case could change how we watch TV

In the endless war of incumbents versus insurgents, Tuesday's oral arguments at the US supreme court America's broadcast TV networks against a video-streaming startup called Aereo will ultimately be one small battle. But they remained a useful, if complex, illustration of the way a supposedly free-market economy has become so beholden to the needs, and whims, of entrenched interests. And American Broadcasting Companies v Aereo reminds us how innovators in all sorts of arenas so often skirt the edges of legality indeed, how they regularly skip right over laws and regulations that are designed to protect the business of incumbency as much as, if not more than, to serve the public interest.

For those who are new to the Aereo case, it's all about broadcast-network panic over a service that bypasses telecom control over how and where viewers watch programming. "Free TV" broadcast over airwaves lets you set up an antenna to collect the signal; you're allowed to then stream it from a device in your home to your laptop or other device. In giant clusters, Aereo sets up a tiny antenna for each customer, who can then stream it elsewhere in the same way.

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Link:

http://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2014/apr/22/aereo-supreme-court-broadcasters-tv-off-the-air

Updated:

04/22/2014, 13:44

From feeds:

Fair Use Tracker » Current Berkman People and Projects
Berkman Center Community - Test » Dan Gillmor | The Guardian

Tags:

us supreme court us television industry cloud computing television

Authors:

Dan Gillmor

Date tagged:

04/22/2014, 14:30

Date published:

04/22/2014, 14:30