Chet Kanojia, the founder of Aereo, a New York City-based TV startup battling the broadcast networks in the Supreme Court.. Steven Brahms Aereo CEO Chet Kanojia peels the wrapper from a piece of ...
Like a lot of people these days, I’ve been considering ways to trim my TV bill, which has risen well above $100 a month. One option that always crops up: ditching satellite TV service, at least in a ...
When Aereo launched its TV-over-Internet business based on tiny antennas, it drew quick legal attack from broadcasters, who have said Aereo’s scheme breaks copyright laws. TV executives are livid over ...
As TiVo scores access to the names of about 100,000 former Aereo customers, a bankruptcy plan is made to wind down Aereo's business and settle claims by TV broadcasters. By Eriq Gardner Former Legal ...
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 ...
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 ...
Today, the Supreme Court ruled that Aereo infringed broadcasters' copyrights by transmitting, in near-real-time, the stream of over-the-air television broadcasts, even when it did so at viewers' ...
Aereo CEO Chet Kanojia holds one of the company's small antenna. Is television streaming service Aereo actually “over,” as its top investor, Barry Diller, put it after a seemingly devastating blow at ...
Aereo was expecting to sell its assets for at least $4 million (and up to $31 million) at a bankruptcy auction, following its loss in a protracted legal battle against broadcasters. Sadly, luck wasn't ...
Chet Kanojia is waiting for the Supreme Court to tell him whether he has a business or needs to have a going-out-of-business sale. Kanojia is the founder and chief executive of Aereo, a start-up ...