Using only an iPad or iPhone App or via streaming from web browser, Aereo actually streams 27 local channels (in NYC for now) and is going to roll out nationwide later this year. The company received a $25 million investment from InterActiveCorp (who also owns Ask.com and Match.com).
Aereo is freaking out the NY-based cable TV companies who are crying foul and claiming exclusive rights to non-antennae based broadcast TV.
Why?
Well, cable TV companies actually pay for the right to re-broadcast local TV and national station content (even though it can be picked up over-the-air for free). But Aereo is actually using a postage-stamp sized antennae (literally small enough to fit on your fingernail) that can be used individually by a viewer or even shared via neighborhoods or apartment buildings. These digital antennas pick up signals through larger “antenna-farms” — much like server-farms — that are placed strategically around the city to pick up over-the-air TV signals. Since Aereo is picking up the signal technically over-the-air, they don’t have to pay for it.
What’s next?
Well, if history is perspective, instead of building a better mouse-trap (meaning instead of the cable TV companies trying to be creative and allow for cheaper, easier access to their own content), the cable TV companies will likely fight this in court – just like they did when DirecTV starting kicking their butt back in the late 1990s and early 2000s. Time Warner and the like decided, back then, the best way to compete with satellite TV was to defend their exclusive deals in court. So, no signal improvement or lower cost, just lawyers.
I applaud Aereo for this creative approach to getting TV to people where and when they want it. CableTV, you suck and you are in trouble — even more.
If you want to know more about Aereo, go here: https://aereo.com/
Gary Kayye is the founder of rAVe [Publications]. Reach him at gary@ravepubs.com