News

Barry Diller on Aereo Ruling: ‘We Did Try, But It’s Over Now’ "I do believe blocking this technology is a big loss for consumers," the Aereo financial backer told CNBC.
Barry Diller said Monday that Aereo’s recent legal victories make it clear that networks and studios suing to stop his IAC-owned service are fighting a losing battle. “We think the lawsuit is ...
Barry Diller, IAC chairman and a key investor in Aereo, said that the startup streaming service will likely see its demise if it loses its Supreme Court battle with broadcasters. “If we lose, we ...
Diller had earlier admitted there was "no plan B" for Aereo if they lost the Supreme Court case. IAC is the biggest investor in Aereo, having pumped $20.5 million in cash into the TV-over-Internet ...
The sun was still setting when The Observer rounded the corner under The High Line for IAC’s Internet Week closing party, co-hosted by Aereo, a provocative new startup that will allow users t… ...
There’s a rumbling from the corporate graveyard — Barry Diller’s Aereo is trying to come back from the dead. After being deep-sixed by the Supreme Court in June for violating broadcast TV ...
The three-day Milken Institute Global Conference kicked off Monday in Beverly Hills, with media moguls Barry Diller and Rupert Murdoch among the hundreds of business leaders and politicians slated ...
Foes of Aereo wasted no time celebrating their hard fought victory in Wednesday's U.S. Supreme Court decision, which held by a 6-3 ruling that Barry Diller's upstart technology company had ...
Aereo investor Barry Diller says that the company isn't about taking free, over-the-air signals and charging for them, but is instead about moving TV from a closed system to IP. At the D11 ...
Barry Diller, one of the largest backers of Aereo, says the online TV service is likely “finished” if it loses its case before the Supreme Court.. The justices will hear arguments on April 22 ...
Barry Diller, IAC chairman and a key investor in Aereo, said that the startup streaming service will likely see its demise if it loses its Supreme Court battle with broadcasters. "If we lose, we ...