US Solicitor General sides with networks against Aereo in Supreme Court case
In Aereos Supreme Court fight to transmit TV stations over the web, the U.S. Solicitor General is taking the side of TV networks. In a friend-of-the-court brief filed Monday, Donald B. Verrilli Jr. argued that Aereo is violating copyright law by setting up tiny antennas and putting the signal online. Unlike home antennas, which bring the signal to an individual, Aero operates an integrated system to rebroadcast to the public.
Like its competitors, respondent therefore must obtain licenses to perform the copyrighted content on which its business relies.
Aereo has claimed that because it uses antenna farms with thousands of individual receivers, it is not retransmitting TV signals and doesnt have to pay retransmission fees. TV networks including ABC, NBCU, CBS, and PBS have claimed that Aereo is engaged in copyright violation.
In the brief, the solicitor general suggested Aereos argument that it isnt engaged in retransmission is not a natural reading of telecommunication laws because it isnt using a single antenna would afford talismanic significance to precisely the sort of technological minutiae that Congress intended to treat as irrelevant in crafting telecommunications laws.
Respondent identifies no reason why Congress would have wanted to countenance such a loophole.
http://www.thewrap.com/u-s-solicitor-general-supports-networks-aereo-fight/