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NATIONAL CABLE & TELECOMMUNICATIONS ASSOCIATION et al. v. BRAND X INTERNET SERVICES et al.
CERTIORARI TO THE UNITE...
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El cable no es sólo para la televisión. De hecho, cuando se usaba para ese fin único, lo que pasaba es que se estaba desperdiciando su gran capacidad de transportar información.
Cada uno de estos canales tiene una capacidad de 6 MHz, lo que les basta para llegar a la televisión y proyectar su señal en la pantalla. El Internet sólo necesita un poco más de la capacidad de estos mismos canales para llegar a su computadora y darle la más alta velocidad.
Considere que el módem no puede brindar Internet con cualquier cable que provea la empresa de televisión. Debe ser uno especial que tiene particularidades especiales como un mayor grosor y una protección electromagnética. Así que para obtenerlo no sólo debe adquirir un módem sino contratar un servicio donde le instalen el cable especial. De ...
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I. INTRODUCTION
The evolution of law and technology has led to substantial activity in the field of communications law. The growth in popularity and...
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... including ADP, American Water, Cablevision, Cisco, Comcast, Convergys, Digicel, DivX, Gartner...); and Excite@Home, the largest cable Internet and broadband company. "Technology and energy are ...
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NEW YORK - Cable companies have been losing TV subscribers at an ever faster rate in the last few months, and satellite TV isn't picking up the slack.
That could be a sign that Internet TV services such as Netflix and Hulu are finally starting to entice people to cancel cable, though company executives are pointing to the weak economy and housing market for now.
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AT THE VERY least, regulators should understand what they're trying to regulate. But the Internet, with its shifting technologies and mores, defies easy understanding. That makes regulation especially dangerous in the hands of a hyperpolitical and craven Congress.
The push to prevent high-speed Internet providers from slowing down websites to gain commercial advantage is a particularly egregious example. Somehow, those same Internet providers - cable and telephone giants, mostly - have turned "net neutrality" into an assault on customer freedom, a neat bit of doublespeak abetted by their friends on Capitol Hill.
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To reach the 250GB limit, a customer would have to do any of the following in a month's time: * send 50 million e-mails (at 0.05 kilobytes an email); * download 62,500 songs (at 4 megabytes a song); * download 125 standard-definition movies (at 2 gigabytes a movie); * upload 25,000 high-resolution digital photos (at 10 megabytes a photo). "Basically all (Internet service providers) have the same issue: A small amount of our users are using an inordinate amount of bandwidth," Time Warner spokesman Alex Dudley said.
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NEW YORK - TV subscribers are ditching their cable companies at an ever faster rate in the past few months, and many of them aren't signing up with a satellite or phone competitor instead.
Their willingness to simply go without pay television could be a sign that Internet TV services such as Netflix and Hulu finally are starting to entice people to cancel cable, though company executives say the weak economy and housing market are to blame.
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Arthur B. Wineburg, Pillsbury Winthrop LLP, of McLean, Virginia, argued for defendant-appellant. With him on the brief were Susan T. Brown, Daniel E. ...
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Objective is to Minimize Impact on Internet Users
LOUISVILLE, Colo. -- The cable industry is well positioned to transition to Internet Protocol vers...