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September 1, 2021 10:42 am GMT

Locast loses legal protections that keep its local TV streaming service alive

A company purporting to improve access to local TV stations for people who cant access the signal via traditional means has been dealt a blow by a New York Court. Locast has lost the courtroom skirmish started by CBS, ABC, NBC and Fox, which said that the company was violating their copyright. Deadline reports that the quartets request for summary judgment was granted, saying that it couldnt use its non-profit status as a defense against further action.

The big four, of course, dont believe Locasts aims were anywhere near as public-minded as the company made out. The body was reportedly backed, in part, by AT&T and Dish Network, and the networks feel that the whole project was set up as a way of dodging carriage fees. Part of Locasts defense was that US copyright law allows third parties to boost local signals, and that it acted like a signal booster station.

Its worth noting that Locasts founder David Goodfriend, a lawyer and former FCC legal advisor, conceived of Locast in the wake of Aeros destruction at the hands of the big networks. A 2019 New York Times profile explained that he had designed the legal situation to be compliant within the law. The profile is even titled that the company would love to get sued to act as a test-case for the rules.

The court found that Locasts policy of expanding into new markets runs contrary to the aim of a non-profit, where cash should be used to cover running costs only. Judge Louis Stanton said that the cash raised from Locasts $5-per-month (dont call it a) subscription was being used to bankroll further expansion and earned far more money from user charges than was necessary.

It didnt help, that when some TV providers have entered into carriage disputes, Locast has been cited as a way of still accessing that content. As The Wall Street Journal wrote back in 2019, DirecTV and Dish customers were directed to access Locast, although Dish and AT&T both said that this was only because it felt that it was obliged to offer the choice to its users.

By removing Locasts major legal shield, its certainly likely that the project will soon have yet more lawyers on their door. After all, were it to survive, it would be a challenge both to the profitability of the major TV players and encouragement to any future upstarts looking to disrupt the space.

In a statement, Locast said that the ruling was disappointing, citing commentary from the EFF adding that the court interpreted the law in an artificially-narrow way. The EFF added that over three million people use Locast to access local TV, including many who cant afford cable and cant pick up their local stations with an antenna. This ruling threatens their access to local news and vital information during a global pandemic. It closed by saying that the ruling treats copyright law not as an engine of progress but a moat protecting the most privileged position of the four giant broadcasting networks.


Original Link: https://www.engadget.com/locast-broadcast-lawsuit-copyright-loss-104215298.html?src=rss

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Engadget

Engadget is a web magazine with obsessive daily coverage of everything new in gadgets and consumer electronics. Engadget was launched in March of 2004 in partnership with the Weblogs, Inc. Network (WI

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