AT&T recently announced that they will launch a service called AT&T Broadband TV.  It will be available for $10 a month, only in the United States.

This looks like the legal alternative to many of the shady free TV aggregation sites that have popped up recently on the web including  Viidoo,  Channel Chooser, Streamick, NetChannels, FreeTube, ChooseandWatch, TVLord, Channel King, Channel Break, and others.

AT&T will also face tough competition from from a myriad of big competitors that are offering free and pay-to-view content on the web including cable channels, network channels, movie and TV download services, and video sharing services.

AT&T, the biggest U.S. phone company, said it would work with media streaming services provider MobiTV to offer the service, which will also offer programs from Food Network, History Channel and Bloomberg TV.

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Commentary

  1. Sidonis wrote on 04. Oct 2006

    Wow haven’t checked xeep in a long time, but seems like a lot of imitation sites have popped up. Anyways, AT&T may be legal and it may offer the major channels, but why would I pay $10 US a month when its already available for free? Plus the limitation of this service is to mainland US states, it excludes Hawaii and Pureto Rico - as well as non-US customers. If its being distributed through the internet, why do they need to limit it according to geographic location? I mean IPTV as a medium is capable of letting anyone with a net connection to watch - this is just a way of restricting access to the content so they can still sell dvds to foreign markets.

    I still recommend using a web service, for non US countries, the best of which appears to be FreeTube ( http://www.xeep.net/freetube-free-tv-on-the-web/ ) . Streamick seems really slow and desolate, while many of the others seem to be stuffed with ads that are hard to avoid clicking.

  2. David wrote on 06. Oct 2006

    Sidonis - Thanks for stopping by again! You are right about the AT&T offering. If it is not available outside the US, why pay $10 to watch something that you can watch at home or in a hotel, etc.

    Regarding the non-US customer thing, I believe it is the fact that many of those shows have already been sold to distributors outside the US, and the content owners would most likely violate their existing contracts by airing shows in countries where distributors are paying for the rights to have the shows exclusively.

    Thanks again for coming by Xeep.

    -David

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