SeeSaw attracts first web TV partners
26 Jan 2010 | by Sara Kimberley
, the online TV service formed in the wake of the collapse of Project Kangaroo.
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was originally conceived by the BBC as Project Kangaroo, but transferred to Arqiva when it fell foul ...
, the online TV service formed in the wake of the collapse of Project Kangaroo.
by regulators, who failed to give the go-ahead to Project Kangaroo, ITV's ad-funded VoD alliance with rivals ...
, developments next year could spell the end of the road for TV's walled garden. The rebirth of the Kangaroo ...
the ashes of Project Kangaroo, the joint venture service planned by BBC Worldwide, Channel 4 and ITV....Kangaroo ground to a halt due to the Competition Commission, Arqiva picked up the technology and SeeSaw brand. The service is expected to be slick, having been advanced by the former Project Kangaroo partners ...
their efforts to build fences around it. From the Competition Commission's bungled review of Kangaroo, the BBC ...
The Competition Commission's shock decision earlier this year not to approve Project Kangaroo ... bought the well-regarded Kangaroo technology, will also be seeking deals. Elsewhere, Microsoft's Ashley Highfield, who helped launched iPlayer and led the Kangaroo project, is pushing to make MSN Video a success ...
. The decision to beef up Channel 4's video on-demand (VoD) service follows the collapse of Kangaroo, the planned ...
The Competition Commission today published the undertakings given by the three broadcasters as part of its Project Kangaroo inquiry. In February, the Commission ruled that the planned joint venture video on demand service was anti-competitive. The BBC, ITV and Channel 4 have now been prohibited ...
Kangaroo. The proposals have already rattled Sky, which has described them as 'unclear', 'incomplete ...
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