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1,542 result(s) for "Robichaux, Mark"
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ACA faithful hope to sway legislators
In addition to listening at panel sessions, ACA members who came to Washington for the summit were scheduled to meet with legislators to get traction on several issues, including relief from onerous regulations and burdens on smaller operators, help on pole fees and rights of way, and a more efficient use of funds to pay for broadband deployment in unserved areas.
The Pride of Lionsgate: Hear Her Roar
Stern has been a key player on the senior management team for the past 15 years, working alongside CEO Jon Feltheimer and TV Group chairman Kevin Beggs, instrumental in tripling the size of Lionsgate's television slate, which includes 90 series on more than 40 U.S. networks. Together at a firm called New World Entertainment, they were haring an issue trying to finance a TV series based on Zorro for a small cable network in the U. S. After many failed attempts, Stern got a bright idea: license the series to a production company in France that she knew.
Hacking 101: How to get in
(Spear phishers focus narrowly on a single company or individual.) * Distributed Denial of Service (DDoS) attackers use multiple hijacked computers to push through a huge volume of traffic through the network until it becomes overwhelmed and no longer functions. * Botnets, also known as \"zombie armies,\" are groups of infected computers controlled bythird parties for DDoS attacks or for distributing other malware. * Trojan attacks allow attackers to remotely steal data and manipulate the computer. * Ransomware demands a ransom after blocking access to the computer byencrypting files on the hard drive. * Spyware allows attackers to go undetected on infected computers to track users movements on the Internet, even keystrokes for theft of accounts, etc. * Adware redirects users to unwanted advertising. * SQL injection inserts a nefarious code in a website/'s entry field that allow attackers to manipulate or steal or destroy data. -
Layer3 TV: A Different Kind of Animal
Layer3 TV, the Colorado-based next-generation cable operator, travels high-speed connections in the local-access network to get video services into customer homes, but the company likewise insists that it's not an \"over-the-top\" service like Netflix or a \"virtual\" MVPD such as PlayStation Vue. [...]Layer3 TV has about 120,000 square feet of space under management where it collects and aggregates its live channels and video-on-demand fare (it's aiming to offer a VOD library with about 30,000 assets by year-end) and encrypts, encodes and packages that payload before delivering it all to the local areas it serves. [...]despite the rise of multichannel services like Sling TV and PS Vue, he doesn't think OTT is a long-term conduit for delivering pay TV packages, but one that is better suited for delivering tailored, more focused fare.
Timing was right for Rocco
Telephone companies, flush with cash, were moving in to buy smaller cable operators. [...]Gerry himself was selling his MSO, CableVision Industries, to Time Warner Inc. Other companies like McLean Hunter, Houston Industries, Times Mirror, Wometco, Sutton Capital and Multimedia had all decided to exit the business. Yes the cable industry got bigger, but it was only after many interactive missteps (Time Warner Cable's Full Service Network) and messy mergers (AOL-Time Warner Inc.).