Starts 3rd October

Vanita Keswani

Madison Media Sigma

Poulomi Roy

Joy Personal Care

Hema Malik

IPG Mediabrands

Anita Kotwani

Dentsu Media

Archana Aggarwal

Ex-Airtel

Anjali Madan

Mondelez India

Anupriya Acharya

Publicis Groupe

Suhasini Haidar

The Hindu

Sheran Mehra

Tata Digital

Rathi Gangappa

Starcom India

Mayanti Langer Binny

Sports Prensented

Swati Rathi

Godrej Appliances

Anisha Iyer

OMD India

  • NDS seeks dismissal of Canal+ suit

    Rupert Murdoch's television security unit NDS on Monday asked a federal judge to dismiss the $ 1 billion hacking laws

  • "We will be pumping money here to help grow the market and benefit from it.": AXN Asia marketing V-P Gregory Ho

    Gregory Ho is an old hand at the broadcasting business.

  • ESPN and Star Sports back on cable homes in the Philippines

    Submitted by ITV Production on Apr 23, 2002

    If in India it‘s cricket, in the Philippines it is basketball that gets the sports fan in a tizzy.

    After just under six months off the air on the Sky Cable, Home Cable and PCC platforms, the ESPN and Star Sports channels came back on TV screens in the Philippines on April 17. This followed a new agreement between the Rupert Murdoch-promoted Star Group Limited and the three cable entities. The agreement also includes other Star Group channels - National Geographic, Star Movies and Star World, an official statement says.

    The agreement was thrashed out ahead of the NBA Playoffs and Finals, which will be telecast on ESPN and Star Sports channels starting this month. With Sky Cable, Home Cable and PCC comprising 75 per cent of cable households in the Philippines, Filipino basketball fans can heave a huge sigh of relief.

    Rik Dovey, managing director of ESPN STAR Sports said: "The Philippines is a key Asian sports TV market with a high demand for quality sports programming. We‘re happy to have ESPN and Star Sports accessible again to cable subscribers in the Philippines who‘ve consistently expressed their passion for a variety of sports and NBA in particular."

    The dispute reportedly goes back to 22 October, 2001, when Star TV pulled the plug on Sky Cable and Home Cable over unpaid fees the broadcaster said was in the millions of Filipino dollars.

    Star Group regional director Charles Pollard had been quoted as saying then that supply was "indefinitely suspended" over the cable systems‘ "non-payment of millions of (Filipino) dollars of fees" to Star and ESPN Star Sports.

    And in shades akin to the situation obtaining in India, Sky Cable and Home Cable had charged in a joint statement that Star TV was "trying to bully us into buying a bundle of six channels on a ?take all or nothing‘ basis," when the two only wanted Star Sports, Star Movies and ESPN.

    The two cable providers, which joined operations in early 2001, said they could not afford the new contract terms worth 10 million Filipino dollars, up from 5.5 million Filipino dollars for five channels.

     


  • ESPN and Star Sports back on cable homes in the Philippines

    If in India it's cricket, in the Philippines it is basketball that gets the sports fan in a tizzy.

     

  • NDS seeks dismissal of Canal+ suit

    Submitted by ITV Production on Apr 23, 2002

    Rupert Murdoch‘s television security unit NDS on Monday asked a federal judge to dismiss the $ 1 billion hacking lawsuit filed against it last month by rival Canal+ Group and its subsidiaries.

    The move comes close on the heels of the San Francisco district court judge who is hearing the dispute agreeing to an accelerated discovery period in the case. The lawyers from both sides were to begin working out a schedule for each to review the other‘s documents and other relevant materials.

    Canal+, the television security arm of troubled French media giant Vivendi Universal, said yesterday it would oppose the dismissal motion.

    In what was essentially a string of technical arguments, NDS, while urging that the case be thrown out, said if any portion of the lawsuit is permitted to proceed, it should be transferred to the federal district court in Santa Ana, California where it belongs.

    NDS‘ motion claims that Canal+‘s complaint does "not belong in the Northern District of California" because Canal+‘s allegations have "no connection whatsoever to this District." The motion asked the court to transfer the lawsuit to the Southern Division of the United States District Court for the Central District of California because defendant NDS Americas Inc. is located there, according to an official release.

    Canal Plus, which operates a pay-TV service and whose technology arm designs security measures to keep the signal from being pirated, claimed in the suit that NDS engineers had hacked its security system and then made the relevant codes available for hackers on the Internet. NDS makes similar TV security systems, and NDS has claimed that Canal Plus is using the suit to deflect attention from alleged shortcomings in its own technology.

    Both motions are scheduled to be heard on 30 May.

  • NDS seeks dismissal of Canal+ suit

    Rupert Murdoch's television security unit NDS on Monday asked a federal judge to dismiss the $ 1 billion hacking laws

Subscribe to