T-Mobile recently launched a service called Binge On, that lets users watch as much video content from select sources as they want. The trick here is that the company down scales the content to 480p and this is something that YouTube agreed to. What YouTube didn’t agree to is allowing T-Mobile to throttle the bandwidth of its users, which YouTube is now accusing T-Mobile of.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Featured Post
Hackers Exploiting ProxyLogon and ProxyShell Flaws in Spam Campaigns
Threat actors are exploiting ProxyLogon and ProxyShell exploits in unpatched Microsoft Exchange Servers as part of an ongoing spam campaign
Popular Posts
-
Threat actors are exploiting ProxyLogon and ProxyShell exploits in unpatched Microsoft Exchange Servers as part of an ongoing spam campaign
-
You might not need to panic. BroadSoft tells Gizmodo that it locked down its Amazon data (Charter says it was taken down) and hasn’t seen ev...
-
The connection between the Apple Watch and an iPhone is the core of Apple’s wearable experience, and for the first time, the company gave th...
No comments:
Post a Comment