Definitions
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Etymologies
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Help support Wordnik (and make this page ad-free) by adopting the word Broadcaster.
Examples
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That Conservative National Broadcaster is causing lots of problems for far too many people that I know.
Well, There Go The Plans for That 24k Gold Room We Were Hoping For 2008
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Introduced in 1950 as the Esquire,* renamed after slight design changes and then a lawsuit re: the name Broadcaster being property of Gretsch Instruments, assembled on a factory line from mass-produced interchangeable parts, sold in stores and catalogs, heard most often via media and broadcast for most music consumers, the 1966 Fender Telecaster is truly a Modern guitar.
GUEST POST: REBELLION + AUTHENTICITY * COMMODITY = PROFIT! » Sociological Images 2008
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Microsoft and Others To Take Stake in Japanese Broadcaster NHK; Streaming Online As Well Interview: iFund Manager Matt Murphy Says "The iPhone Is The Place To Be"
contentSutra 2008
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Microsoft and Others To Take Stake in Japanese Broadcaster NHK; Streaming Online As Well Interview: iFund Manager Matt Murphy Says "The iPhone Is The Place To Be"
contentSutra 2008
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Microsoft and Others To Take Stake in Japanese Broadcaster NHK; Streaming Online As Well
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Vizrt Signs Media Asset Management Deal with a Latin American Broadcaster Vizrt Ltd., a leading provider of content production tools for the digital media industry, announced today that the Company has signed a deal worth approximately USD 380,000 for the implementation of Media Asset Management MAM products with a Broadcaster in Latin America.
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It's called the Broadcaster Freedom Act. You can read the Bill for yourself here:
NewsByUs 2008
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WIPO introduced something called the Broadcaster’s Treaty, which is the most egregious example of any of this stuff, and essentially says, regardless of the copyright of a broadcast work, the person who broadcasts it should have a 50 year monopoly over what you do with the copies of that broadcast you receive.
WIPO – What is it? 2005
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WIPO introduced something called the Broadcaster’s Treaty, which is the most egregious example of any of this stuff, and essentially says, regardless of the copyright of a broadcast work, the person who broadcasts it should have a 50 year monopoly over what you do with the copies of that broadcast you receive.
WIPO – What is it? 2005
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Local commercials, local news and PA programs, participation in community events make one a "Broadcaster".
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