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Technology: Apple in talks with Comcast for streaming-TV service: WSJ

A shattered large glass panel, part of Apple's cube store on Fifth Avenue, damaged from the results of the snowstorm on Tuesday is seen in New York, January 22, 2014. The panel, one of 15 large panels that make up the 32-foot structure, could cost up to $450,000 to replace according to the tech community website 9to5Mac. REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES - Tags: ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS LOGO)

(Reuters) – Apple Inc is in talks with Comcast Corp to enter into a deal for a streaming-television service that would allow Apple set-top boxes to bypass congestion on the web, the Wall Street Journal reported, citing people familiar with the matter.

A shattered large glass panel, part of Apple’s cube store on Fifth Avenue, damaged from the results of the snowstorm on Tuesday is seen in New York, January 22, 2014. The panel, one of 15 large panels that make up the 32-foot structure, could cost up to $450,000 to replace according to the tech community website 9to5Mac.
REUTERS/Shannon Stapleton (UNITED STATES – Tags: ENVIRONMENT BUSINESS LOGO)

The discussions are in early stages and there are a lot of hurdles to be crossed before a definitive agreement could be reached, the Journal said. (link.reuters.com/reb87v)

Apple, which wants its TV service’s traffic to be separated from public internet traffic over the last mile for faster transmission, is looking for special treatment from Comcast’s cables to bypass congestion, the report said.
Comcast and Apple declined to comment on the report.

Apple has been in talks for a faster TV set-top box with Time Warner Cable Inc, which recently agreed to be bought by Comcast.

Apple’s $99 TV box competes with similar streaming devices from Roku and Google Inc.

Netflix agreed last month to pay Comcast Corp for faster speeds, throwing open the possibility that more content companies will have to shell out for better service.

The Federal Communications Commission is in the process of drafting a new net-neutrality bill that would ensure that network operators disclose exactly how they manage Internet traffic and that they do not restrict consumers’ ability to surf the Web or use applications.

(Reporting by Arnab Sen in Bangalore and Greg Roumeliotis in New York; Editing by Gopakumar Warrier)

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