Report: Comcast In Talks To Buy DreamWorks For $3 Billion (usatoday.com)
An anonymous reader quotes a report from USA Today: Comcast is in talks to buy DreamWorks Animation in a multi-billion-dollar deal, The Wall Street Journal and Bloomberg are reporting. The cost of the deal would be more than $3 billion, according to both news organizations, citing unnamed sources. Jeffrey Katzenberg, CEO of DreamWorks Animation, has been searching for a buyer for the company, which has a current market value of $2.3 billion. DreamWorks is based in Glendale, Calif., and was founded in 1994 by Katzenberg, filmmaker Steven Spielberg and movie and music executive David Geffen. The animation unit was spun off in 2004. Philadelphia-based Comcast has two primary businesses, Comcast Cable and NBCUniversal. Comcast also owns Universal Parks and Resorts. Comcast already owns an animation studio, Illumination Entertainment, known for its work on the Despicable Me and Minions movies.
I would prefer it if they would purchase Red Hat instead, and then get rid of systemd.
I for one welcome our new cable overlords.
"Cancellation" - Chronicles the efforts of trying to cancel service of the course of three months.
"Spinners!" - Examines the various types of spinning "wait" icons a user sees while trying to load various pages.
"The Cable Guy" - An animated horror flick about a family being stalked by a Comcast Cable repairman. - Apologies to Jim Carrey
Feel free to join in.
I'll miss their movies.
It's the only way to stop their anticompetitive tactics. When you're a content producer, content distributor, and carrier, there's really no way to avoid the anticompetitive issues. Shut Comcast down.
Anybody want to look up why Comcast and NBCUniversal merged?
how about fucking spending money on your infrastructure first?
Do not look at laser with remaining good eye.
Interesting that Comcast imposes data caps and charges a pile of money for internet access, complaining that they need to do this to help manage their network infrastructure instead of investing back into infrastructure to accommodate their paying customers. Instead, they take money gained from their customers and use it to buy other companies. This is why it's so frustrating to see the FCC not push harder on these companies to prevent/remove data caps and increase bandwidth for customers, especially since the companies are doing all they can to punish customers for cord cutting. As a cable company, should they not focus on providing the best service available for their customers?
I would be all in favor of Comcast's efforts to become a content creator if they were't using their position against their customers who don't want their content via a cable subscription.
That is one way to destroy a company... Let Comcast purchase it, their support will be non existent. ;)
Just a reminder from your friendly Comcast, We don't give an F
In other news, Comcast is in talks to buy the local water department.
I live in Hong Kong, and more or less every provider can use the existing infrastructure to provide service to a customer. This can easily be enforced by the FCC, much in the same way the oligopoly has been enforced all these years. For roughly $35USD/month, I have 1Gbps fiber to my home (internet only). 2 year contract, installation fee was waived.
So, we'll each need to make a 3 hour phone call to leave the theater after the movie's over?
From one shitty business model to another
why any ISP is also allowed to be a content provider?
At sufficient scale, this combination obviously creates perverse incentives.
How would this not just worsen the market failure we're already seeing?
First NBC for $12.3B, and now Dreamworks for $3B? How does a government-sanctioned monopoly have this much free capital in the first place?
Oh right. They're a government-sanctioned monopoly.
https://www.eff.org/https-everywhere