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[Internet]| Monday 14th April 2008 |
Highfield is to become CEO of the joint venture between BBC Worldwide, the commercial arm of the BBC, ITV and Channel 4, which will see content from all three providers united under one streaming service later this year.
"This is a fantastic opportunity. Kangaroo is a historic partnership with a combination of innovative technology and terrific content and I'm looking forward to transforming the way audiences watch television," says Highfield.
Highfield was instrumental in launching the BBC's iPlayer service, so has experience of working with high-profile web TV services.
However, Highfield's tenure at the BBC has not been without controversy. Last year he claimed in a magazine interview that <
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Highfield was later forced into an embarrassing u-turn, when he later admitted the number of Linux users could be almost 100,000.
And earlier this month Highfield picked a fight with broadband providers, threatening to create a blacklist of providers who applied traffic shaping to the iPlayer.
If Kangaroo proves as popular as the iPlayer, Highfield may have some bridges to build, with ISPs already crying foul over the increased costs of hosting the service.
The BBC claims that up to half a million television shows are being watched everyday using its iPlayer service, and ISPs claim that this has tripled their overhead costs.
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