kiniku :
Aereo wasn't charging for the broadcast, they were charging to rent the equiptment needed to access it and some bandwidth.
Regardless, Aereo was making a profit off broadcasts that are provided for free.
This is where the controversy lies. Aereo could argue they were profiting by providing the DVR service, solid antenna reception and the guide that's included with all paying memberships.
Anyone can purchase a $15 HD antenna, but that might not get you every local channel available depending on your location. To get a decent DVR to hook the antenna to with a decent guide (I know you can get cheaper units), the buy-in price is a little higher. The cost is around $200. Aereo takes this and bundles it for $8/month.
There's a bigger picture here though.
Aereo, and that way of receiving content in general, is a a major threat to traditional cable programming as if you bundle Hulu+, Aereo, Netfllx and Amazon Prime plus the cost of a decent internet connection to use the services, you pay around $70-80/month, whereas most of that programming offered by traditional cable is close to double+.
No one took action regarding the elimination of Net Neutrality in the U.S. until Wheeler (former cable/wireless lobbyist and other pro big business titles) was appointed by Obama and confirmed by the Senate. And now prices are raised for services like Netflix. This is just the beginning.
The big cable providers want to control every form of media that reaches our homes. This makes sense from a business standpoint.
Now they have people in the right positions of government to dictate legal policy affecting citizens of the nation. This seems very wrong.