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OpenText's headquarters in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada OpenText office in Richmond Hill, Ontario Archive Center v16 Administration Client OpenText Corporation (also written opentext) is a Canadian company that develops and sells enterprise information management (EIM) software.[2] OpenText, headquartered in Waterloo, Ontario, Canada,[3] is Canada's largest software company as of 2014[4] and recognized as one of Canada's top 100 employers 2016 by Mediacorp Canada Inc.[5] OpenText software applications manage content or unstructured data for large companies, government agencies, and professional service firms. OpenText aims its products at addressing information management requirements, including management of large volumes of content, compliance with regulatory requirements, and mobile and online experience management. OpenText employs over 12,000 people worldwide[6] and is a publicly traded company, listed on the NASDAQ (OTEX) and the Toronto Stock Exchange (OTEX). History University of Waterloo pro
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Started in 1991 in Ontario
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The social news site Reddit has occasionally been the topic of controversy due to the presence of communities on the site (known as "subreddits") devoted to explicit or controversial material. In 2012, Yishan Wong, the site's then-CEO, stated, "We stand for free speech. This means we are not going to ban distasteful subreddits. We will not ban legal content even if we find it odious or if we personally condemn it."[1] The subreddit r/jailbait, devoted to suggestive or revealing photos of underage girls, was one of the most prominent subreddits on the site before it was closed down in October 2011 following a report by CNN.[2] The controversy surrounding r/Creepshots, devoted to revealing or suggestive photos of women taken without their awareness or consent, occurred a year after r/jailbait's closure. The r/Creepshots controversy prompted a Gawker exposé of one of the subreddit's moderators by Adrian Chen, which revealed the real-life identity of the user behind the account, Michael Brutsch. This started dis
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Internet properties ended in 2017
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An ellipsis (plural ellipses; from the Ancient Greek: ἔλλειψις, élleipsis, 'omission' or 'falling short') is a series of dots (typically three, such as "…") that usually indicates an intentional omission of a word, sentence, or whole section from a text without altering its original meaning.[1] Opinions differ as to how to render ellipses in printed material. According to the Chicago Manual of Style, each dot should be separated from its neighbor by a non-breaking space.[2] Such spaces should be omitted, however, according to the Associated Press.[3] A third option, illustrated in the opening sentence of this article, is to use the precomposed Unicode character with code point U+2026, in which the gaps are not as wide as standard spaces,[4] though not every font in practice obeys this dictate. It's also not uncommon to see the three dots set extremely tight. Background The ellipsis is also called a suspension point, points of ellipsis, periods of ellipsis, or (colloquially) "dot-dot-dot".[5] Depending on
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Randi Jayne Zuckerberg[4] (born February 28, 1982) is an American businesswoman. She is the former director of market development and spokesperson for Facebook, and a sister of the company's co-founder and CEO Mark Zuckerberg. Prior to working at Facebook, she was a panelist on Forbes on Fox. As of May 2014, she is founder and CEO of Zuckerberg Media, editor-in-chief (EIC) of Dot Complicated, a digital lifestyle website,[5] and creator of Dot., an animated television show about a young girl (the eponymous Dot) who uses technology to enhance both her educational experiences and recreational activities.[6] Career Before Facebook After graduating from Harvard, Randi Zuckerberg worked for two years in marketing for advertising firm Ogilvy & Mather. She has stated in articles and interviews that to her it was a dream job in which she enjoyed the work and was on a good track for professional advancement. Facebook In late 2004, Randi's brother Mark asked her to join him at his startup Facebook, which he sai
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.tk is the Internet country code top-level domain (ccTLD) for Tokelau, a territory of New Zealand located in the South Pacific. Overview Tokelau allows any individual to register domain names. Users and small businesses may register any number of domain names free of charge (with some restrictions).[1] In addition to the name itself, users can opt to forward their web traffic using HTML frames and their email traffic, with a maximum of 250 addresses per user log in, or use full DNS, either via their own or third-party servers, or by using Dot TK's servers. There are content restrictions for free domains, banning sites containing sexual content, drug use, hate speech, firearms, and spam or copyright infringement.[1] Dot TK requires free domains to have a regular traffic of visitors, and if a domain's redirect target does not work (even temporarily) the domain is taken offline. If a domain violates any of these terms, it is replaced by a Sedo advertisement page, and no advance warning is given. Dot TK also p
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Companies based in Amsterdam
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This is a list of notable content management systems that are used to organize and facilitate collaborative content creation. Many of them are built on top of separate content management frameworks. Open source software This section lists free and open-source software that can be installed and managed on a web server. Systems listed on a light purple background are no longer in active development. Java Name Platform Supported databases Latest stable release Licenses Latest release date Alfresco Community Edition Java MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, PostgreSQL, DB2, 201901[1] LGPL 2019-02-04[±] Ametys CMS Java MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, JCR, Apache Derby 4.1.11[2] Apache 2.0 License 2019-??-??[±] Apache Roller Java HSQL, MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, DB2, PostgreSQL, Apache Derby 5.2.2[3] Apache 2.0 License 2019-01-11[±] Bloomreach Experience Manager Java MySQL, Oracle, SQL Server, Ingres, PostgreSQL, JCR 13.1[4] Apache 2.0 License 2019-03-20 Crafter
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Work is the product of force and displacement. In physics, a force is said to do work if, when acting, there is a movement of the point of application in the direction of the force. For example, when a ball is held above the ground and then dropped, the work done on the ball as it falls is equal to the weight of the ball (a force) multiplied by the distance to the ground (a displacement). When the force F {\displaystyle F} is constant and the angle between the force and the displacement s {\displaystyle s} is θ, then the work done is given by W = Fs cos θ. Work transfers energy from one place to another, or one form to another. The SI unit of work is the joule (J). Etymology According to Jammer,[1] the term work was introduced in 1826 by the French mathematician Gaspard-Gustave Coriolis[2] as "weight lifted through a height", which is based on the use of early steam engines to lift buckets of water out of flooded ore mines. According to Rene Dugas, French engineer and historian, it is to So
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Ian Carter (born July 27, 1990),[2] better known online as iDubbbz, is an American YouTube personality and comedian, most well known as the creator of YouTube channels iDubbbzTV, iDubbbzTV2, and iDubbbzgames, as well as comedy video series Content Cop, Bad Unboxing and Kickstarter Crap. His diss track "Asian Jake Paul" charted and peaked at number 24 on Billboard's US R&B/HH Digital Song Sales chart. Career Carter's Content Cop series highlights other YouTube channels, critiquing their content as well as their owner's behavior on social media. Each episode of Content Cop has been dubbed as an "event" by fellow YouTube commentators, with every new episode sparking controversy. Fellow YouTube personality Philip DeFranco has stated that he is a fan of Carter and that "no one does hit-pieces better than Ian"[3] referring to his thorough but also entertaining style of criticism. Usually, after a Content Cop video is released, the creator or creators under scrutiny lose a significant amount of subscribers an
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A shock site is a website that is intended to be offensive or disturbing to its viewers. They contain material of high shock value, generally of a pornographic, scatological, racist, sexist, graphically violent, insulting, vulgar, profane, or otherwise provocative nature.[1] Some shock sites display a single picture, animation, video clip or small gallery, and are circulated via email or disguised in posts to discussion sites as a prank.[2] Steven Jones distinguishes these sites from those that collect galleries of shocking content, such as Rotten.com, as the gallery sites must be searched for content.[3] Some shock sites have also gained their own subcultures and have become internet memes on their own. Goatse.cx featured a page devoted to fan-submitted artwork and tributes to the site's hello.jpg,[4] and a parody of the image was unwittingly shown by a BBC newscast as an alternative for the then-recently unveiled logo for the 2012 Summer Olympics.[1] A 2007 shock video known as 2 Girls 1 Cup also quickly b
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Imane Anys[1] (born 14 May 1996), better known by her alias Pokimane, is a Moroccan Canadian Twitch streamer, YouTube & Media personality and gamer. Anys is best known for her live streams on Twitch, where she showcases her gaming experiences—most notably with League of Legends and Fortnite. Twitch streaming Anys has streamed on Twitch for several years.[2] She gained 450,000 followers on Twitch in 2017, earning her account a place within the 100 most followed on the platform.[2] As a result of her account's rise on the platform in 2017, the Shorty Awards named her as the Best Twitch Streamer of the year.[2] The Shorty Awards detailed that her gameplay and commentary streams of League of Legends (LOL), a MOBA video game, propelled her to popularity on Twitch.[2] Anys had a cameo appearance in a LOL trailer announcing a new game mode.[3] Anys also has been noted to stream gameplay and commentary of Fortnite, which she first streamed as part of a sponsorship.[4] At the Electronic Entertainment Expo (E3)
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Enthalpy (listen), a property of a thermodynamic system, is equal to the system's internal energy plus the product of its pressure and volume.[1][2] In a system enclosed so as to prevent mass transfer, for processes at constant pressure, the heat absorbed or released equals the change in enthalpy. The unit of measurement for enthalpy in the International System of Units (SI) is the joule. Other historical conventional units still in use include the British thermal unit (BTU) and the calorie. Enthalpy comprises a system's internal energy, which is the energy required to create the system, plus the amount of work required to make room for it by displacing its environment and establishing its volume and pressure.[3] Enthalpy is defined as a state function that depends only on the prevailing equilibrium state identified by the system's internal energy, pressure, and volume. It is an extensive quantity. Change in enthalpy (ΔH) is the preferred expression of system energy change in many chemical, biological, a
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The full point, full stop (Commonwealth English) or period (North American English) is a punctuation mark. It is used for several purposes, the most frequent of which is to mark the end of a declaratory sentence (as opposed to a question or exclamation); this sentence-terminal use is properly, or the precise meaning of, full stop. The full stop is also often used alone to indicate omitted characters (or in an ellipsis, "..." to indicate omitted words). It may be placed after an initial letter used to stand for a name, or sometimes after each individual letter in an initialism or acronym, for example, "U.S.A."; however, this style is declining, and many initialisms like UK or NATO have individually become accepted norms. A full stop is also frequently used at the end of word abbreviations – in British usage, primarily truncations like Rev., but not after contractions like Revd; however, in American English it is used in both cases. The full point also has multiple contexts in mathematics and computing, where
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Richard Tyler Blevins[1] (born June 5, 1991), better known by his online alias Ninja (formerly NinjasHyper), is an American streamer, YouTuber, professional gamer, and Internet personality. As of July 2019, he is the most followed streamer on Twitch.tv with over fourteen million followers and an average of over 50,000 viewers per week.[3][4] In August 2019, Blevins announced he was moving to Twitch competitor Mixer fulltime.[5] Early life Blevins was born Richard Tyler Blevins to American parents of Welsh descent.[6] Though born in the Detroit area, he moved with his family to the Chicago suburbs when he was a year old.[7] Blevins' youth in the Chicago suburbs included video games and sports. He attended Grayslake Central High School, where he played soccer, and was also an avid video game player. Upon graduation, he decided to play video games professionally, entering tournaments, joining professional organizations, and live streaming his games.[8] Career Blevins began playing Halo 3 professionally in 20
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Rock Band 2 is a 2008 music video game developed by Harmonix and distributed by MTV Games and Electronic Arts. The game, a sequel to Rock Band, has been released for the Xbox 360, PlayStation 3, Wii and PlayStation 2.[1] Rock Band allows one to four players to simulate the playing of rock music by providing the players with peripherals modeled after musical instruments (a guitar peripheral for lead guitar and bass gameplay, a drum peripheral, and a microphone). The gameplay in Rock Band 2 is nearly identical to the original Rock Band, while also comparable to that in Guitar Hero. The game disc features 84 songs, all of which are master recordings.[2] In addition, the game supports existing downloadable content from Rock Band, as well as tracks which have been exported from other Rock Band game discs.[3] Twenty additional tracks were released exclusively for Rock Band 2 as free downloadable content after the game was released. A redeemable code that allows the player access to these songs is included with new
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Soil composition by Volume and Mass, by phase: air, water, void (pores filled with water or air), soil, and total. Water content or moisture content is the quantity of water contained in a material, such as soil (called soil moisture), rock, ceramics, crops, or wood. Water content is used in a wide range of scientific and technical areas, and is expressed as a ratio, which can range from 0 (completely dry) to the value of the materials' porosity at saturation. It can be given on a volumetric or mass (gravimetric) basis. Definitions Volumetric water content, θ, is defined mathematically as: θ = V w V wet {\displaystyle \theta ={\frac {V_{w}}{V_{\text{wet}}}}} where V w {\displaystyle V_{w}} is the volume of water and V wet = V s + V w + V a {\displaystyle V_{\text{wet}}=V_{s}+V_{w}+V_{a}} is equal to the total volume of the wet material, i.e. of the sum of the volume of solid host material (e.g., soil particles, vegetation tissue) V s {\display
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8chan, also called Infinitechan or Infinitychan (stylized as ∞chan), is an imageboard website composed of user-created message boards. An owner moderates each board, with minimal interaction from site administration.[3] The site has been offline since August 2019. As with unaffiliated imageboard 4chan, the site is linked to the white supremacism, alt-right, racism and anti-Semitism, hate crimes, and multiple mass shootings.[4][5][6] The site is also known for its presence of child pornography,[7] and as a result, it was filtered out from Google Search.[8] Several of the site's boards played an active role in the Gamergate controversy, encouraging Gamergate affiliates to frequent 8chan after 4chan banned the topic. As of June 2019, 8chan was the 3,832nd most visited site in the world.[2] As of November 2014, it received an average of 35,000 unique visitors per day and 400,000 posts per week.[7] In the aftermath of the back-to-back mass shootings on August 3 and August 4, 2019, in El Paso, Texas, and Dayton,
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Cortland is a cultivar of apple, that was raised at the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station in Geneva, New York, United States in 1898.[1] The apple was named after nearby Cortland County, New York. It is among the fifteen most popular in the United States.[2] Breeding After the many attributes of McIntosh were discovered, plant breeders began crossing it with other varieties to enhance its traits. One of the earliest was the 'Cortland'. Its flavor is sweet compared to McIntosh, and it has a flush of crimson against a pale yellow background sprinkled with short, dark red stripes and gray-green dots. It was first bred by American horoculturalist S.A Beach.[3] Has a very white flesh and makes a great dessert apple. Patented mutants (sports) The original Cortland variety, introduced in 1915 by the New York State Agricultural Experiment Station, produced apples which were 20–30% red, and was not patented.[4] Since then, several sports have been identified and patented: Date "Inventor" Mark
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The Domain Name System of the Internet consists of a set of top-level domains which constitute the root domain of the hierarchical name space and database. In the growth of the Internet, it became desirable to expand the initial set of six generic top-level domains in 1984. As a result, new top-level domain names have been proposed for implementation by ICANN. Such proposals included a variety of models ranging from adoption of policies for unrestricted gTLDs that could be registered by anyone for any purpose, to chartered gTLDs for specialized uses by specialized organizations.[1] In October 2000, ICANN published a list of proposals for top-level domain strings it had received.[2] Geographic proposals .geo - Generic geographical locations. .africa - General category for African websites. .ln and .le - Currently being sold by Dennis Hope's "Lunar Embassy Commission" alongside .lunar, .moon, .venus, .mars, .jupiter, .saturn, .uranus, .neptune, .pluto. People who purchase novelty deeds for outer space p
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9GAG is a Hong Kong-based[3] online platform and social media website,[4] which allows its users to upload and share "user-generated content" or other content from external social media websites. Since the platform for collections of Internet memes was launched on July 1, 2008,[5] it has grown in popularity across the social media such as Facebook, Twitter, and Instagram.[a] In November 2017, it had 223.35 million visitors: 11.03% from Germany, 5.55% from the United States, 4.40% from France, 4.19% from Brazil and 3.99% from United Kingdom.[6] History The website was co-founded in 2009–2010 by a group of 5 Hong Kong people: University of Hong Kong student Ray Chan, his brother Chris Chan, Derek Chan, Marco Fung and Brian Yu, with the intention of creating an alternative online platform to email on which users could easily share humorous photos or videos. In a 2012 interview, its CEO Ray Chan declined to explain where the name "9GAG" is derived from.[7] Starting the company under a "Just for Fun" mentality
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Viu is a Hong Kong-based over-the-top (OTT) video streaming provider from PCCW Media, a subsidiary of PCCW.[1] Operated in dual-revenue model comprising subscriptions and advertising, Viu delivers content in different genres from Asia's top content providers with local language subtitles, as well as original production series under 'Viu Original' initiative.[2] Viu is now available in 17 markets across Asia, Africa and the Middle East including Hong Kong, Singapore, Malaysia, India, Indonesia, the Philippines, Thailand, Myanmar, Bahrain, Egypt, Jordan, Kuwait, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, the United Arab Emirates and South Africa.[3] As of December 2018 annual results, Viu had over 30 million monthly active users.[4] History PCCW Media launched the Viu OTT video service in Hong Kong on 26 October 2015.[5] In January 2016, Viu announced its official launch in Singapore.[6] In March 2016, Viu announced its official launch in India and Malaysia.[7] In May 2016, Vuclip launched Viu in Indonesia.[8] In Novemb
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The original "Doge" inner monologue image[1] Doge (often DOHJ, DOHG)[2] is an Internet meme that became popular in 2013 and has had a resurgence in 2019. The meme typically consists of a picture of a Shiba Inu dog accompanied by multicolored text in Comic Sans font in the foreground. The text, representing a kind of internal monologue, is deliberately written in a form of broken English.[1] The meme is based on a 2010 photograph, and became popular in late 2013, being named as Know Your Meme's "top meme" of that year. A cryptocurrency based on Doge, the Dogecoin, was launched in December 2013, and the Shiba Inu has been featured on Josh Wise's NASCAR car as part of a sponsorship deal. Doge has also been referenced by members of the United States Congress, a safety video for Delta Air Lines, a Google Easter egg, and the video for the song "Word Crimes" by "Weird Al" Yankovic. Structure Doge meme relating to Wikipedia Doge uses two-word phrases in which the first word is almost always one of five modif
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The dark web is the World Wide Web content that exists on darknets, overlay networks that use the Internet but require specific software, configurations, or authorization to access.[1][2] The dark web forms a small part of the deep web, the part of the Web not indexed by web search engines, although sometimes the term deep web is mistakenly used to refer specifically to the dark web.[3][4][5][6][7] The darknets which constitute the dark web include small, friend-to-friend peer-to-peer networks, as well as large, popular networks like Tor, Freenet, I2P, and Riffle operated by public organizations and individuals. Users of the dark web refer to the regular web as Clearnet due to its unencrypted nature.[8] The Tor dark web may be referred to as onionland,[9] a reference to the network's top-level domain suffix .onion and the traffic anonymization technique of onion routing. Terminology The dark web has often been confused with the deep web, which refer to the parts of the web not indexed (searchable) by searc
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Dream Market was an online darknet market founded in late 2013.[2] Dream Market operates on a hidden service of the Tor network, allowing online users to browse anonymously and securely while avoiding potential monitoring of traffic. The marketplace sells a variety of content, including drugs, stolen data, and counterfeit consumer goods, all using cryptocurrency. Dream provides an escrow service, with disputes handled by staff. The market also has accompanying forums, hosted on a different URL, where buyers, vendors, and other members of the community can interact. Following the seizures and shutdowns of the AlphaBay and Hansa markets in July 2017 as part of Operation Bayonet, there was much speculation that Dream Market would become the predominant darknet marketplace. Formerly, Dream Market had been considered the second-largest darknet marketplace, with AlphaBay being the largest and Hansa the third-largest. Many vendors and buyers from AlphaBay and Hansa communities registered on Dream Market in the afte
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The Dictionary of Occupational Titles or D-O-T (DOT) refers to a publication produced by the United States Department of Labor which helped employers, government officials, and workforce development professionals to define over 13,000 different types of work, from 1938 to the late 1990s. The DOT was created by job analysts who visited thousands of US worksites to observe and record the various types of work, and what was involved. Innovative at the time, the DOT included information still used today in settling EEO and Workers Comp claims, like the physical abilities required to perform that occupation, and the time and repetitiveness of those physical actions (i.e. standing, sitting, lifting 20 pounds or more, seeing at a distance, near vision, hearing quiet sounds, ignoring loud sounds). The DOT was later rendered obsolete and was replaced by an online database which was based largely on voluntary input from occupation incumbents (people who have direct experience working in each occupation). This new occu
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A DOT-111 tank car, specification 111A100W1, constructed by fusion welding carbon steel. This car has a capacity of 30,110 US gallons (113,979 L; 25,071.8 imp gal), a test pressure of 100 psi (690 kPa), a tare weight of 65,000 pounds (29,500 kg) and a load limit of 198,000 pounds (89,800 kg). In rail transport, the U.S. DOT-111 tank car, also known as the TC-111 in Canada, is a type of unpressurized general service tank car in common use in North America. Tank cars built to this specification must be circular in cross section, with elliptical, formed heads set convex outward.[1] They have a minimum plate thickness of 7⁄ inch (11.1 mm)[2] and a maximum capacity of 34,500 US gallons (131,000 L; 28,700 imp gal).[3] Tanks may be constructed from carbon steel, aluminum alloy, high alloy steel or nickel plate steel[4] by fusion welding.[5] Usage A damaged DOT-111A tank car. Note the AAR Type E double shelf coupler required for transporting dangerous goods. Up to 80% of the Canadian fleet and 69% of U.S. rail
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Sony Liv (marketed as SONY LIV and formerly as SonyLIV) is a South Asian internet television channel and subscription video on demand service operated by Sony Pictures Networks in India and Pakistan. Overview The service was launched on January 23, 2013. Sony Liv is a part of the network of Television channels owned by Sony Pictures Networks India Pvt. in India. The network's other channels include: Sony TV, Sony SAB, Sony Mix, Sony Max, Sony Max 2, Sony Six, Sony Pix, AXN, and Sony Yay (formerly Animax Asia). It also offers original Web series like Lovebytes, Married Women Diaries, etc. Anime is now part of Sony Liv with the inclusion of Animax as a live channel. Sony Pictures Networks bagged the Indian subcontinent telecast rights for the 2018 FIFA World Cup. The network will also be dedicating channels to broadcast in Russia, which includes Sony SIX, Sony TEN 1, Sony TEN 2, Sony TEN 3, Sony ESPN. Sony Liv is the official mobile and Internet broadcaster for streaming all 2018 FIFA World Cup live matche
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