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NOS, SGPS S.A. is a Portuguese telecommunications and media company which provides mobile and fixed telephony, cable television, satellite television and internet.The company resulted from the merger in 2013 of two of the country's major telecommunications companies: Zon Multimédia (formerly known as PT Multimédia, a spun-off media arm of Portugal Telecom) and Sonae's Optimus Telecommunications.
Sporting TV is the television channel of Sporting Clube de Portugal. [1] In open signal, the channel is present in the operators MEO , NOS , Vodafone and Nowo . [ 2 ] [ 3 ] The channel broadcasts live Sporting games at home in the Academia Sporting and in Pavilhão João Rocha .
Sport TV is widely regarded as anti-competitive, since it is the only group of channels in Portugal with the rights to broadcast the Primeira Liga matches (except Benfica home games, which air on their in-house channel Benfica TV).
Since 2012, all channels are digital. All national, regional and local Spanish television channels are available to Portuguese households along the national border, subject to restrictions due to distance or local topography.
NPO Politiek en Nieuws is a public television channel operated by the public broadcaster NOS, which supplies news and sports to all national public television and radio networks. Programmes come live from The Hague when the parliament is in session.
Medialivre also publishes two printed magazines: Sábado [2] and TV Guia [3] as well as two online People magazines: Flash! [4] and Máxima. Medialivre also owns two television channels: CMTV and News Now. CMTV is the fourth largest generalist channel in Portugal. [2] and News Now is the fourth largest news channel in Portugal.
Eleven Sports was a Portuguese sports-oriented premium cable, satellite and IPTV television network with six premium channels and an OTT service. It was owned by Andrea Radrizzani and DAZN Group (executive of the sports marketing MP & Silva) and The Channel Company.
TV tower of RTP Porto studios in Monte da Virgem, Vila Nova de Gaia. In 1953, a group on behalf of Emissora Nacional de Radiodifusão (later RDP) was set up examining the feasibility of a television service in Portugal. The group started a preliminary work for a network of television signals, with a budget on the order of 500,000 escudos.