A bankruptcy judge said Aereo Inc. can auction its TV streaming technology after the company struck a deal with broadcasters over the sale process.

Judge Sean Lane of the U.S. Bankruptcy Court in Manhattan Wednesday signed off on the rules governing Aereo’s auction after company and broadcasters agreed to how and when the company can scrub its servers and how much time broadcasters will have to oppose any sale that could infringe their copyrights. Under the revamped auction rules, Aereo will also provide weekly updates on the status of the sale process and will allow the broadcasters to attend the auction.

Until June, Aereo provided customers with the ability to watch and record broadcast TV through the Internet and on mobile devices. That business model faltered after a U.S. Supreme Court ruling that found Aereo violated copyright laws.

The litigation with broadcasters is now back in a lower court, which will determine how much money Aereo owes in damages, a number that could be in the tens of millions of dollars. The legal fight was one of the sticking points to an auction of Aereo’s assets. The broadcasters—including CBS Corp., Walt Disney Co. ’s ABC, Comcast Corp. ’s NBC and 21st Century Fox Inc.’s Fox—want to be allowed to scrutinize Aereo’s customers’ activities before the company deletes its servers.

Aereo, founded in 2010, raised $95.6 million in venture funding, including from Barry Diller’s IAC and funds managed by Highland Capital. But much of that money has gone toward litigation expenses.