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The FCC should at least get credit for the one thing they accomplished with today's Net Neutrality vote: they brought both sides of a critical issue ...
... arguing that they amount to unnecessary regulation. Bob Garfield, co-host of On The Media, explains the ins and outs of the "net neutrality" rules.
The FCC in voting for its net neutrality rules cited Android as a reason for softening the conditions for wireless neutrality. The official statement from ...
By Melissa Bell The Federal Communications Commission approved the first net neutrality regulation calling for unimpeded access to Web content for home ...
Rest assured that we're working on a full analysis of the FCC's major net neutrality decision today, but the Commission hasn't actually released the.
You read that title correctly. Net neutrality regulation over the wireless spectrum isn't as necessary because Android is open source. How the FCC went.
The F.C.C. approved new rules regarding access to the Internet that are sure to attract opposition from Republicans and in the courts.
If, as some say, a deal can only be called successful when everyone involved leaves the table unsatisfied, then the net neutrality rules approved at a meeting this ...
In a 3-2 vote split down party lines the FCC approved the first.
Despite what some politicians and pundits are saying, the FCC's vote on net neutrality is neither a government takeover of the Internet nor a complete sell-out to the telecommunications industry.
The so-called net neutrality [JURIST news archive] rules, proposed [JURIST report] by FCC Chairman Julius Genachowski [official profile] earlier this month, would prevent Internet providers from selectively blocking web access. ...
With a 3 to 2 vote earlier today, the FCC has put its stamp of approval on Net Neutrality. The funny thing is ...
The FCC today approved an order that will enshrine the policies of network neutrality -- the idea that ISPs can't hinder or discriminate against lawful content flowing across their pipes -- as regulations enforced by the FCC.
It essentially means that while the FCC is stepping in on behalf of net neutrality as it pertains to our home and office computers, our smartphones and tablets and the apps thereon – increasingly the way many of us consume bandwidth and ...

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