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Australia: Facebook and Google versus journalism
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Congressional Committee Presses Cable Providers on Election Fraud Claims
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Unfortunately, annual increases in cable and internet charges are among them.
More than a few consumers are probably thinking that the middle of a deadly pandemic, with millions of people out of work and the economy in tatters, is a pretty heartless time to boost the price of everyone’s connection to the outside world.
That’s not how Big Cable sees it.
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If anything, the country’s stay-at-home misery is an opportunity not just for service providers like Charter’s Spectrum and Comcast, but also for streaming services such as Netflix and Disney+.
Rates for many of the communications and content services we’ve all grown to rely on over the last year have risen recently or will rise in 2021, and there’s little you can do about it.
Under Biden, Democrats are ready to revive net neutrality rules
Tony Romm, The Washington Post
Jan. 27, 2021
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Jessica Rosenworcel, the acting chairwoman of the Federal Communications Commission.Washington Post photo by Jonathan Newton.
WASHINGTON - More than three years ago, Jessica Rosenworcel could only react in horror as her Republican counterparts on the Federal Communications Commission voted to repeal the U.S. government s net neutrality rules. There is no shortage of people who believe Washington is not listening to their concerns, their fears and their desires, Rosenworcel, a Democratic member of the FCC, said in a speech at the time. Add this agency to the list.
Tue, Dec 22nd 2020 6:41am
Karl Bode
For much of the last few years, broadband customers have been complaining that Frontier Communications, the nation s third-biggest telco, had been charging its customers a rental fee for modems they already owned. Normally, you re supposed to be able to buy your own modem instead of paying your ISP a rental fee upwards of $10 per month. To nab some extra dough from captive customers, Frontier basically decided to charge its customers a rental fee anyway, giving them a polite, though giant, middle finger when they complained.
This façade persisted until customers had a problem with their hardware, at which point the ISP would just shrug and claim there was nothing they could do. When consumers complained to the Trump FCC about this, the agency did. absolutely nothing. As with most complaints to the Trump FCC, the agency just forwards your complaint to the ISP in question then does. nothing whatsoever.
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