For a lot of people, the issue of network neutrality shouldn't be an issue at all, it should just be fact. The equal treatment of all internet traffic — subject to no throttling, control, or any other form of oversight by governments or internet providers — is held up as one of the foundational principles of the web and should be respected unconditionally.
What SCOTUS just did to broadband, the right to repair, the environment, and more
From net neutrality to H-1B tech workers to cellphone unlocking, much of tech policy revolves around the administrative state.
Supreme Court ruling kneecaps federal regulators
SCOTUS overrules Chevron deference, completely changing how environmental and consumer protections will be decided.
Now that it’s added a 5th commissioner, a vote will be officially held on April 25th, but the FCC told advocates its plan ahead of time. The vote also includes reestablishing regulatory oversight of broadband internet, something the Trump administration took away — and was influenced by a lot of fake comments to the FCC.
I’m over at the FCC building in Washington, D.C. today because the agency is about to vote on a notice of proposed rulemaking to restore net neutrality.
It’s also Commissioner Anna Gomez’s first open meeting after her September confirmation.
Sources speaking to both Bloomberg and Reuters say that the FCC is ready to launch a grueling effort to reinstate net neutrality rules rescinded under Trump, after Democrats took majority control of the five-member agency on Monday. FCC chair Rosenworcel will reportedly outline the initiative later today, followed by months of notice and comments and voting and, inevitably, lawsuits backed by broadband providers like AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast and the lawmakers they help elect.
President Joe Biden wanted Gigi Sohn to fix America’s internet — what went wrong?
‘Dark money’ and the never-ending election cycle kept a qualified consumer advocate out of the Federal Communications Commission.
World wired
On ethernet’s 50th anniversary, we’re taking a look at how wiring the entire planet has changed the future forever.
Ads, surveys, a data breach: all were used to turn unsuspecting people into fake net neutrality comments. This report (pdf) from the NY Attorney General’s office details some shady shit; firms even cheated their own subcontractors.
But as Karl Bode points out, the real story is the wrist-slap. A tiny fine for the goons; none at all for the telecom monopolies that hired ‘em.
Join Sen. Ed Markey and Gigi Sohn for a Verge Live event on Wednesday
How can we build a better internet?