FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler has confirmed that he will base new Net Neutrality rules on Title II of the Communications Act. He described those rules as "the strongest open Internet protections ever proposed by the FCC."
On the anniversary of the Verizon v. FCC court decision that jumpstarted a nationwide movement for Net Neutrality, we look back at the biggest moments over the last 365 days.
Breaking news: At the Consumer Electronics Show in Las Vegas on Wednesday, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler signaled that he will move to protect Net Neutrality by reclassifying Internet-access service under Title II of the Communications Act.
A lot of us felt devastated after learning that Darren Wilson won’t be indicted for the murder of Michael Brown.
We listened to prosecutor Bob McCulloch’s statement last night on cable news channels, public radio stations, YouTube webcasts and on-the-ground livestreams. We were glued to the media, old and new. And we went there to find community.
ABC, CBS and NBC are refusing to broadcast Thursday’s historic presidential address on immigration. They think The Big Bang Theory, Grey’s Anatomy and The Biggest Loser: Glory Days are more important.
Earlier this month, President Obama added his voice to the nearly 4 million people who have urged the FCC to preserve the open Internet and protect free speech online. Is any of this getting through to Chairman Tom Wheeler?
On Monday President Obama threw his full support behind real Net Neutrality.
But FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler still wants rules that would please his industry pals at AT&T, Comcast and Verizon.