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Tag: FCC

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Who will win the race for net neutrality?

12 Nov 2014

Europe and the U.S. are nearing the finish line in a neck-and-neck race to enshrine net neutrality into law, and support the rights of some 800 million users.

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Who will win the race for net neutrality?
12 Nov 2014
Who will win the race for net neutrality?

Today Is the Internet Slowdown

10 Sep 2014

Today a broad coalition of groups and companies is participating in the “Internet Slowdown” — a day of action in which sites around the web are covered in symbolic “loading” icons to remind everyone of what an internet without net neutrality would look like. Access is proud to participate in the action.

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Today Is the Internet Slowdown
10 Sep 2014
Today Is the Internet Slowdown
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Access tells the FCC to use its authority to reclassify broadband and protect net neutrality

18 Jul 2014

This week Access submitted comments to the FCC urging it to use its full authority to reclassify broadband internet access service as a telecommunications service under Title II of the Telecommunications Act — the only viable way the agency can safeguard the values that enabled the internet to become a global force for commerce, culture, free expression, and innovation.

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Access tells the FCC to use its authority to reclassify broadband and protect net neutrality
18 Jul 2014
Access tells the FCC to use its authority to reclassify broadband and protect net neutrality

The FCC is dealing the internet away, opening the door to network discrimination

24 Apr 2014
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The FCC is dealing the internet away, opening the door to network discrimination
24 Apr 2014
The FCC is dealing the internet away, opening the door to network discrimination

FCC’s tender touch won’t save the internet

20 Feb 2014

Nearly a month after the U.S. Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia (D.C. Circuit) struck down the U.S. Federal Communications Commission’s (FCC) authority to enforce existing network neutrality rules, the FCC announced its response. In a statement today, FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler engaged in impressive verbal acrobatics to avoid the simple truth: In order to protect the open and innovative internet the FCC must correct its earlier mistakes and expand the agency’s regulatory authority over internet service providers (ISP) under Title II of the 1996 Communications Act.

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FCC’s tender touch won’t save the internet
20 Feb 2014
FCC’s tender touch won’t save the internet

U.S. District Court ruling on net neutrality sets dangerous precedent

15 Jan 2014

Yesterday, a U.S. Appeals Court invalidated the U.S. Federal Communication Commission’s (FCC) net neutrality rules. In its ruling, the court stated that the FCC lacked the authority to prevent internet service providers from discriminating among certain types of traffic — effectively allowing providers to make pay-to-play a reality online. This ruling is a significant blow to net neutrality, in the United States and elsewhere. The Court’s ruling creates a dangerous global precedent places the unique character of the internet — its boldness, creativity, and diversity — at risk. And yet, by ruling selectively on the merits of the case, the Court has left the door open for possible reforms, at least in the United States.

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U.S. District Court ruling on net neutrality sets dangerous precedent
15 Jan 2014
U.S. District Court ruling on net neutrality sets dangerous precedent

U.S. “Internet Governance Bill” advances to the full House of Representatives with modifications

17 Apr 2013

The proposed U.S. House of Representatives “Internet Governance Bill” was approved by the full Energy and Commerce Committee today and will now move on to the full House of Representatives. The revised draft of the bill would make it the “policy of the United States to preserve and advance the successful multistakeholder model that governs the Internet.”

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U.S. “Internet Governance Bill” advances to the full House of Representatives with modifications
17 Apr 2013
U.S. “Internet Governance Bill” advances to the full House of Representatives with modifications