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The Supreme Court appeared likely to reject an effort to invalidate the FCC's multi-billion-dollar mechanism for expanding phone and internet access.
The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed poised to uphold the federal program that provides schools, libraries, and underserved ...
The program has to subsidize services essential to education, public health and public safety. That doesn’t mean the FCC can include ... what would happen to phone and internet service for ...
A majority of the Supreme Court appeared reluctant Wednesday to wipe out a Federal Communications Commission program.
The justices heard arguments in an appeal by the agency and a coalition of telecommunications firms and interest groups of a lower court's ruling that the FCC funding operation effectively levied ...
The agency initially established a system of implicit subsidies by requiring telephone companies to charge below-cost rates in rural areas, where it was harder and more expensive to build phone ...
If there's one thing people with iPhones and Android phones can agree on, it's this: Robocalls suck. They're annoying ...
The Supreme Court leaned toward upholding a $9 billion subsidy program that funds phone and internet services ... the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) too much power in administering ...
Experts at the Consortium for School Networking’s annual conference in Seattle urged K-12 leaders to contact the FCC and ...