News

A majority of the Supreme Court appeared reluctant Wednesday to wipe out a Federal Communications Commission program.
Decisions to eliminate rules can be challenged in court. TechFreedom, a libertarian-leaning think tank, supported the goals of "Delete, Delete, Delete" but cautioned the FCC to move deliberately so ...
The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed poised to uphold the federal program that provides schools, libraries, and underserved ...
Donald Trump took issue with its 60 Minutes news program after it aired two segments regarding the war in Ukraine and his ...
TV Tech’s roundup of the filings shows that eliminating ownership rules was a top priority in filings from The NAB, Nexstar, Sinclair, Gray Media and other commercial broadcasters ...
The Federal Communications Commission chief is joining Trump’s efforts to smear Kilmar Abrego Garcia, in a troubling attempt ...
In response to a federal deregulation initiative, Sirius XM is calling on the FCC to eliminate legacy rules and merger ...
The LPTV Broadcasters Association has filed comments supporting technical rule changes while opposing new regulatory ... Read ...
President Trump has a “hope” for his Federal Communications Commission: that the agency will punish CBS for airing “60 Minutes” reports he doesn’t like.
The Supreme Court seems unlikely to strike down the E-rate program, though some justices questioned its funding structure and ...