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News BlogChanges In Latest Senate Draft Bill Affect 'Net Neutrality,' Anti-PiracyPosted on June 20, 2006 - 9:56pm.
from: National Journal, Congress Daily Changes In Latest Senate Draft Bill Affect 'Net Neutrality,' Anti-Piracy By Drew Clark (Monday, June 19) Senate Commerce Chairman Ted Stevens, R-Alaska, made hundreds of changes to his third and latest draft of telecommunications legislation, aides said. ( categories: Senate S.2686 )
Bid To Pre-Empt State Laws Draws Controversy For Senate Telecom BillPosted on June 20, 2006 - 9:54pm.
from: National Journal - Technology Daily Bid To Pre-Empt State Laws Draws Controversy For Senate Telecom Bill By Drew Clark (Tuesday, June 20) Democrats are deeply troubled by a last-minute attempt to pre-empt state law under the latest draft of Senate telecommunications legislation authored by Senate Commerce Chairman Ted Stevens, R-Alaska. ( categories: Senate S.2686 )
Inouye Rips New Stevens Draft BillPosted on June 19, 2006 - 8:07pm.
from: MultiChannel News Inouye Rips New Stevens Draft Bill Washington – The top Democrat on the Senate Commerce Committee Monday refused to endorse the newest version of a sweeping telecommunications bill sponsored by chairman Ted Stevens (R-Alaska), calling the third draft released last Friday “a further step backward for consumers.” ( categories: Senate S.2686 )
$200 Billion Broadband Scandal - Get the book free!Posted on June 19, 2006 - 12:37pm.
$200 Billion Broadband Scandal is NOW a free download for http://www.teletruth.org/docs/BROADBANDSCANDAL.pdf Senate Should Stop and Investigate Verizon, AT&T, BellSouth and Qwest’s Broadband and Internet Control and Deployments. – FOLLOW THE MONEY TRAIL. An Internet rigged by providers?Posted on June 19, 2006 - 6:57am.
from: Toronto Star An Internet rigged by providers? If you're like many Canadians, you hate the way you have to take — and pay for — TV channels you never watch just to get those channels you do watch. ( categories: HR.5252 COPE | Senate S.2686 )
Net Neutrality LitePosted on June 19, 2006 - 6:52am.
from: Ars Technica Senate bill compromise paves the way for "Net Neutrality Lite" 6/18/2006 A vote on one telecommunications bill that seeks to address Net Neutrality is expected later this week, but just what will be voted on is far from clear. Dubbed the Communications, Consumer’s Choice, and Broadband Deployment Act of 2006 (S.2686), the Senate bill backed by Ted Stevens (R-AK) could be voted on as early as this Thursday, June 22. The vote would take place in the Commerce Committee's weekly session, a necessary step before reaching the attention of the full Senate. ( categories: Senate S.2686 )
Sen. Stevens offers deal on Net neutralityPosted on June 18, 2006 - 6:30pm.
Sen. Stevens offers deal on Net neutrality Sun Jun 18, 2006 4:13 PM ET By Jeremy Pelofsky WASHINGTON (Reuters) - Senate Commerce Committee Google, Microsoft Corp. and other Internet ( categories: AT&T | Senate S.2686 )
Net Neutrality to Change in Stevens BillPosted on June 17, 2006 - 6:01pm.
from: MultiChannel News Net Neutrality to Change in Stevens Bill Washington— A Senate telecommunications bill is expected to be modified this week to accommodate legislators’ concerns about potential discriminatory conduct by cable, phone and other broadband-access providers that could affect Internet services. ( categories: Senate S.2686 )
A Ten-Point Plan for Media DemocracyPosted on June 16, 2006 - 3:18pm.
From: The Nation A Ten-Point Plan for Media Democracy By Jeffrey Chester Ten years after the passage of the Telecommunications Act of 1996, digital technologies are rapidly reshaping the country’s communications system. It will be the most powerful media environment ever created—always “on” with connections via PCs, digital TVs and an array of mobile devices, delivering a torrent of personalized, interactive and virtual content, much of it coming from the nation’s most powerful traditional and new media companies (e.g., AT&T, Comcast, Google, Microsoft). The next several years are critical to insure that the promise of what we now experience online—and its vast potential to help build a just civil society—is fulfilled. With Congress poised to pass legislation that rewrites key parts of the Telecom Act, the following ten action items should be on any media reform agenda. ( categories: NSA/Telco Wiretap Scandal )
Cable act seen hurting localitiesPosted on June 16, 2006 - 8:07am.
from: Washington Times Cable act seen hurting localities By Jacqueline Palank Counties and cities that broker their own cable service deals in the Washington area are worried that recent efforts to shift control to the state and federal levels would hurt customer service and local programming. ( categories: HR.5252 COPE | Senate S.2686 )
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