Newstral
Article
Ars Technica on 2021-06-11 23:19
NY can’t force ISPs to offer $15 low-income broadband plans, judge rules
Related news
- FCC finally orders ISPs to say exactly where they offer broadbandArs Technica
- Court upholds New York law that says ISPs must offer $15 broadbandArs Technica
- FCC slows expansion of low-income broadband subsidiesThe Verge
- FCC stops federal approval of low-income broadband subsidiesengadget
- White House agreement sees ISPs cap broadband prices for low-income householdsengadget
- ISPs are fighting to raise the price of low-income broadbandengadget
- FCC exempts small ISPs from broadband truth-in-billing rulesArs Technica
- AT&T's rollout of broadband serves the rich, shunts mid- and low-income families to the slow laneLA Times
- New York to require providers to offer $15 broadband to low-income customers – or get finedFox News
- Google will offer free broadband to low-income families in White House pilot programThe Verge
- ISPs claim broadband prices aren’t too high—Biden admin isn’t buying itArs Technica
- ISPs and FCC Republicans celebrate FCC’s court loss on muni broadbandArs Technica
- FCC extends low-income subsidy to broadbandThe Salt Lake Tribune
- Ajit Pai’s 5G plans make it harder for small ISPs to deploy broadbandArs Technica
- Ajit Pai uses bad data to claim ISPs are deploying broadband to everyoneArs Technica
- FCC gives ISPs another $563 million to build rural-broadband networksArs Technica
- FCC will pay ISPs to deploy broadband with 250GB monthly data capArs Technica
- Biden broadband plan will be hated by big ISPs, welcomed by Internet usersArs Technica
- New York requires $15 broadband for poor people, promptly gets sued by ISPsArs Technica
- New York State just passed a law requiring ISPs to offer $15 broadbandThe Verge