Corporate-friendly judges on the Sixth Circuit have overturned net neutrality, and Trump’s FCC will only make things worse.
Appeals court verdict is setback for Biden administration efforts to have legal internet content treated equally.
No longer bound by deference to regulators, a Sixth Circuit panel ruled that the Biden administration cannot enforce stricter regulation policy on internet service providers.
NPR's Juana Summers speaks with Stanford Law Professor Barbara van Schewick about a federal court's decision to strike down the Biden administration's net neutrality protections.
Members of the House and Senate haven’t received any bump to their $174,000 annual salary since 2009, and that’s bad for the country. The 27th Amendment stipulates that lawmakers may not raise their ...
A federal appeals court decision striking down the Federal Communications Commission’s net neutrality rules demonstrates the ...
The Sixth Circuit’s January 2, 2025, decision in Ohio Telecom Association et al. v. Federal Communications Commission et al. may reshape the future ...
Net neutrality changes have minimal impact on telecom companies' shareholder returns due to their diversified revenue streams ...
Federal appeals court strikes down FCC's net neutrality rules, ending decades-long internet regulatory effort.
A nearly decades-long fight over net neutrality has come to an end. Net neutrality forbids internet providers from giving preferential bandwidth to certain providers. On Friday, a U.S. court rejected ...
A ruling passed by the 6th Circuit Court of Appeals on Thursday overturns last year’s FCC vote to restore certain net neutrality rules. The net neutrality rules, which were first put in place in 2015 ...