March 2020

Working with States to Solve the Broadband Challenge

The National Telecommunications and Information Administration's State Broadband Leaders Network is a powerful forum for connecting local government, industry and stakeholders across the country that are focused on broadband activities.

Sponsor: 

2010 National Broadband Plan Alumni, Benton Institute for Broadband & Society, Common Sense Media, Free Press, Next Century Cities, New America/Open Technology Institute, Public Knowledge, Schools Health & Libraries Broadband Coalition

Date: 
Thu, 03/19/2020 - 19:00 to 21:15

THIS EVENT HAS BEEN POSTPONED

 

Ten years ago, Congress received the first National Broadband Plan. What would a plan for this decade say? 



Sponsor: 

Subcommittee on Crime and Terrorism

Senate Judiciary Committee

Date: 
Wed, 03/04/2020 - 20:30

Understanding the True State of Connectivity in America

Through the TestIT app, we demonstrated that small counties are disproportionately impacted by the digital divide. With regards to fixed-wireless levels, 59.6 percent of counties were experiencing the internet below 25 mbps including 16 percent of large counties, 44 percent of mid-sized counties and 74 percent of small counties. Regardless of size and demographics, all counties and communities across America should have access to affordable, reliable and high-speed Internet.

Sen Van Hollen Introduces Legislation to Address the Homework Gap

Sen Chris Van Hollen (D-MD) introduced the introduction of the Homework Gap Trust Fund Act, legislation to eliminate the homework gap and ensure children have access to the internet at home. According to the Senate Joint Economic Committee, as many as 12 million students do not have access to the internet at home. Data also suggests that while 70 percent of teachers assign homework that requires internet access, almost 20 percent of students don’t have home internet access to complete it.

Big Tech's small deals pose a quandary for regulators

Tech companies like Google and Facebook grew giant in part by rolling up startups that are now fully integrated into their businesses. Despite heated antitrust rhetoric, it would be a tall order for regulators to reverse hundreds of deals or force divestitures of the essential business lines those transactions helped build. As regulators review a decade of tech industry acquisitions for signs of monopolistic behavior, proposing remedies is going to be a tough challenge. Washington still has some tools to help counter competitive harms stemming from past mergers.