Bloomberg
T-Mobile Cuts Home Internet Price by 17 Percent to Dislodge Cable
T-Mobile is cutting the price of its new 5G wireless home broadband service by 17 percent, stepping up efforts to steal internet customers from cable and phone companies. The new price is $50 a month, a decrease of $10, T-Mobile said October 5. The six-month-old service is available to more than 30 million homes, but that’s just a fraction of the US total.
Snapchat Was the Biggest Winner the Day Facebook Went Dark (Bloomberg)
Submitted by benton on Wed, 10/06/2021 - 06:19Zuckerberg Loses $6 Billion in Hours as Facebook Plunges (Bloomberg)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 10/05/2021 - 06:22AT&T’s Best Bet to Catch 5G Rivals Begins With Airwaves Auction
AT&T gets a chance to close a 5G airwaves gap with its rivals as bidding begins in a US auction of frequencies for ultrafast wireless service that’s expected to attract $25 billion in bids. The third-largest US wireless carrier is predicted to be the top bidder in the spectrum auction run by the Federal Communications Commission. Mobile leaders Verizon and T-Mobile are also ready to take part in the sale that starts October 5, as is Dish Network. The airwaves being sold are in the 3.45-3.55 GHz range, and are known as midband frequencies.
FCC Vacancies Stunt President Biden’s Internet Ambitions
The drumbeat of advocacy for universal internet access in the US became louder during the Covid-19 pandemic and was amplified by President Biden early in his presidency as he laid out a New Deal-like vision for the future of infrastructure and connectivity. Unfortunately, though, an agency responsible for carrying out the specifics of that vision has been paralyzed by a baffling situation that could inadvertently put Republican appointees of former President Donald Trump in the driver’s seat.
Google Adds Context to Search Results to Combat Misinformation (Bloomberg)
Submitted by Grace Tepper on Thu, 09/30/2021 - 10:30Infrastructure Bill Offers Telecommunications Unions a $43 Billion Boon
The part of the bipartisan infrastructure bill dedicated to distributing $42.5 billion in broadband funds would give preference to companies with a record of following labor and employment laws—a requirement that, practically speaking, could give an advantage to professionalized union workforces over the constellation of subcontractors that power the telecommunications industry.
White House Weighs Invoking Defense Law to Get Chip Data (Bloomberg)
Submitted by benton on Fri, 09/24/2021 - 16:12FCC May Be Hamstrung Under GOP Majority as Nominations Lag
Republicans are poised to become a majority of the Federal Communications Commission at year’s end unless President Joe Biden nominates a chair who can swiftly be approved by the Senate. Eight months into his administration, President Biden hasn’t named anyone to permanently lead the agency.