USA Today
House, Senate Democrats unveil $94 billion bill to improve Internet access
Thirty House and Senate Democrats unveiled a new $94 billion proposal to make broadband Internet access more accessible and affordable nationwide, aiming to remedy some of the digital inequalities that have kept millions of Americans offline during the coronavirus pandemic. The new effort, chiefly authored by Rep. James Clyburn (D-SC) and Sen. Amy Klobuchar (D-MN), marks one of the most expensive, ambitious broadband packages proposed in recent years.
These cities could become the biggest winners and losers as more Americans shift to remote work (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 03/08/2021 - 06:21Twitter ups efforts to stop misinformation, labeling falsehoods related to COVID-19 vaccine (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Mon, 03/01/2021 - 16:37What AT&T, Verizon and T-Mobile are buying up: The 5G battle between US carriers just got very interesting
While you probably never thought you needed to understand the intricacies of how cellular networks operated by AT&T, T-Mobile and Verizon work, some big news that affects those operations will have real-world impacts on the services that they offer and that we rely on. In every country around the world except the US, 5G networks have been built around mid-band spectrum because it offers the right combination of coverage area and width of data lanes over which our TV shows can be streamed, Instagram posts uploaded, worldwide web browsed, etc.
Americans are united on one thing: We have become a nation of video streamers during coronavirus pandemic (USA Today)
Submitted by benton on Tue, 02/16/2021 - 06:26World wide web inventor Tim Berners-Lee takes on Google, Facebook, Amazon to fix the internet
Sir Tim Berners-Lee and his business partner, John Bruce, have launched Inrupt, a company that allows consumers, rather than companies, to control their own data, to store it in pods, and to move it wherever they please. That means Facebook, Google or any other Big Tech company will no longer be able to extract an individual's photos, comments or purchase history without asking.
What online school? Thousands of students still can't access classes over the internet
Since schools shut down in spring, districts have scrambled to distribute laptops and internet so students can engage in schooling from home. But almost a year later, with no end in sight for virtual learning, millions of students still lack reliably fast internet or a working computer — the basic tools to participate in live lessons from home. The digital divide is complicated to solve. The cost of broadband is out of reach for many families.