- Former France Telecom CEO indicted over 35 suicides
- Five years after the iPhone, carriers are the biggest threat to innovation
- Father of Australian Internet Warns of Address Crunch--"IPv6 will supply many more addresses, but Huston says telecoms have little incentive to invest in adopting it, since an address shortage would give companies the power to ration internet traffic and charge a premium for easier access."
- Verizon urges court to scrap net-neutrality rules--"Verizon claimed that the rules violate its First Amendment free speech rights."
- Verizon wants the "freedom" to edit your internet--They're purporting that "broadband providers possess 'editorial discretion'" to "feature some content over others."
- Verizon is trying to stamp out unlimited data customers
- Is Verizon 'shaking down' customers with family plan?
- Verizon Silences T-Mobile: Wireless Industry Consolidation and Cross-Industry Collusion — Verizon Wireless, Comcast and T-Mobile
- White House Debuts Ambitious Plan To Remake The Web Using Broadband
- Obama's Broadband Vision vs. the Communications Trust
- Success! How Progressives Stalled the Deregulation Agenda of Greedy Telecoms and ALEC
- South Carolina passes bill against municipal broadband--"Broadband policy analysts decry pressure from AT&T and a conservative group."
- Colorado city rolls out free Wi-Fi in seven parks--"In November 2011 a referendum vote in favor of letting Longmont offer telecom services effectively lifted state restrictions on the use of the city's existing fiber-optic network. Opponents, including Comcast, spent nearly $300,000 trying to convince Longmont's residents to defeat the ballot question."
- Why Comcast really cares about data caps and tiered plans
- Sprint Changes 'Unlimited' Broadband To 5 Gigs... While Still Advertising Unlimited Broadband
- No meter? No problem. AT&T is still happy to charge you
- Ohio man gets a $16.4 million cable bill
- Congressman Wants to Ban Download Caps--"Time Warner Cable plans to test its controversial, new scheme to have users pay by the gigabyte in Rochester, New York, but the area’s freshman congressman calls usage caps greedy and plans to introduce legislation to stop it."