FCC, Colbert and Trump
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The Federal Communications Commission is changing how it approaches broadband deployment under Donald Trump's second administration.
President Trump has said that he anticipates receiving at least $20 million in advertising, public service announcements or similar programming from incoming Paramount Global owner Skydance as part of a settlement to resolve a lawsuit that 60 Minutes conducted with Kamala Harris.
The latest meeting comes after David Ellison spoke with the agency's chairman Brendan Carr about the pending $8 billion deal
The Federal Communications Commission is ditching Biden-era standards for measuring progress toward the goal of universal broadband deployment.
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PCMag on MSNRepublican-Led FCC Moves to Kill Gigabit Broadband Speed Goal
Raising the broadband speed benchmark to 1Gbps is 'prejudicial to technologies such as satellite and fixed wireless,' says FCC Chair Brendan Carr.
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An FCC proposal seeks to undo the Biden administration's efforts to encourage increased availability of gigabit download speeds.
Brendan Carr, chair of President Donald Trump’s Federal Communications Commission, is speaking out about CBS’ cancellation of The Late Show with Stephen Colbert. Carr wrote on X, “The partisan left’s ritualist wailing and gnashing of teeth over Colbert is quite revealing.
At its July 24, 2025 meeting, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is expected to adopt a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking (NPRM) seeking
Verizon also follows similar network lock-in rules. However, it had recently submitted a request to the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) to remove the current network lock-in rules. It wants the FCC to ease up on them. Verizon submits petition to ...