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tmobile legere

Good-Bye, MetroPCS: Only Verizon Now Opposes Net Neutrality

Now Verizon is the only remaining petitioner in the case.
Julius Genachowski

The Former Head of the FCC Is Now on Twitter

Julius Genachowski may no longer be a public servant. But that doesn't mean he's out of the public eye.
cell phone google fiber

How to Get Google Fiber—Without Google

The trick is to get a university on your side.
Michele Bachmann

Bachmann Airing Ads On Minnesota TV

Rep. Michele Bachmann, R-Minn., has purchased TV advertising time for the next two weeks with a Minneapolis station, according to filings with the Federal Communications Commission. Beginning Thursday, Bachmann's campaign will air 31 30-second spots on KMSP, a local Fox affiliate, for $14,565 over...
syria internet outage

Syria Has Switched Off the Internet For the Second Time in 6 Months

On Twitter, reports are coming in that the Syrian government has cut off Internet access to its citizens.
internet retailer online sales

What if the Internet Sales Tax Doesn't Make it Through Congress?

Legislation allowing states to collect sales taxes on purchases made over the Internet—approved by the Senate in a 69-27 vote Monday evening—faces an uncertain future in the House.
stephen lynch

Previewing the Sunday Shows

This week the Sunday shows are focusing on Syria and the continuing investigation on the Boston Marathon Bombing. The specter of immigration reform will also have a role in the programming. Rep. Tom Cotton, R-Ark., who hasn't ruled out a bid against Sen. Mark Pryor, D-Ark., in 2014, will be on Meet...
hollywood LA

The New Urban Brand War: A Top-Level Domain for Every City on Earth

Craving a slice in Istanbul? Check out www.pizza.istanbul. Need a taxi in Tokyo? Try www.taxi.tokyo.
Row of computers

Obama's FCC Pick Has Some Surprising Allies

Obama's pick for FCC chair is more than what his résumé shows, unexpected allies say.
Tom Wheeler FCC

6 Revealing Quotes From Obama's Potential New FCC Nominee, Tom Wheeler

The man who could be in line to head the Federal Communications Commission wrote prolifically about tech on his blog.
AT&T-T-Mobile merger logo

FCC Chair: Blocking the AT&T/T-Mobile Merger Was 'Absolutely the Right Call'

Julius Genachowski doesn’t regret killing the AT&T/T-Mobile merger one bit. 
MOOC

How Online Education Saves Everyone Money

Online learning isn’t just another path into the middle class. It’s also a way for the government to spend more wisely. 
bitcoin

What an Internet Sales Tax Could Mean for Your Bitcoin Stash

How will states collect taxes on bitcoin transactions if they're anonymous and untraceable?
telephone operators, cell phone

Why We Need to Move Ahead on IP

When it comes to communications technology, federal regulations shouldn’t discourage innovation. They have to keep up with the times.
ajit pai hudson institute

The FCC's Republican Member

Ajit Pai is the sole remaining Republican on the Federal Communications Commission. 
James Carney

Get Ready To Be Taxed on Internet Purchases

The Senate is scheduled to debate the Internet sales-tax legislation this week. The bill is expected to pass.
Goodlatte

Immigration Debate May Grow More Complicated

With Congress focused on immigration reform this week, the national security aspects of the issue are moving to the forefront amid efforts by some conservatives to inject the Boston Marathon bombing suspects into that debate.
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Energy and Commerce's Jurisdiction: Anything that Moves, Burns, or is Sold

That is how National Journal once described the jurisdiction of the House Energy and Commerce Committee. House rules offer one definition of the committee’s turf, but a practical, bottom-up view of the committee’s territory is visible in the word cloud below. It shows the terms most common to the titles of the almost 350 hearings held by the House Energy and Commerce Committee and its subcommittees in the 111th and 112th Congresses. The larger the word, the more frequently it appeared in those hearing titles.
Neil Fried

Neil Fried, Majority Chief Counsel, Communications and Technology Subcommittee

Neil Fried came to Washington without a shred of telecom experience. Now, he’s counted as one of the top tech-policy experts in government—so much so that he was considered for chairman of the Federal Communications Commission, according to industry analysts.
Roger Sherman

Roger Sherman, Minority Chief Counsel

Roger Sherman started working for Rep. Henry Waxman, D-Calif., as his defense and foreign-affairs staffer back in 1990—one week before the first Gulf War started.
First Solar Manufacturing Plant

Manufacturers Focus on Reforming Tax Code and Reducing Barriers to Trade

Manufacturers are, naturally, the biggest stakeholders in the committee’s discussion of improving the manufacturing sector.
INTERNET USAGE

Companies Fight Hard to Shape Internet Regs

It’s the closest thing the Internet has to a creation myth: The Web owes its usefulness today to decentralization, individual empowerment, and noninterference from the corporate and government classes. For the Internet to remain an innovative place, tech-policy types argue, this libertarian culture must continue.
Henry Waxman_Betty Sutton_Ed Markey_Bart Stupak

A Polarized Committee Reflects a Gridlocked Congress

Shortly after Rep. Fred Upton, R-Mich., won the chairmanship of the House Energy and Commerce Committee in December 2010, he invited all the former committee chairmen and their wives to dinner at Carmine’s in downtown Washington.
Julius Genachowski

Committee Will Watch Spectrum Auction Closely

By definition, virtually every wireless technology in use today depends on radio waves. Whether it’s for Wi-Fi, cell-phone calls, or satellite TV, the radio spectrum transports signals from source to destination quickly and efficiently.
Antenna broadcasts spectrum

Companies Fight to Influence Auction Rules

On spectrum issues, wireless carriers and cable companies account for the most active lobbying. The top three are AT&T, Verizon, and Comcast, followed by trade groups such as the National Cable and Telecommunications Association.
Person uses computer screen

Internet Regulation Tests Bipartisanship

  When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Dozens of countries, including the United States, refused to sign the final international treaty.

Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy. It’s one of those rare moments at which Democrats and Republicans find themselves in alliance based on their respective beliefs, rather than out of political expediency. Democrats see the issue as mainly about civil liberties; for the GOP, it’s about blocking government overreach. When China and Russia last year proposed building a set of rules into a long-standing global-telecommunications regime, critics decried the idea as a way for governments to spy on their citizens. Both chambers of Congress unanimously passed a nonbinding resolution opposing it. Now, as part of a broader effort to address Internet regulation, the House Energy and Commerce Committee wants to institutionalize Washington’s position in the talks as official policy.   

commerece timeline thumb

The 218 Year History of the House Energy and Commerce Committee

Historical highlights of the oldest standing legislative committee in the House of Representatives
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The 50 Insiders Who Know Fred Upton Best

Meet the 50 people inside the beltway closest to Upton. The list includes two former and one current Cabinet official, a handful of mostly telecommunications lobbyists, several current and former senior staffers, a Fox journalist and a smattering of other people from many walks of the Washington political life.
Rep. Fred Upton

A Polarized Congress Tests Fred Upton’s Instincts

In the final days of the last Congress, House Energy and Commerce Committee Chairman Fred Upton spoke out against a bill to provide roughly $50 million to aid the victims of superstorm Sandy.
Yamaha Motor Corporation USA's RMax

What Drones Can Do for You

Prescription drugs, fast-food delivery, disaster relief—unmanned aerial vehicles can be handy in all sorts of ways. 
bob goodlatte

The House Member Who Can Change the Internet

Often overlooked on tech issues, Rep. Bob Goodlatte has a quiet approach that masks his power.
Net neutrality

Memorable Moments From a Departing Telecom Regulator

Robert McDowell, one of two Republican members of the FCC, said Wednesday he plans to step down.
Derek Khanna

Freedom for Phones — and Their Owners

Derek Khanna, pushed out of his job as a GOP researcher, led the drive to make it legal to unlock your mobile device.
rotary landline phone

How the Humble Telephone Is About to Bring Internet to the Masses (Again)

Two percent of Americans don't have broadband, but upgraded infrastructure could give high-speed access to the country's neediest.
tmobile parachute

T-Mobile’s Brilliant Plan to Win Over the Internet

You can’t fault T-Mobile for being bold. In the past six months, the nation’s third-largest wireless company has renounced data caps, put the brakes on phone subsidies and started a war with AT&T. At a major trade show in January, T-Mobile’s new CEO, John Legere, called AT&T’s network “crap” -- prompting the incumbent to respond with a full-page ad in newspapers pointing out T-Mobile’s own network flaws.
Leahy

That Was Quick: Now There's Legislation on Cell-Phone Unlocking

From the beginning, White House petitioners looking to keep phone-unlocking legal have insisted that they want Congress’ help. Barely a day after their first victory, in which the Obama administration expressed support for unlocking, they got more good news: Congress is paying attention.
police tape

How an Obscure 911 Tax Could Have You Paying for Washington's Budget Cuts

With the countdown to a massive federal budget cut ticking away, top-level agencies everywhere are bracing for bad news. But they're not the only ones: the sequester puts many state budgets at risk, too. 
Obama Speaks about Economy

Why Won't the Government Let You Unlock Your Phone? 100,000 People Want to Know

Suppose you're upset with your cell-phone carrier, and you'd like to switch. Under current law, you can take your phone number with you when you leave. But if you want to take your phone? Forget it. 
cell phone inventor Martin Cooper

5 Inventors of the Cell Phone Honored for Wiring the World

On April 3, 1973, in New York City, Motorola engineer Martin Cooper made the first call on a cell phone. Hoisting a 2.2-pound device, the 44-year-old called his rival at Bell Laboratories to gloat.
Votes

Key Votes Used to Calculate the Ratings

The 116 Senate votes and 116 House votes on which National Journal’s 2012 vote ratings are based.
mobile soccer brazil

You Probably Have the Seventh Most Expensive Data Plan on Earth

Every time my mobile phone bill arrives, it's impossible not to think I've been robbed. There’s no way a data plan should cost as much as it does. And I’m on a budget carrier! But it could be worse.

Diverse Needs in Libraries Reveal Pressure Points

Historically, recessions increase reliance on libraries, far beyond individuals who opt to borrow a book, rather than purchase one. Many patrons – particularly minorities and low-income individuals – turn to the library in pursuit of employment, whether for a warehouse position or a top-level managerial job, aided by research librarians.
Capitol Building Through A Rain-Covered Car Window

Republicans Embark on a Weekend of Self Help

With seminar titles such as “What Happened and Where Are We Now?” the GOP hopes to turn spirits around at their annual retreat.
cargo ship

Against the Tide

Republicans are almost always in tune with the oil and gas industry, but they’re singing a different song on the drydocked Law of the Sea Treaty. 
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