With rare exception, nothing has galvanized activists and those of us in libraries more these days than net neutrality. It’s also “a thing” with just about everyone else. If you “google” the phrase, the first two or three trillion hits that come up are in favor of the status quo and against the current Federal Communications Commission’s chairman, Ajit Pai, and the FCC’s plans to scuttle the Obama-era rules on net neutrality: no blocking, no throttling, and no paid prioritization
In an effort to save our culture, strike a blow for reading, and, above all, correct the well-intent...
The debate over regulation of the Internet may be one of the most important of our day. Companies th...
During a labour dispute in 2005, the Internet Service Provider (ISP) Telus blocked its subscribers f...
Net neutrality is currently one of the most topical government policies up for debate. In the follow...
The Emmanuel d\u27Alzon Library Newsletter provides important updates about library collections, pol...
Net neutrality is a critical component of equitable access to information and freedom of expression....
As the topic of net neutrality becomes increasingly polarized, the question becomes: Who should deci...
The principle of net neutrality implies that internet service providers must treat all information ...
You expect that any material in public libraries is available to you. There may be a few exceptions,...
An important reason for the Internet's remarkable growth over the last quarter century is the "end-t...
The debate about network neutrality—the idea that packets of information traversing the pipes that c...
An important reason for the Internet\u27s remarkable growth over the last quarter century is the "en...
The past few years have witnessed a once-obscure issue known as “net neutrality” blow up into arguab...
In 2005, the FCC changed the competitive landscape of the high-speed Internet access industry by cla...
Why should you worry about Net Neutrality? It’s a complicated concept, even more complex in reality....
In an effort to save our culture, strike a blow for reading, and, above all, correct the well-intent...
The debate over regulation of the Internet may be one of the most important of our day. Companies th...
During a labour dispute in 2005, the Internet Service Provider (ISP) Telus blocked its subscribers f...
Net neutrality is currently one of the most topical government policies up for debate. In the follow...
The Emmanuel d\u27Alzon Library Newsletter provides important updates about library collections, pol...
Net neutrality is a critical component of equitable access to information and freedom of expression....
As the topic of net neutrality becomes increasingly polarized, the question becomes: Who should deci...
The principle of net neutrality implies that internet service providers must treat all information ...
You expect that any material in public libraries is available to you. There may be a few exceptions,...
An important reason for the Internet's remarkable growth over the last quarter century is the "end-t...
The debate about network neutrality—the idea that packets of information traversing the pipes that c...
An important reason for the Internet\u27s remarkable growth over the last quarter century is the "en...
The past few years have witnessed a once-obscure issue known as “net neutrality” blow up into arguab...
In 2005, the FCC changed the competitive landscape of the high-speed Internet access industry by cla...
Why should you worry about Net Neutrality? It’s a complicated concept, even more complex in reality....
In an effort to save our culture, strike a blow for reading, and, above all, correct the well-intent...
The debate over regulation of the Internet may be one of the most important of our day. Companies th...
During a labour dispute in 2005, the Internet Service Provider (ISP) Telus blocked its subscribers f...