In trying to promote the development of an open Internet, the U.S. Federal Communications Commission (FCC) has primarily tried to encourage network providers to be transparent about their traffic management practices and quality of service prioritization policies. Dominant network operators have successfully challenged this minimalist approach to addressing end-user concerns about the rise of a two-tiered Internet, motivating the FCC to engage in yet another public consultation process to assess its future approach to the problem. This article maps the debate using Natural Language Processing (NLP) tools that allow us to build a systematic picture of the positions of the regulator and groups of private interests trying to shape its decision...
The past few years have witnessed a once-obscure issue known as “net neutrality” blow up into arguab...
The FCC’s new Open Internet rules seek to limit interference by broadband service providers in marke...
This paper traces the history of net neutrality and the judicial reviews of the Federal Communicatio...
Article published in the Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property
During the last decade, broadband deployment, speed and utility have increased, allowing the public ...
The Federal Communications Commission’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, “Preserving the Open Internet...
Communications regulators over the next decade will spend increasing time on conflicts between the p...
This Article challenges the various jurisdictional theories that underpin the FCC’s net neutrality r...
The Net Neutrality debate in the United States has ramifications for all countries interested in how...
A decade of broadband access deregulation has landed the FCC at a legal deadend. After the D.C. Circ...
This article examines the current state of net neutrality regulation in the United States. Debates s...
The FCC has issued a new set of Internet access regulations and policies (namely Preserving the Open...
The Internet is central to the business and pastimes of Americans. Calls for increased regulation ar...
Network neutrality has dominated broadband policy debates for the past decade. While important, netw...
For over a decade, net neutrality has dominated telecommunications policy. Advocates targeted broadb...
The past few years have witnessed a once-obscure issue known as “net neutrality” blow up into arguab...
The FCC’s new Open Internet rules seek to limit interference by broadband service providers in marke...
This paper traces the history of net neutrality and the judicial reviews of the Federal Communicatio...
Article published in the Northwestern Journal of Technology and Intellectual Property
During the last decade, broadband deployment, speed and utility have increased, allowing the public ...
The Federal Communications Commission’s Notice of Proposed Rulemaking, “Preserving the Open Internet...
Communications regulators over the next decade will spend increasing time on conflicts between the p...
This Article challenges the various jurisdictional theories that underpin the FCC’s net neutrality r...
The Net Neutrality debate in the United States has ramifications for all countries interested in how...
A decade of broadband access deregulation has landed the FCC at a legal deadend. After the D.C. Circ...
This article examines the current state of net neutrality regulation in the United States. Debates s...
The FCC has issued a new set of Internet access regulations and policies (namely Preserving the Open...
The Internet is central to the business and pastimes of Americans. Calls for increased regulation ar...
Network neutrality has dominated broadband policy debates for the past decade. While important, netw...
For over a decade, net neutrality has dominated telecommunications policy. Advocates targeted broadb...
The past few years have witnessed a once-obscure issue known as “net neutrality” blow up into arguab...
The FCC’s new Open Internet rules seek to limit interference by broadband service providers in marke...
This paper traces the history of net neutrality and the judicial reviews of the Federal Communicatio...