The alleged cyberattack that briefly overwhelmed the FCC's Electronic Comment Filing System in early May 2017 was actually a deluge of public comments.
With conservative local-TV behemoth Sinclair Broadcast Group’s unprecedented expansion plan now in sudden peril, advocates are warning that the fight for local news is far from over.
Lawmakers have responded to a crisis in local news coverage by dedicating public money to fund journalism in what is believed to be the first effort of its kind.
A federal court rejected a lawsuit against the FCC seeking to overturn the agency’s decision to effectively raise the limit on the number of local television stations a company can own.
The appeals court said that the plaintiffs in the case, including the public-interest group Free Press, lacked standing, but said that it did not consider the merits of the case.
Large ISPs are trying to control the internet, restrict the free flow of information and restore their historical role of for-profit arbiter of what we can and cannot read, watch or hear.
The questionable maneuvers that triggered the FCC’s slow-down of the Sinclair-Tribune deal represent only a fraction of the regulatory tricks Sinclair uses.
Sinclair Broadcast Group tried to placate federal regulators but the FCC still voted unanimously to have a judge review the company's deal to buy Tribune Media.