That information will now be standardized across providers and displayed ... on the market today. The transparency the labels provide could help Americans save money, FCC and White House officials ...
A glossary on the FCC’s website is available to help consumers better understand the information displayed on the label. If a provider does not display their labels or posts inaccurate ...
Bloosurf was the first to complain directly to the FCC to get its license frozen. After this initiative by Bloosurf two other service providers, Redzone and NextWave, have also started complaining ...
If a provider does not display their labels or posts inaccurate information about its fees or service plans, consumers can file a complaint with the FCC Consumer Complaint Center. WHEN DO THESE RULES ...
On November 10th, [Theodore Rappaport] sent the FCC an ex parte filing regarding a proposed rule change that would remove the limit on baud rate of high frequency (HF) digital transmissions.
That declaration hasn’t stopped FCC officials and pro-regulation advocates in the years since. The agency’s areas of regulation — telegraph, telephone, broadcast-TV, and cable-TV providers ...
Like all government regulations, the law of unintended consequences rears its ugly head, and the proposed rules effectively ban Open Source router firmware. The rules require all relevant devices ...
This article is the latest in the Health Affairs Forefront series, Provider ... to compare prices across different plans and providers. Federal hospital price transparency regulations, which ...
NEW YORK (AP) — Internet service providers will be required to be more transparent about the cost and performance of their internet service packages, thanks to new FCC rules that take ... consumers ...