Network neutrality now rests in the hands of the FCC. I’m worried

In discarding out a huge chunk of the network neutrality rules that the Federal Communications Commission put into place in 2010, the U.S. Court of Appeals in Washington has thrown the way the Internet works into turmoil: Instead of treating all traffic flowing over their broadband pipes equally, internet service providers can now start making deals that could prioritize some content over other traffic. And based on the options facing the FCC and the FCC Chairman Tom Wheeler’s previous statements, I think there is a credible threat that a double-sided market for bandwidth will emerge.

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Want to know if your ISP is capping data? Check GigaOm’s updated chart

An updated look at how Internet service providers (ISPs) around the US are trying to implement broadband data caps.

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AT&T and Google’s plans to give Austin a gigabit is an experiment. Is it a good one?

AT&T executives will meet with Austin and Texas officials seeking the same concessions that Google is getting in order to build out its gigabit network. As someone who has followed telecom in Austin, and in Texas, this mostly means the ability to cherry pick where it will deploy its gigabit network. And that points to both the upside and downside of Google’s influence.

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