Then on Wednesday, a post appeared on the Post's Wonkblog comparing the Amazon / Hachette fight to
the debate over net neutrality: «Wanting to give consumers access to its products through the biggest single pipeline available, Hachette may relent on the price at which it sells books to Amazon, squeezing its slim profit margins even further.»
The debate over net neutrality — equal access to the internet — is back on the front burner.
Carriers have long supported greater leeway to manage their networks as part of the U.S. government's fierce
debate over net neutrality.
The Federal Communications Commission has done what no one, including apparently chairman Tom Wheeler, once thought possible when
the debate over net neutrality erupted early last year.
The debate over Net neutrality continues to rage.
By the end of February, when Federal Communications Commission chairman Tom Wheeler delivers his final set of rules on net neutrality, Wheeler would expand the agency's reach over the internet and broadband providers through a series of «bright line rules» that would take
the debate over net neutrality to yet another level.
As if
the debate over net neutrality rules couldn't get any more polluted, reports are surfacing that the Federal Communications Commission is being flooded with fake comments.
Not exact matches
Wheeler's «split the baby» approach to the contentious
net neutrality
debate, reported on
over the weekend by the Wall Street Journal and the New York Times, would effectively reclassify Internet service providers as public utilities akin to the phone companies under Title II of the Telecommunications Act, but only in dealing with large content providers such as Netflix and Google's Youtube.
No matter where one stands on the
debate over safety -
net programs like welfare and food stamps, or massive federal undertakings like Obamacare, everyone agrees that those need taxation to fund them.
At last week's
debate, he threatened to war with Ottawa
over the equalization formula, in a way that would have no
net effect on the amount Alberta receives (zero) but limit the transfers to seven «have - not» provinces.
As well as communication issues inside the John Smith's Stadium after Mata
netted from an acute angle, the decision to chalk off the goal by VAR Neil Swarbrick raises serious
debate over the definition of a «clear and obvious error.»
Instead of developing policies aimed at making immigration work for the country as a whole, however, the response of the Westminster political class
over recent years has been to
debate caps on immigration and give credence to the philosophical position that immigrants are a drain on society instead of
net contributors.
Acquisitions of
net art by the Tate Modern, the Guggenheim, and other institutions have given institutional validation to the genre, but complicated curatorial
debates rage
over what exactly it includes: Can it be shown on a computer in a gallery?
And thirty years later, there is vigorous
debate over the magnitude of both natural and anthropogenic factors, and how opposite effects of the latter (SO2 cooling versus CO2 warming)
net out.
This, along with wildly exaggerated climate damage scenarios, is needed to justify aggressive short - term interventions such as the Al Gore or Stern proposals.14 Since calculated
net benefit results for a two - hundred - year horizon are extremely sensitive to the choice of a discount rate, the
debate over the discount rate is far more than technical.
DESCRIPTION: A simple insight — the policy
debates in Canada
over the last two years around
net neutrality, Canadian content online, copyright reform, the digital TV transition, the future of local TV and anti-spam legislation are all reflections of a single technological and business transformation: the convergence of everything to the open internet.
The trust's value to investors has been subject to
debate, as its shares have traded at a significant premium
over the
net asset value (NAV) of the underlying asset.
Thus, quantification of the
net value of brokerage services other than MLS listings bears directly on the recent policy
debate over the desirability unbundling of MLS listings.