 Your new post is loading...
 Your new post is loading...
Last month, Ofcom, the United Kingdom’s telecom regulator, granted Amazon’s Kuiper Systems a license to provide low-Earth-orbit-based (LEO) broadband Internet in the country. The move places Kuiper systems in a rival position with the industry leader, and SpaceX subsidiary, Starlink Services. And while more specialized LEO broadband Internet interests are also emerging—in the public and private sectors—Ofcom’s decision signifies an important shift in consumer LEO Internet providers. The game is shifting, in other words, from a single-player to a multiplayer one. Which is not to say, however, that the game today is evenly matched. As one analyst from Copenhagen-based Strand Consult recently put it in the industry publication Broadband Breakfast, Kuiper now is just “a burger bar, while [Starlink Services] runs an interstellar McDonald’s.” In fact, “burger bar” is being charitable
A Trump takeover of Greenland could open the door to tech moguls’ mineral interests and their utopian aspirations. resident Donald Trump started his second term with his sights set on Greenland. When Trump first proposed buying the Arctic nation during his first administration, it was treated like a joke. But in a phone call last week with Denmark’s prime minister, who controls the autonomous territory’s foreign policy, the president doubled down on his efforts to seize power. In the “aggressive and confrontational” conversation, Trump threatened tariffs if he didn’t get his way. In a news conference earlier this month, he also refused to rule out the use of military force. Now, Denmark is taking him seriously: On Monday, they announced a $2 billion military expansion in the Arctic. Though the island is not for sale, the president emphasized Greenland’s importance to U.S. national security. Left unspoken: A U.S. takeover could weaken the country’s mining laws and ban on private property, aiding Trump donors’ plans to profit from the island’s mineral deposits and build a libertarian techno-city. Trump, who has summarized his own natural resources policy as “drill, baby, drill,” would likely approach the island’s natural resources quite differently from Greenland’s current government, which has opposed large extractive projects.
A leading artificial intelligence expert has rolled back his timeline for AI doom, saying it will take longer than he initially predicted for AI systems to be able to code autonomously and thus speed their own development toward superintelligence. Daniel Kokotajlo, a former employee of OpenAI, sparked an energetic debate in April by releasing AI 2027, a scenario that envisions unchecked AI development leading to the creation of a superintelligence, which – after outfoxing world leaders – destroys humanity. The scenario rapidly won admirers and detractors. The US vice-president, JD Vance, appeared to reference AI 2027 in an interview last May when discussing the US’s artificial intelligence arms race with China. Gary Marcus, an emeritus professor of neuroscience at New York University, called the piece a “work of fiction” and various of its conclusions “pure science fiction mumbo jumbo”.
A former X exec who worked on Elon Musk’s embattled Grok chatbot got a “highly unusual” carveout to keep his company shares while working as the U.S. Patent Office’s “chief AI officer.”
Willmar City Council had planned to announce the broadband plans at Monday's council meeting. Instead, West Central Tribune reports... Consideration for awarding the bid for the Willmar Connect initiative was expected to be on the Willmar City Council agenda on Monday, Jan. 5, but that agenda item was again delayed. When asked why, City Operations Director Kyle Box explained…
As we kick off 2026, NDIA is proud to announce the release of our latest Impact Report, highlighting two years of progress from June 2023 through June 2025. This period brought major shifts in funding, policy, and the broader digital inclusion landscape. Even amid uncertainty and change, NDIA and our national network of community-based organizations, advocates, and practitioners continued advancing digital equity. The Impact Report reflects how the field adapted, stayed resilient, and remained focused on ensuring all people have the access, skills, and support needed to fully participate in our digital world.
In the first episode of the new year, Chris is joined once again by Blair Levin to unpack what 2025 delivered and what 2026 may hold for broadband, media, and technology policy. The two revisit last year’s predictions on tariffs, deportations, BEAD implementation delays, and federal broadband investment, assessing where expectations aligned with reality — and where they didn’t. The discussion closes with reflections on what it will take to rebuild trust, competition, and accountability in an era where policy, power, and technology are more intertwined than ever.
The New Mexico Office of Broadband Access and Expansion (OBAE) has released a comprehensive and detailed Three-Year Statewide Broadband Plan that unveils the agency’s ambitious goals, strategic priorities and initiatives planned for 2026-2028. The plan is the result of feedback from the members of the Connect New Mexico Council and stakeholders around the state. At present, 90 percent of New Mexico has high-speed internet, and the Three-Year Plan will serve as the roadmap to getting the state 100 percent connected.
Washington, D.C. — Good Jobs First alerted Virginia taxpayers that the Commonwealth now officially reports that it lost $1.6 billion in sales and use tax revenues in FY 2025 to data centers. That is an increase of 118% from the previous year’s disclosure. The revelation, in the state’s Annual Comprehensive Financial Report (ACFR), is pasted at the end of this press release. It was disclosed pursuant to Governmental Accounting Standards Board (GASB) Statement No. 77 on Tax Abatement Disclosures, the landmark sunshine reform for which Good Jobs First led a national comment campaign in 2014-2015. “Like 35 other states, Virginia is losing control of its spending by enacting virtually automatic sales and use tax exemptions, and sometimes other subsidies, for data center building materials and equipment,” said Good Jobs First Executive Director Greg LeRoy. “That’s not to mention local property tax abatements.”
In a historic and somber development, the Corporation for Public Broadcasting (CPB) has announced that its Board of Directors has voted to formally dissolve the organization after more than five decades of service. The decision marks the closure of the private, nonprofit entity established by Congress in 1967 to oversee and distribute federal funding for […]
Sexualized deepfakes have led to some of the most trenchant criticism of generative AI after affecting everyone from Taylor Swift to high school students. Grok, the AI chatbot and image generator launched by Elon Musk, has effectively turned this disturbing phenomenon into a meme over the past week. Trollish provocateurs kicked off the trend after a December update made it easier to use Grok to remove clothing from images. Users have directed the chatbot to digitally undress people in innumerable images, which Grok then posts to X. Those affected have primarily been women, and there have also been cases of sexualized AI images of children being distributed on the platform. Governments around the world are scrutinizing X, from France to Malaysia to India. But should it be X that’s on the hook, or its users?
It’s the time of the year for New Year’s resolutions, and I asked some of my ISP clients if they are carrying unfinished tasks into the new year. Some of my clients laughed and told me that some of these tasks have been on their list for years. Some of the wish list ‘resolutions’ I…
|
Congress is moving to avoid another lapse in funding, but a freeze in welfare support to blue states shows what’s missing in the debate.
From flying to online shopping to using social media, everything seems to be getting worse. It’s all — pardon our language here — shittier. According to today’s Lever Time guest, that’s no accident. Cory Doctorow is the author of Enshittification: Why Everything Suddenly Got Worse and What to Do About It. In this episode, Doctorow explains how enshittification works, how it’s infected our online spaces, and what we can do to stop it.
The demise of the coal industry left much of Appalachia in economic tatters, with lost jobs, spoiled water, and depopulated communities across the coalfields of Kentucky, West Virginia, and Virginia. Now, in an ironic twist of the region’s energy history, tech companies and data center developers are eyeing these same rural landscapes with ambitious plans to power the artificial intelligence revolution. From the hollows of Tucker County, West Virginia, to the former strip mines of Wise County, Virginia, proposals for massive data center complexes are sparking both hope and fierce resistance.
At the start of a new year, I thought it would be interesting to take a fresh look at the state of the Internet around the world. The following statistics come from the DataReportal Digital 2026 Global Overview Report. Population. There are 8.25 billion people on the planet, up 69 million over the last year,…
- Marvell inked a $540M deal to buy XConn shortly after acquiring optical interconnect startup Celestial AI
- The company “absolutely” sees optical as a high-growth opportunity, said analyst Jack Gold
- XConn tech could help Marvell scale AI memory bandwidth
Semiconductor company Marvell is sharpening its data center networking arsenal with a deal to buy XConn Technologies for $540 million. XConn, which manufactures compute express link (CXL) and Peripheral Component Interconnect Express (PCIe) switching silicon will allow Marvell to expand its switching portfolio and add “highly experienced engineering talent with deep domain expertise in high-performance switching,” the company said in a press release.
- Fiber rollouts will keep moving, but BEAD revenue won’t come quickly for access vendors
- Operators will focus on experience more than subscriber count and speeds, said Calix
- Cable gear spend will likely pick up after a 2025 slump
2026 is poised to be a busy year for broadband access vendors, but not necessarily due to the Broadband Equity, Access and Deployment (BEAD) program. Although NTIA is finally allowing states to put their BEAD plans in motion, it’ll take a while longer before equipment vendors profit from those projects, said Dell’Oro Group VP Jeff Heynen.
GoNetspeed is bringing state-of-the-art fiber internet connectivity to Newport. Construction is underway on a 100% fiber network that will deliver ultrafast internet to more than 8,200 homes and businesses.
HARRISBURG — It’s been a year of sweeping and controversial changes for a huge federal broadband initiative. The $42.45 billion program was created in 2021 with bipartisan support and an ambitious goal: bring high-speed internet access to every home and business in the U.S., no matter how remote. Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick, whose agency oversees the program, said in January that under the Biden administration the program had become bogged down in red tape and “woke mandates.” He promised changes, pending a “rigorous review.”
The N.C. Department of Information Technology’s (NCDIT) Division of Broadband and Digital Opportunity today announced the launch of the $86 million Stop-Gap Solutions program to accelerate the expansion of high-speed internet infrastructure to eligible unserved and underserved rural households, businesses, community anchor institutions and state facilities in each county.
There is still some glimmer of hope that states will see some of the BEAD non-deployment funds. I call it a glimmer of hope because the issue is far from settled. In a December 21 online post, Commerce Secretary Howard Lutnick was still taking credit for having saved taxpayers about $21 billion through changes in…
The Corporation for Public Broadcasting — which helped fund NPR, PBS and many local radio and TV stations — is officially shutting down, months after Congress passed spending cuts that stripped the organization of more than $1 billion in funding.
SpaceX's Starlink is offering free broadband internet service to the people of Venezuela through Feb. 3, amid the fallout of a U.S. military operation in the country. The satellite internet provider said in a release on Sunday that service credits were being added to both active and inactive accounts as it monitored evolving conditions.
|