Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream
148.6K views | +22 today
 
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
onto Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream
April 12, 12:29 AM
Scoop.it!

How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors | by Gia Chaudry | WIRED.com

How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors | by Gia Chaudry | WIRED.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

From AI-generated images to restricted satellite data, the systems used to verify what’s real online are struggling to keep up.

 

Lego-style propaganda videos alleging war crimes are flooding online feeds, echoing the White House’s own turn toward cryptic teaser clips and meme-native visuals. This is not just content drift. It is a new front in the information war, one where speed, ambiguity, and algorithmic reach matter as much as accuracy.

 

One Iran-linked outlet, Explosive News, can reportedly turn around a two-minute synthetic Lego segment in about 24 hours. The speed is the point. Synthetic media does not need to hold up forever; it only needs to travel before verification catches up.

 

Last month, the White House added to that confusion when it posted two vague “launching soon” videos, then removed them after online investigators and open source researchers began dissecting them.

No comment yet.
Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream
Everything about Broadband Policy, Network Infrastructure, Voice, Video and Data Services, Devices and Applications for Managing our Planet
Your new post is loading...
Your new post is loading...
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 7:11 PM
Scoop.it!

Wire 3 connects first homes and businesses in Leesburg, Florida | by Telecompetitor Staff | Telecompetitor.com

Wire 3 connects first homes and businesses in Leesburg, Florida | by Telecompetitor Staff | Telecompetitor.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Soon, Clermont, Eustis, Minneola, Mount Dora, and Tavares, FL will join Leesburg neighbors in connecting to Wire 3’s symmetrical speeds of up to 10 Gigs.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 5:59 AM
Scoop.it!

Whoops, The Tech Press Mythologized Another Unethical Asshole | by Karl Bode | The Fine Print | KarlBode.com

Whoops, The Tech Press Mythologized Another Unethical Asshole | by Karl Bode | The Fine Print | KarlBode.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Lazy access journalism is pathologically obsessed with helping unremarkable, unethical weirdos cultivate elaborate supergenius engineer mythologies while covertly undermining the public interest.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 5:52 AM
Scoop.it!

Brightspeed surpasses 3 million fiber locations passed | by Linda Hardesty | Fierce-Network.com

  • Brightspeed claims it's now the 3rd largest fiber builder in the U.S.
  • The company aims to pass four millions homes with fiber by year end
  • New Street Research speculates that Brightspeed might make a good acquisition target for Verizon

 

Brightspeed — a broadband company that was created in 2022 from assets it acquired from Lumen Technologies — today claims it’s the nation’s third-largest fiber builder, and it has now surpassed three million fiber-enabled locations.

 

The top two fiber deployers in terms of current build rates in the U.S. are AT&T and Verizon.

 

For Brightspeed, 2026 will mark the company’s second consecutive year of building more than one million fiber passings, putting it on track to reach four million homes by the end of this year. Ultimately it aims to pass more than five million homes and businesses across its 20-state footprint.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 5:47 AM
Scoop.it!

Master Plan Premium from The Lever | Episode 4: The Meese Doctrine | The Kingmakers | by David Sirota | http://LeverNews.com

Master Plan Premium from The Lever | Episode 4: The Meese Doctrine | The Kingmakers | by David Sirota | http://LeverNews.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Rather than retreat from Iran-Contra and other scandals, conservative operatives inside the White House — led by Attorney General Edwin Meese — went on the offensive.

 

Drawing on newly uncovered documents and exclusive interviews, we trace how Meese helped turn a fringe idea into doctrine: that all executive power belongs to the president alone.

 

This is the origin story of the unitary executive theory.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 9:33 PM
Scoop.it!

'Epitome of Crony Capitalism': Hollywood Stars Come Out Swinging at Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger | by Brad Reed | CommonDreams.org

'Epitome of Crony Capitalism': Hollywood Stars Come Out Swinging at Paramount-Warner Bros. Merger | by Brad Reed | CommonDreams.org | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

A group of Hollywood actors, directors, and producers on Monday published an open letter demanding the proposed merger between Paramount and Warner Bros. Discovery be blocked.

 

In their letter, the Hollywood heavyweights outlined the harms that would come from allowing Paramount—which is owned by David Ellison, son of billionaire Trump donor Larry Ellison—to acquire Warner Bros. Discovery.

 

“This transaction would further consolidate an already concentrated media landscape, reducing competition at a moment when our industries—and the audiences we serve—can least afford it,” the letter states.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 7:40 PM
Scoop.it!

The FCC’s Ability to Levy Fines | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs

The FCC’s Ability to Levy Fines | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Today’s blog takes a deeper dive into the upcoming case at the Supreme Court concerning appeals by AT&T and Verizon over fines levied by the FCC. The original appeals followed an FCC finding that all three major U.S. cellular carriers were liable for violating customer privacy by selling access to customer location data.

 

This data showed every place that a customer visited during the day, something that should make every cell customer uncomfortable. The FCC fined AT&T $50 million, T-Mobile  $80 million, and Verizon $47 million, with smaller fines against a few other carriers. The case at the Supreme Court looks specifically at the FCC’s ability to levy fines against the carriers for violating consumer privacy rights.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 5:28 AM
Scoop.it!

Podcast: What to Do If the AI Bubble Bursts | Interview by Justin Hendrix | TechPolicy.Press

Podcast: What to Do If the AI Bubble Bursts | Interview by Justin Hendrix | TechPolicy.Press | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

A conversation with Asad Ramzanali, Director of AI and Technology Policy at the Vanderbilt Policy Accelerator for Political Economy and Regulation.

 

If you read, watch, or listen to financial news, you’ll find there is a boom in discussion over whether the AI boom is a bubble, and what the consequences might be if it bursts. Today’s guest says that if such a crash occurs, it will represent a significant policy opportunity—a potential point of intervention that could lead to meaningful reform of the tech sector.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 4:37 AM
Scoop.it!

Meta must face Massachusetts lawsuit over youth social media addiction, court rules | by Reuters | Meta | TheGuardian.com

Meta must face Massachusetts lawsuit over youth social media addiction, court rules | by Reuters | Meta | TheGuardian.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Meta Platforms must face a lawsuit by the Massachusetts attorney general alleging that as the parent company of Facebook and Instagram, it deliberately designed social media features to addict young users, the state’s top court ruled on Friday.

 

The ruling by the Massachusetts supreme judicial court marked the first time a state high court has considered whether a federal law that generally shields internet companies from lawsuits over content posted by their users would also bar claims that companies like Meta knowingly addicted young users.

 

Writing for the unanimous court, Justice Dalila Argaez Wendlandt said the lawsuit brought by the attorney general, Andrea Campbell, does not seek to hold Meta liable for content created by its users, which section 230 of the Communications Decency Act of 1996 generally shields companies from, but targets the company’s conduct.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 4:12 AM
Scoop.it!

UK regulators rushing to assess risks of latest Anthropic AI model: report | by Reuters | New York Post | NYPost.com

UK regulators rushing to assess risks of latest Anthropic AI model: report | by Reuters | New York Post | NYPost.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

British financial regulators are holding urgent talks with the government's cyber security agency and major banks to assess risks posed by the latest artificial intelligence model from Anthropic, the Financial Times reported on Sunday.

 

Bank of England, Financial Conduct Authority and Treasury officials are in talks with the National Cyber Security Centre to examine potential vulnerabilities in critical IT systems highlighted by Anthropic’s latest AI model, the FT said, citing two people briefed on the talks.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 1:25 AM
Scoop.it!

BEAD Data Creates Opportunities for Non-Awardees | by Mira Bhakta | BroadbandBreakfast.com

BEAD Data Creates Opportunities for Non-Awardees | by Mira Bhakta | BroadbandBreakfast.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

WASHINGTON, April 8, 2026 – Winning a grant from the $42.5 billion Broadband Equity, Access, and Deployment program may not be the only path to gaining a competitive edge as the market undergoes major expansions.

 

At a webinar hosted Tuesday by the Fiber Broadband Association, industry experts said the BEAD program is creating opportunities not just for awardees, but also for providers that did not receive funding.

 

“For the non-awardees,” said Jeremiah Sloan, head of product marketing at Vetro, “they essentially have their competitors’ roadmap laid out before them. That’s intelligence and data that they can leverage for better strategic positioning.”

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 12, 5:19 AM
Scoop.it!

Ex-FCC Chief Ajit Pai: Wireless Competition Is Driving Prices Down | by Sergio Romero | BroabandBreakfast.com

Ex-FCC Chief Ajit Pai: Wireless Competition Is Driving Prices Down | by Sergio Romero | BroabandBreakfast.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

WASHINGTON, April 10, 2026 – Former Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai said competition in the wireless industry is helping lower prices for consumers while improving service, arguing the model could guide broader broadband and economic policy.

 

“America’s innovative wireless providers aren’t just stabilizing prices; they’re driving them lower while delivering competitive choice, more data, and better services,” Pai said in the opinion piece on April 8.

 

Writing in the Washington Examiner, Pai pointed to declining wireless costs alongside rising performance.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 12, 2:35 AM
Scoop.it!

The UTOPIA Model — Open Access and Community Broadband – Episode 3 of Unbuffered | interview by Chris Mitchell with guest Roger Timmerman, Executive Director of UTOPIA Fiber | ILSR.org

A deep dive into one of the most successful municipal fiber networks in the country—and what other communities can learn from it.

 

In this episode of Unbuffered, Chris is joined by Roger Timmerman, Executive Director of UTOPIA Fiber, for a deep dive into what it takes to build fast, reliable, and community-focused broadband networks.

 

They begin with a closer look at a recent Ookla report and what it reveals about network performance, unpacking why latency matters more than most people realize and how UTOPIA’s open access, active ethernet model delivers a different kind of Internet experience.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 11, 7:22 PM
Scoop.it!

FCC to loosen satellite power limits, potentially reducing broadband price | by Sulagna Saha | RCRWireless.com

FCC to loosen satellite power limits, potentially reducing broadband price | by Sulagna Saha | RCRWireless.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

“We could see billions of dollars in benefits for the American economy,” says FCC chairman, Brendan Carr.

 

In sum — what to know:

 

Policy change: The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is set to discard the power limits on satellite spectrum use.

 

EPFD limits: The current Equivalent Power Flux Density (EPFD) framework which was established in the 1990s is “an enormous regulatory constraint,” that limits operators’ ability to deliver faster speeds.

 

New regime: The commission proposes looser power limits that could potentially produce $2 billion from increased usage and lower broadband costs for customers.

 

The Federal Communications Commission (FCC) is preparing to rewrite a key piece of satellite policy, in a move that could clear a major bottleneck constraining growth of low Earth orbit (LEO) satellite services.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 2:02 PM
Scoop.it!

Leftover Copper Customers | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs

Leftover Copper Customers | by Doug Dawson | POTs & PANs | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

I read that T-Mobile was thinking about buying the fiber assets of UNITI, which includes the fiber assets of Windstream. Regardless of whether that sale happens or not, it made me wonder about what happens to the customers served by copper who don’t go with a sale. Copper customers would be those served with telephone copper who are buying traditional TDM telephone service, DSL, and T1s and related products.

 

The concept of buying only fiber customers from an ISP seems to be a new industry theme. Lumen sold its fiber customers to AT&T but retained the copper customers. We know Lumen’s stated plans when it sold fiber customers to AT&T. The company publicly said it would retain and care for its copper-based consumer services since they continue to provide a strong ongoing financial contribution to the company.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 5:55 AM
Scoop.it!

T-Mobile might buy Uniti Group's Kinetic fiber assets | by Linda Hardesty | Fierce-Network.com

  • T-Mobile may be working with a private equity firm to buy fiber assets from Uniti Group
  • Analysts at TD Cowen said Uniti is currently enjoying demand for FTTH as well as AI fiber support
  • Major consolidation is expected in the U.S. fiber industry this year

 

T-Mobile and the private equity firm TPG are among companies rumored to potentially buy all, or parts, of Uniti Group, according to the research group TMT Finance. The speculation caused Uniti’s stock to rise from about $8 per share on Monday to more than $10 today.

 

T-Mobile is interested in Uniti's Kinetic fiber-to-the-home (FTTH) business, while TPG is eyeing Uniti’s enterprise fiber business, according to the TMT Finance report published on Tuesday. One TMT unidentified source told the publication that T-Mobile and TPG could be partnering for an offer for the entire company.

 

It wouldn’t be unusual for T-Mobile to partner with a private equity firm to purchase a fiber provider. That’s what T-Mobile has done to purchase both Lumos and Metronet.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 5:49 AM
Scoop.it!

New House of Representatives bills hope to improve broadband access | by Phil Britt | Telecompetitor.com

New House of Representatives bills hope to improve broadband access | by Phil Britt | Telecompetitor.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

The four bipartisan bills are designed to expand broadband while lowering the cost for broadband access for people in rural America.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
Today, 3:48 AM
Scoop.it!

An Open Letter to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr | by Robert Corn-Revere | Checks & Balances | Substack.com

An Open Letter to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr | by Robert Corn-Revere | Checks & Balances | Substack.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

The following is an open letter to FCC Chairman Brendan Carr, by Robert Corn-Revere, who served as Chief Counsel to former FCC Chairman James H. Quello. He is currently Chief Counsel for the Foundation for Individual Rights and Expression. Checks & Balances is a newsletter of the Society for the Rule of Law Institute.

 

Dear Chairman Carr,

 

Pam Bondi’s sudden and ignominious end as Attorney General is an important cautionary lesson about what happens to officials in this administration who over-promise in order to curry favor with the man they see as their boss, but who under-perform because of the limits of their authority.

 

Bondi promised the President she would prosecute his political enemies and failed miserably. The President rewarded her misplaced loyalty by denying her the graceful exit she sought, and instead fired her during a cross-town limo ride to watch a Supreme Court argument.

 

You have recently threatened to revoke the licenses of broadcasters who air what you call “fake news,” which apparently includes any skeptical reporting about the war in Iran—something you know you cannot do legally.

 

My advice? Don’t get into a car with the president anytime soon.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 7:53 PM
Scoop.it!

The Google Search Remedies Are Already Failing: How Weak Antitrust Relief Handed Google an AI Advantage | by Lydia Giannini | PublicKnowledge.org

The Google Search Remedies Are Already Failing: How Weak Antitrust Relief Handed Google an AI Advantage | by Lydia Giannini | PublicKnowledge.org | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Apple and Google recently announced a multiyear, $20 billion partnership to integrate Google’s Gemini technology into Apple's own AI features.

 

On January 12, 2026, Apple and Google announced a multi-year partnership between the companies, in which Apple will use Google’s Gemini models and cloud technology to power its artificial intelligence features, including an AI-powered Siri.

 

This partnership is partly due to weak remedies handed down in the U.S. v. Google case, where the Department of Justice and a bipartisan group of states proved that Google held an illegal monopoly in the online search market. Judge Amit Mehta imposed several behavioral remedies, but they don’t go far enough to restore competition or meaningfully restrict Google’s anticompetitive practices. These remedies include limits on Google’s ability to form long-term, exclusive contracts.

 

However, rather than preventing Google from entering billion-dollar default agreements, the Court’s Order simply limits these agreements to one-year terms. While this change is meant to encourage partners to reconsider their options each year, it may do little to increase real competition.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 5:32 AM
Scoop.it!

Skylo, Rakuten, Viasat, Telesat execs discuss satellite as a threat to telecom | by Linda Hardesty | Fierce-Network.com

  • Satellite operators may work peacefully with telecom providers for the time being
  • But telecom providers will have to keep an eye on their revenue share
  • There was disagreement among satellite executives as to whether physics will remain a major problem for satellite to act as a standalone mobile operator

 

panel of satellite experts discussed the excitement (and perhaps some trepidation) in the telecom world from the entrance of direct-to-device (D2D) satellite connectivity.

 

During a recent virtual event, Fierce asked the question on everyone’s mind in telecom: Will D2D be complementary to telecom, or will it pose a competitive threat?

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 5:21 AM
Scoop.it!

IBM pays $17 million to settle US federal probe over DEI practices | by Tech Observer Desk | TechObserver.in

IBM pays $17 million to settle US federal probe over DEI practices | by Tech Observer Desk | TechObserver.in | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

IBM agrees to pay $17 million to resolve US Department of Justice probe over diversity hiring practices, the first settlement under Trump's anti-DEI initiative.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 4:30 AM
Scoop.it!

How the AI boom derailed clean‑air efforts in one of America's most polluted cities | by By Valerie Volcovici and Tim McLaughlin (Reuters) | GroundNews.com

How the AI boom derailed clean‑air efforts in one of America's most polluted cities | by By Valerie Volcovici and Tim McLaughlin (Reuters) | GroundNews.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

Barbara Johnson has been fighting coal pollution for decades in her mostly Black neighborhood of North St. Louis as an organizer with Metropolitan Congregations United – one of many activist groups campaigning for cleaner air in a city that has some of the country’s dirtiest.

 

She sees environmental progress reversed by Trump's policies supporting data centers. The rollback of Biden's soot standards could prevent Ameren's plant from reducing emissions, threatening St. Louis's air quality amid AI-driven power demands.

 

 

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 13, 4:10 AM
Scoop.it!

U.S. Telecom Infrastructure Crisis: The magical economic thinking at the center of the 1996 Telecom Act: Why Al Gore’s Information Superhighway wasn’t built | by Fred Pilot | EldoTelecom.com

U.S. Telecom Infrastructure Crisis: The magical economic thinking at the center of the 1996 Telecom Act: Why Al Gore’s Information Superhighway wasn’t built | by Fred Pilot | EldoTelecom.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

"The Telecommunications Act of 1996 is now 30 years old, and there has been a lot of events, hearings and webinars, including a congressional hearing, an FCC series of panels, Public Knowledge, Benton Foundation, TPI, Brookings, Broadband Breakfast, and a few others, all easily findable on the web.

The Act was supposed to open the wired networks to direct competition, that would lower prices and bring in new and innovative services that would be available via a new fiber optic wire to the home and business. And it would be delivered to everyone, equally, as this Act was an update of the original Communications Act of 1934."

 

https://kushnickbruce.medium.com/telecom-act-is-30-500-billion-overcharging-the-digital-divide-and-delete3-by-fcc-chairman-carr-e50d0ab5940f

 

With these words, Bruce Kushnick, a longtime critic of U.S. telecom policy, sums up the flawed magical thinking that made the envisioned future state immediately preceding this regulatory overhaul impossible to attain. As Kushnick describes it:

 

Starting in the 1990’s, a few years before the Telecom Act, America was promised a new shiny fiber optic future. Seven holding companies had been created in 1984 and given control over the existing state telecommunications public utilities, which were based on copper wire.

And in 1992, Vice President Al Gore laid out the ‘Information Superhighway’, a fiber replacement of this existing copper wires.

 

The root cause is negligent policymaking.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 12, 5:42 AM
Scoop.it!

Rural Louisiana community center to become local broadband hub | by Brad Randall | BBCMag.com

Rural Louisiana community center to become local broadband hub | by Brad Randall | BBCMag.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

St. Joseph, Louisiana has celebrated the opening of a renovated community center that will now serve as a local broadband hub.

 

A renovated community center in a small Tensas Parish town is being positioned as a local hub for broadband-enabled services after a groundbreaking ceremony Thursday marking upgrades to the St. Joseph Community House.

 

Town leaders say the project will add high-speed workspaces and classrooms for data, language and driver’s training, along with space for GED and HiSET tutoring and extracurricular programs tied to area schools.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 12, 5:14 AM
Scoop.it!

Why Are There So Few Wireless Carriers in the United States? A New Study Says “Performative Competition” | by Hailey Reissman | Annenberg School of Communications | ASC.UPENN.edu

Why Are There So Few Wireless Carriers in the United States? A New Study Says “Performative Competition” | by Hailey Reissman | Annenberg School of Communications | ASC.UPENN.edu | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

n 2020, the Federal Communications Commission (FCC) approved the T-Mobile/Sprint merger, reducing the number of wireless carriers in the U.S. to just three. 

 

In a new paper titled “Performative competition: The U.S. wireless communication market and the T-Mobile/Sprint merger,” published in the journal International Communication Gazette, several researchers with ties to the Annenberg School for Communication at the University of Pennsylvania examine the evolving political economy of the U.S. wireless communications market through a case study of the merger, arguing that telecom executives and regulators worked to construct a perception of competition to justify the merger’s approval. 

 

The researchers, Postdoctoral Fellow Sydney Forde, Visiting Scholar Hendrik Theine, and alumni Pawel Popiel (Ph.D. ‘20) and Christopher Ali (Ph.D. ‘13), call this strategy “performative competition.” Drawing from policy documents and industry data from the Global Media & Internet Concentration Project (GMICP), they show how the FCC justified ongoing consolidation in the U.S. wireless communications market by downplaying antitrust concerns, reframing consumer harms, and emphasizing the speculative promises of new technology.

 

“The wireless industry has long been dominated by just a handful of corporations,” says Forde, postdoctoral fellow at Annenberg’s Media, Inequality, & Change Center. “AT&T and Verizon, alongside smaller competitors Sprint and T-Mobile, have made up a tight oligopoly since the early 2000s,” she says.

No comment yet.
Scooped by Chuck Sherwood, Former Senior Associate, TeleDimensions, Inc
April 12, 12:29 AM
Scoop.it!

How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors | by Gia Chaudry | WIRED.com

How the Internet Broke Everyone’s Bullshit Detectors | by Gia Chaudry | WIRED.com | Surfing the Broadband Bit Stream | Scoop.it

From AI-generated images to restricted satellite data, the systems used to verify what’s real online are struggling to keep up.

 

Lego-style propaganda videos alleging war crimes are flooding online feeds, echoing the White House’s own turn toward cryptic teaser clips and meme-native visuals. This is not just content drift. It is a new front in the information war, one where speed, ambiguity, and algorithmic reach matter as much as accuracy.

 

One Iran-linked outlet, Explosive News, can reportedly turn around a two-minute synthetic Lego segment in about 24 hours. The speed is the point. Synthetic media does not need to hold up forever; it only needs to travel before verification catches up.

 

Last month, the White House added to that confusion when it posted two vague “launching soon” videos, then removed them after online investigators and open source researchers began dissecting them.

No comment yet.