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Washington, D.C. – In a letter sent to Congress today, more than 520 organizations from 48 states called for the enactment of a full nationwide moratorium on the approval and construction of new hyperscale data centers. The letter was facilitated by the environmental advocacy group Food & Water Watch; other signers include Greenpeace, Friends of the Earth, Americans for Financial Reform, Popular Democracy, People’s Action Institute, Good Jobs First and Honor the Earth.
Add another name to Bellevue’s growing list of AI tenants. Taiwan-based eNeural Technologies is setting up its North American headquarters in the city, joining a wave of AI companies — from CoreWeave to xAI to OpenAI — that have staked out office space east of Seattle over the past year. eNeural plans to invest $3.5 million in the Seattle region over the next three years and create about 30 jobs, more than 20 of them AI engineering positions, according to Greater Seattle Partners, the regional economic development group that announced the expansion. The company said it eventually envisions its Bellevue office growing into a core edge AI research and development center with more than 500 employees over the next decade.
According to a Thursday report from CNN, Thiel told the Aspen Ideas Festival in Colorado on Tuesday that the pope was inadvertently serving as a “Chinese communist agent” when he released a 42,000-word encyclical that called for strict regulation of AI, a technology that the pontiff said heightens the “risk of dehumanization” throughout the world.
Texas, Arizona, Illinois governors restrict data center tax incentives over energy costs. Virginia debates impact fees. Analysis of state data center policy shifts. Recently, we wrote about how a few governors are beginning to institute restrictions on data centers, and in recent weeks, the trend has ramped up. In Texas, Governor Greg Abbott (R) sent a letter to state regulators directing them to take action to insulate consumers from costs associated with data centers and outlining his legislative priorities for 2027. In Arizona, lawmakers placed a pause on the state’s data center incentive at the urging of Governor Hobbs (D). And Illinois Governor Pritzker (D) paused the state’s data center credits in a move that mirrors Ohio Governor DeWine’s (R) recent actions. Not every governor is moving in the same direction though. In Virginia, Governor Spanberger has pushed back on legislative proposals to curtail the state's data center tax exemption.
Properly valuing existing assets used as in-kind match is one of the most important compliance requirements for BEAD subgrantees. Federal regulations establish clear standards for how these contributions must be calculated and documented; failure to comply with those requirements can result in rejected match contributions or otherwise jeopardize your funding request. How do you value existing assets as in-kind match? Under 2 CFR 200.306, cost sharing requires that the value of donated or contributed property reflect the remaining life of the asset as recorded in the subgrantee’s accounting records at the time of donation. When a subgrantee contributes existing assets such as previously purchased fiber, conduit, poles, or network equipment as in-kind match, the valuation must account for depreciation and the asset’s remaining useful life rather than original purchase price or full replacement cost.
New Community Technology Center expands digital access, remote work, telehealth, education, and high-speed Internet opportunities in rural Vermont. The initiative, funded on the back on a $2.9 million USDA Community Connect Grant, includes 2 gig symmetrical fiber connectivity to five different hubs: one in the town clerk’s office, one in the town garage, fire department, with the fifth hub located inside the Ryegate Library, in the town neighboring Groton.
In May, Verizon’s new CEO Dan Schulman spoke at a MoffettNathanson conference, and one thing he said stunned me. Schulman said, "We're so used to doing things the way we did them, as opposed to being massively analytical.” And then he said that Verizon will be looking at not just "like four segments," but "hundreds of thousands of segments." What in the world?!
Stakeholders are in active talks about a possible 800,000 square foot data center in Callaway County, MO. Western District Commissioner Christopher Scott told ABC 17 News that Crusoe, a Denver-based AI company, would build the 14-acre center somewhere in the north Callaway area. It would be a private land transaction, and he said it is not his information to share the exact location of the proposed site. The non-partisan group Missouri Protest Organization, Inc. held a meeting at the Callaway County Co-Op Monday night to discuss the data center. Scott said the focus of the forum was water usage.
Microsoft follows Amazon, OpenAI, and Anthropic with its new AI deployment group. On Thursday, Microsoft announced a new operating business called Microsoft Frontier Company, focused on delivering successful enterprise AI deployments with Microsoft’s existing AI tools. The project will be backed by a $2.5 billion investment from Microsoft, as well as 6,000 industry and engineering experts. In a statement announcing the venture, Microsoft’s Commercial Business CEO Judson Althoff resisted the Forward Deployed Engineer (FDE) label that is often applied to these ventures. “This goes beyond what has been labeled as Forward-Deployed Engineering,” Althoff wrote, “and will be the largest, most capable, outcome-driven engineering organization in the industry.”
Could it be used to fund an American AI Sovereign Wealth Fund? It looks like we are one step closer to U.S. government owning an equity stake in OpenAI. Financial Times is reporting that negotiations between OpenAI and the Trump Administration have floated OpenAI would donate a 5% equity stake to the U.S. government.
WASHINGTON, July 1, 2026 – Federal auditors said the National Telecommunications and Information Administration has implemented just one of 11 priority recommendations the Government Accountability Office identified last July. In a June 22 letter addressed to NTIA Administrator Arielle Roth, the GAO urged NTIA to give “high priority” to recommendations that remain unfulfilled, which include: improving how it coordinates federal spectrum use, modernizing aging IT systems, and tightening oversight of multibillion-dollar broadband funding programs.
The Supreme Court on Monday gave President Donald Trump sweeping new authority over approximately two dozen multi-member agencies that Congress intended to be independent. By a vote of 6-3, the justices struck down a federal law that bars the president from firing members of the Federal Trade Commission except in cases of “inefficiency, neglect of duty, or malfeasance in office.” That law, a majority of the justices ruled, violates the constitutional separation of powers between the three branches of government. And in reaching that decision, the court overruled its 91-year-old decision in Humphrey’s Executor v. United States, which had upheld the law at the center of the dispute. More broadly, Monday’s decision was a major victory for proponents of the “unitary executive” theory – the idea that the president should have complete control over the executive branch. Under this theory, the president should be able to fire any member of the executive branch, and laws – like the one that the court struck down – that restrict his ability to do so violate the separation of powers.
The Federal Communications Commission (FCC), as expected, has published its auction plan for the satellite ‘Upper C-band’ release of 160 MHz of spectrum to be used by terrestrial operators for 5G and 6G services. (The Upper C-band is 3.98-4.14 GHz). FCC chairman Brendan Carr announced that “the FCC will vote July 22nd to auction a large swath of prime, mid-band spectrum next summer—putting America back ahead on 5G, 6G, and next-gen connectivity.
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Rwanda's President Paul Kagame, Salesforce Chair and CEO Marc Benioff, and ITU Secretary-General Doreen Bogdan-Martin today announced the launch of the AI for Good Global Commission. The Commission brings together more than 40 Founding Members — including Heads of State and Government, industry CEOs and top executives, and Heads of UN agencies — to help define practical pathways to strengthen trust, expand access and unlock AI's potential to solve real-world challenges at the speed the technology demands. The newly formed Commission occupies a unique position in the global AI landscape. By connecting leaders who build technology, deploy it at scale, shape policy and represent communities, the Commission seeks to help forge responsible AI solutions across sectors and borders while ensuring the participation of developing countries.
Amazon Leo's satellite count exceeds 390, clearing a path for competition with SpaceX's Starlink network to begin in earnest within months. Amazon says the overnight launch of 29 satellites should clear the way for its Amazon Leo network to start offering commercial high-speed internet service from space this year, in direct competition with SpaceX’s Starlink network.
Someone asked me recently why Public Media Network even needs to exist. YouTube is free. Facebook reaches everyone. Why bother? It’s a fair question. And honestly, it’s one I don’t mind answering, because the people asking it aren’t wrong about the tools. They’re just working with an incomplete picture. We use YouTube. We use Facebook. Public Media Network posts content on both platforms regularly, because that’s where people are, and reaching people matters. If you’ve ever learned about a city commission meeting or a community talk show through our Facebook page, or watched a program on our YouTube channel, those platforms did exactly what they’re supposed to do. I’m not here to tell you they don’t work. But here’s what I’ve come to understand after years of working in community media: the question was never really about reach. It’s about who owns the infrastructure.
Firms today are pushing employees to use as much AI as possible to squeeze out the technology’s productivity gains. But that pressure is leading to cracks, and those cracks may be irreparable. Companies are racing to incentivize employees to use AI. But as some companies are finding, the more employees that use the technology, the heavier the bill. Microsoft has reportedly begun canceling most of its direct Claude Code licenses, according to The Verge, instead moving engineers toward using GitHub Copilot CLI. That comes just six months after the firm first opened up access to Claude Code, encouraging thousands of its developers, project managers, designers, and other employees to experiment with coding. The tech became popular fast. Perhaps too popular.
Public Knowledge promotes freedom of expression, an open internet, and access to affordable communications tools and creative works. We work to shape policy. Friends of Public Knowledge: It’s time to pause to celebrate, reflect, and envision the future of technology as Public Knowledge turns 25 years old this fall! For a quarter century, Public Knowledge has served as one of the leading digital rights defenders in Washington D.C., working at the intersection of communications, media, and internet law to promote freedom of expression, an Open Internet, and access to affordable communications tools and creative works. And while our mission is easily found on our website, it is also lived in the values, work, and impact of dozens of Public Knowledge alumni and all of our allies. We are proud of the impact Public Knowledge has made over the years and we want you to join us this fall to help us leverage those 25 years of public interest work and impact for the future of technology policy. Before I share how you can celebrate 25 years with us, let’s review some of our history and contributions.
DCN, Range, and WIN Technology, three regional backbone fiber providers, announced a joint investment, known as the Heartland Fiber Project, to expand high‑capacity fiber infrastructure across the America’s heartland. The initiative, known as the Heartland Fiber Project, will create a new long‑haul fiber route designed to increase network capacity, resiliency, and flexibility to support the rapidly growing connectivity requirements across the industry and meet demand from AI hyperscale data center development in the region. The Heartland Fiber Project will span seven states – Colorado, Wyoming, Montana, North Dakota, Minnesota, Wisconsin, and Illinois – establishing a route containing high fiber count and future path conduit to support future growth between Denver and Chicago. The $700 million investment represents a 2,000-mile expansion of regional network infrastructure that is designed to deliver the scale, resiliency, and performance demanded by next‑generation AI workloads and hyperscale computing environments.
Explore global Wi-Fi adoption trends, including where Wi-Fi 7 is gaining traction and how Wi-Fi connectivity is evolving worldwide. Wi-Fi 7 represents just a small portion of the global Wi-Fi base, but in certain countries —U.S., Canada and Singapore —it’s gaining ground. Wi-Fi is the last-mile workhorse that carries the vast majority of indoor internet traffic, supporting an increasingly dense network environment of smart home systems, enterprise IoT endpoints, and security infrastructure. While the demands of all these applications on Wi-Fi continue to diversify, the active end-user experience is ultimately governed by the device used most frequently – the smartphone.
Four hours of testimony, broken into answer length, topic splits, and contradictions — a data walk-through of the June 30, 2026 NTIA broadband oversight hearing. The Assistant Secretary answered questions from both parties on NTIA activity for four hours. This walks through what she said, variance in answers, and a breakdown of topics. Scroll through, or click to explore.
Elon Musk's business decisions routinely leave minority populations lodged squarely under his white supremacist bootheel. So I just got done writing about how Elon Musk's xAI data centers outside of Memphis feature 57 largely-unregulated gas turbines pumping pollutants and toxic chemicals into black neighborhoods that already see disproportionate levels of pollution-triggered illnesses among local minority children.
This synopsis was from a recent lawsuit by civil rights groups pointing out Musk's Colossus 2 AI data center is openly violating the Clean Air Act: xAI’s power plant in Southaven has the potential to emit more than 1,700 tons of smog-forming nitrogen oxides (NOx) each year. The staggering emissions numbers likely make the facility the largest industrial source of NOx in the greater Memphis area, an area already failing to meet national smog standards. The illegal turbines also have the potential to release up to 180 tons of fine particulate matter, 500 tons of carbon monoxide, and 19 tons of formaldehyde—a toxic, cancer-causing chemical—each year. The data center is also having a negative impact on the local water supply, something Musk said he'd address by building a next-gen water recycling system that he just...never bothered to follow through on. And because U.S. regulators have been gutted by corruption, there's no accountability anywhere in sight. Very innovative stuff!
It looks like the chip shortage is going to last longer than expected. At the beginning of this year, it looked like the chip shortage might be over by early to mid-2027. That no longer seems to be the expectation. As a reminder of the issue, the chip shortage has come about due to chip manufacturers migrating to produce the more profitable chips used by AI data centers. Recent predictions are that 70% of all memory chips manufactured worldwide will go to data centers for the rest of 2026 into 2027. To put that number into perspective, the first public AI model was introduced to the world in November 2022, and the demand for AI chips has grown since then. At that time, about 32% of chips went to the more traditional data centers used for cloud computing.
BEAD was meant to expand access to high-quality broadband, but under Trump, it’s been diverted to tech moguls like Elon Musk and Jeff Bezos.
With BEAD awards moving into the contract execution phase, a small but growing number of proposed subgrantees are deciding not to proceed. In some cases, companies are walking away voluntarily. In another, questions remain about what happened behind the scenes. Nebraska. It’s Not for Everyone In Nebraska, The Nebraska Examiner reported that three ISPs backed out “due to changes in their business plans.” The three BEAD participants in the state that didn’t sign contracts appeared to be Amazon, Northeast Nebraska Telephone Company, and Pinpoint Communications.
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