Difference between revisions of "Federal Communications Commission"
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+ | The '''Federal Communications Commission''' regulates communication in the US. | ||
==Radio decency== | ==Radio decency== | ||
The FCC requires that broadcasts be 'decent', but does ''not'' specify exactly what this means. Amongst small broadcasters, for whom the potential fines or legal costs from an obscenity trial are huge, the practical effect is a serious chilling effect on speech.<ref>http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/FCC-Safety</ref> | The FCC requires that broadcasts be 'decent', but does ''not'' specify exactly what this means. Amongst small broadcasters, for whom the potential fines or legal costs from an obscenity trial are huge, the practical effect is a serious chilling effect on speech.<ref>http://www.unwelcomeguests.net/FCC-Safety</ref> |
Revision as of 17:56, 31 March 2017
Federal Communications Commission | |
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Parent organization | US |
Headquarters | 445 12th Street SW, Washington DC38°53′00″N 77°01′44″W, 38.8834°N 77.0288°W, 38.8834, -77.0288Coordinates: 38°53′00″N 77°01′44″W, -77.0288 |
Staff | 1,720 |
Subpage | •Federal Communications Commission/Chair |
The Federal Communications Commission regulates communication in the US.
Radio decency
The FCC requires that broadcasts be 'decent', but does not specify exactly what this means. Amongst small broadcasters, for whom the potential fines or legal costs from an obscenity trial are huge, the practical effect is a serious chilling effect on speech.[1]
Wireless routers
In 2015, the FCC announced plans to make it illegal to reflash wireless routers (for example, with OpenWRT or DD-WRT) so as to allow the creation of mesh networks or other hacks not anticipated by the manufacturers. This was criticised by Vint Cerf and others.[2]
Mass surveillance
On Mar 28, 2017, US Congress approved legislation allowing logs of users' internet access to be sold.[3]
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