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On Nov. 4, the FCC voted to approve the unlicensed use of “white spaces” — empty airwaves between television channels — to provide high-speed Internet access nationwide. This vote follows an exhaustive 18-month study that concluded new technology can use white spaces without harming adjacent TV signals.
On Aug. 1, the public won a historic victory for an open Internet. In a precedent-setting decision, the Federal Communications Commission ruled that Comcast must stop blocking Internet content.
When St. Paul police launched a violent crackdown on journalists covering the Republican National Convention in September, Free Press needed an on-the-ground organizer to pressure city officials to drop the charges against the journalists. Free Press knew just the person to call: Nancy Doyle Brown of the Twin Cities Media Alliance.
The best thing about Media Minutes, Free Press’ weekly radio program, is that it brings the message of media reform to a whole new audience: radio listeners.
High-speed Internet access — aka broadband — has transformed communications, inspired new technologies, engaged millions of people in civic affairs and fueled economic development.
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