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The Affordable Connectivity Program, which helped low-income Americans get online, is no more.
The program has been designed overwhelmingly around installing underground fiber-optic cables, a medium widely seen as a gold standard for fast and reliable internet.
More than 20 million US households are now receiving discounts on internet service as part of a federal program created to close the digital divide, according to the Federal Communications Commission.
On New Year’s Eve 2021, the federal government launched the Affordable Connectivity Program, which has helped over 20 million American households afford internet access with monthly subsidies of ...
DoD is raising its Proliferated Low Earth Orbit (PLEO) Satellite-Based Services program from an initial $900 million ceiling to a projected $13 billion ...
Universities are being used to proxy offensive government operations, turning research access decisions political’ Censys Inc ...
The funding could keep a popular internet affordability program in place for millions of American households through the end of the year.
President Trump denounced the Biden-era Digital Equity Act as “woke handouts based on race,” raging in a social media post against a broad effort to improve high-speed internet access.
It's been a year since the Affordable Connectivity Program ended. The federal subsidy provided $30 a month to help low-income households pay for internet service.
West Virginia's $1.2 billion plan to bring high-speed broadband to homes and businesses leaves out about 40,000 households ...