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It's Friday, so we're stepping away from the controls for a bit. Enjoy yourselves in the comment section below. 35 comments
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Late last year Iranian leaders made it a criminal offense to bypass the country's Internet filters using VPNs or any other technology. The announcement by Iranian Telecommunications Minister Reza Taghipour insisted the move was made to combat a "soft war being waged by Western countries against Iran (read: we want to spy on our own citizens and stifle information exchange among liberal thinkers). story continues..27 comments
Torrent Freak directs our attention to the development of a new BitTorrent client whose developers claim is impossible to shut down without pulling the plug on the entire Internet. Dubbed Tribler, the client uses pure peer to peer communications and doesn't require a central website to find or download content. story continues..65 comments
Back in June of 2010, Nielsen proclaimed that the idea of TV cord cutting in favor of Internet video alternatives was "purely fiction." A year and a half later and the company's latest report (reg. required) almost goes out of its way not to acknowledge cord cutting exists, despite finding that homes with broadband but without paid TV are on the rise. story continues..47 comments
Late last year Skype co-founder Niklas Zennström announced he'd be launching a new wireless carrier in 2012 that provides free wireless service. Zennstrom and company are being a little murky about the specific financials behind the service, which is supposed to piggyback on the so-far-nonexistent LightSquared network. story continues..6 comments
While carriers here in the States seem to do everything possible to demonize heavy bandwidth users as the worst sort of gluttons (despite benefiting from billing them out at $10 per gigabyte), one Russian wireless provider is doing everything possible to encourage users to use more data. Russian carrier MegaFon has been running a promotion encouraging 21 Mbps 3G users to consume as much data as humanly possible in order to win a 150,000 ruble (around $5,000) vacation. The winner of the contest managed to consume 419GB of 3G data in one week, and MegaFon got some delicious PR showing that their network works well, their definition of unlimited actually is unlimited -- and that they actually like it when people consume their product. 62 comments
As we've discussed for months, the ACTA took all of this country's worst copyright ideas --many of them enshrined in the controversial DMCA -- made them considerably worse, then foisted them upon much of the globe with little to no real public discussion. With SOPA generating unprecedented public disgust, it helped draw a lot of attention to ACTA -- and now support in numerous countries appears to be falling apart. Poland, Czech Republic and Latvia have all withdrawn their support for the agreement, and now Germany has postponed their vote. Granted the the European Union and 22 of its 27 member states already signed the agreement in January, but it's clear that the growing public protests (which are expected to grow significantly louder Saturday) across numerous countries have started to make politicians nervous. 15 comments
In 2009 ViaSat acquired residential satellite broadband service WildBlue for $568 million, and now it appears they're phasing out the WildBlue brand and service entirely. The company has confirmed to Light Reading they're phasing out the WildBlue name to focus on selling the company's new Exede service, which will be sold directly to consumers as well as via Dish, DirecTV, and a number of other rural satellite operators. story continues..14 comments
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Since 1993 the FCC has had the authority to place restrictions on auctions or conditions on spectrum (like requiring auction winners offer wholesale access) -- depending on the bidders' market dominance and/or current spectrum holdings. As their spectrum and market positions attest, neither AT&T and Verizon have been harmed by the requirements. story continues..17 comments
In 2010 Comcast decided that a good way to take aim at services like AT&T's U-Verse and Verizon's FiOS would be to change the name of all of their services to "Xfinity." Though the Xfinity rebranding did coincide with some substantive improvements to services (including the expansion of a 100 Mbps tier), most people generally found the move a little silly, noting the name sounded like a new porn channel. Following on the heels of Comcast in the States and Telus (their Optik brand which falsely suggests last mile fiber) in Canada, Shaw's launching new ads for their "Exo" branding, which this video attempts to explain. The idea of course is to sex up existing services with a brand refresh, but judging from the initial response in our Shaw forum, users aren't all that impressed. 10 comments
In May of last year AT&T confirmed that at the end of 2011 they'd effectively be stopping their deployment of U-Verse upgrades, with 30 million homes passed (not necessarily served), leaving about 40-45% of their footprint on older, slower technologies. On their recent earnings call AT&T again confirmed that the U-Verse build is "largely complete," and the focus now is on ramping up adoption in deployed areas. story continues..154 comments
According to a paywalled story in the Wall Street Journal, Google is getting close to finally offering their Google Drive storage locker service. The report cites sources close to the matter who claim the service will launch in "weeks or months." Like most storage options there will be a free version, with additional storage pricing not yet specified. Google Drive is a project that we've reported as rumor for more than half a decade, though rumblings of the service grew a little louder last September with a report at Techcrunch, which noted that Google Drive will essentially be Google Docs rebranded to include multimedia storage capabilities. 14 comments
Earlier this week we noted how AT&T's waging a quiet war on those "unlimited" data users it had agreed to grandfather when it eliminated unlimited data back in 2010. One, those that legally jailbreak and use unofficial tethering options are automatically being moved to metered service as punishment for refusing to pay AT&T a fee for doing nothing. story continues..53 comments
RIAA boss Cary Sherman penned an editorial in the New York Times this week that's effectively a very large pout against the recent backlash to both SOPA and PIPA. According to Sherman, opponents of the universally-considered-awful laws (including thousands of websites and technical experts in numerous fields) were engaged in a campaign of "misinformation" when they were pointing out how the law effectively created a system of website censorship while potentially breaking key components of the Internet: The hyperbolic mistruths, presented on the home pages of some of the worlds most popular Web sites, amounted to an abuse of trust and a misuse of power. story continues..63 comments
Fresh off the failed AT&T deal, T-Mobile is back to playing the pesky upstart, running a new promotion that involves giving away any of the company's cellphones (and some of their tablets) for free if the user signs a new two-year contract. "New and existing eligible customers can take advantage of this deal receiving their device for free after a mail-in rebate card when they sign up for a new two-year contract on any qualifying Classic Plan or for a $0.00 down payment after mail-in rebate card when signing up on a qualifying Unlimited Value Plan," says the company. To get the phones (which you'll still pay tax on), users will of course have to sign up for supporting 2 GB or 5 GB data plans. 
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Last month Sprint announced that their first LTE launch markets would arrive sometime mid-year, including Atlanta, Dallas, Houston, San Antonio and six other smaller markets. In a press statement, Sprint this morning announced that they'd be adding both Baltimore and Kansas City to that initial launch list. The company is conducting a $4-$5 billion network upgrade that involves retrofitting every Sprint cell site, eliminating the refrigerator-sized cabinets for each technology (800 MHz, 1.9 GHz and 2.5 GHz) in favor of small, more energy efficient multi-mode base stations allowing them to offer Mobile WiMax and LTE for the foreseeable future. Sprint says their goal is to cover 123 million "pops" (potential users) with LTE by the end of 2012, and 250 million by the end of 2013. 7 comments
by Revcb Thursday 09-Feb-2012 8 comments ·more stories, story search, most popular ..
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