News

On Wednesday, the Supreme Court heard oral arguments in Federal Communications Commission v. Consumers’ Research (consolidated with SHLB Coalition ...
Digital divide advocates can breathe a tentative sigh of relief, as the Supreme Court appeared reluctant to dismantle the ...
The Supreme Court on Wednesday seemed poised to uphold the federal program that provides schools, libraries, and underserved ...
In a 3 hour long session, the Justices grilled a conservative group's lawyer about the consequences of declaring the practice ...
The Supreme Court will hear oral arguments on Wednesday in a major challenge to the federal “E-rate program,” which subsidizes telephone and high-speed internet services in schools, libraries, rural ...
The US Supreme Court suggested it’s likely to uphold a federal program that uses more than $8 billion in fees imposed on phone bills to subsidize the cost of telecom services for poor people, rural ...
The challenge by conservatives to the program raised questions about how much Congress can delegate its legislative authority ...
WASHINGTON (AP) — The Supreme Court on Wednesday ... is simply not the right case for the court to revamp the nondelegation ...
"If we find that this one is unconstitutional, are all of these programs in jeopardy in your view?" Justice Ketanji Brown Jackson asked during a hearing on the Federal Communications Commission's ...
At the Supreme Court today is another challenge to the way federal agencies operate. The issue at hand: Did Congress overstep ...
They also handle billing, content delivery, and user engagement for lottery and gaming services and ensure regulatory compliance with telecom policies and state laws Impact of the Supreme Court ...