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Daily Digest 12/14/2017 (FCC Votes on Net Neutrality Today)

Benton Foundation

Net Neutrality

118 House Members’ Letter to FCC: Don’t Kill Net Neutrality

House Commerce Committee Leaders Head Republican Letter to FCC on Restoring Internet Freedom

Rep. McNerney Denied Request to Address FCC Open Meeting

18 attorneys general ask the FCC to delay net neutrality repeal vote

via Vox

It’s Super Hard to Find Humans in the FCC’s Net Neutrality Comments

via Wired

Commissioner Rosenworcel Statement on Widespread Identity Theft in FCC Record

FCC’s own chief technology officer warned about net neutrality repeal

INCOMPAS to FCC: Delay Vote, Show Item Edits

FCC Chairman Pai Ajit Pai Nears His Biggest Win With Net Neutrality Repeal

Net neutrality regulations perfectly fit the FCC’s statutory intent

No, the Draft Net Neutrality Repeal Does Not “Restore Us To 2014” — And 2014 Wasn’t Exactly Awesome Anyway.

As Millions of Americans Spent Time Commenting on Net Neutrality, Internet Providers Spent $1.12 For Each Comment

NHMC Will Challenge the FCC’s Repeal of Net Neutrality Rules That Protect Latinos’ Rights to Speak and Be Heard Online

Here’s What Congress Needs to Do If the FCC Kills Net Neutrality

Net neutrality keeps the Web from running like an airport security line. And it might go away.

Net neutrality: Could anything stop the repeal of the Open Internet regulations?

Cable and broadcast news still largely ignoring planned net neutrality repeal

ISPs Back Legislative Limitation on Paid Prioritization

Netflix Backs Away From Fight Over Internet Rules Now That Traffic is Flowing

Europe Has a Message for Americans on Net Neutrality

via Slate
Journalism

Record number of journalists jailed as Turkey, China, Egypt pay scant price for repression

For the second year in a row, the number of journalists imprisoned for their work hit a historical high, as the U.S. and other Western powers failed to pressure the world’s worst jailers–Turkey, China, and Egypt–into improving the bleak climate for press freedom.

News media offers consistently warped portrayals of black families, study finds