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Facebook at last count had attracted more than 2 billion users worldwide to its social media platform where they share photos, links, memories, life鈥
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There is something millions of Ohioans take for granted that hundreds of thousands of others merely dream about: broadband service. All of Ohio鈥檚 major鈥
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FCC Chairman Ajit Pai succeeded in repealing the 2015 rules for internet service providers. But some states have already acted to keep net neutrality alive on their turf.
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The U.S. Senate is set to vote this week on a resolution to undo the Trump administration鈥檚 repeal of 鈥渘et neutrality鈥 rules. Senate Democrats are forcing鈥
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In the Senate, a resolution of disapproval of the FCC rule has the support of every member of the Democratic caucus, along with Maine Republican Susan Collins.
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Ohio cities need three important utilities to stay viable: gas, electricity, and water. Now a fourth utility is pushing its way into the conversation: internet access. More specifically high-speed internet access. Where once communities have had to hope that private companies would provide that service, more and more local governments are taking on the responsibility themselves.
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The agency has formally published the order to undo net neutrality rules, which opens the door for lawsuits by state attorneys general and others. Congress could also decide to block the repeal.
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After a brief security evacuation, the agency voted to undo Obama-era regulations that prohibit cable and telecom companies from blocking access to websites and apps or influencing how fast they load.
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To upwardly-mobile Americans, those gigantic suburban houses known as McMansions might signal affluence and "making it," but they鈥檙e nails on a chalkboard鈥
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We've been told to create passwords that are complicated, to change them regularly and to use different ones for each app or site. But the latest advice is to keep them simple, long and memorable.