C|Net

FCC Chairman Ajit Pai argues a patchwork of state regulations is bad for business
Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai worries a patchwork of local and state regulations on internet technologies could hurt the competitiveness of the US in the tech sector. He made the case for harmonizing regulation among federal and state and local governments.
DoorDash data breach affected 4.9M customers, drivers, merchants (C|Net)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Thu, 09/26/2019 - 17:32Comcast's Internet Essentials delivers low-cost broadband to people with disabilities
Of the more than 56 million people in the US who have a disability, many haven't been able to afford service or have lacked the digital training to access the internet. The result is that Americans with disabilities are three times more likely than those without a disability to say they never go online. When compared with those who don't have a disability, disabled adults are roughly 20 percentage points less likely to say they subscribe to home broadband and own a traditional computer, a smartphone or a tablet.

Wi-Fi Alliance Launches Wi-Fi Certified 6 Program
Promising a "new Wi-Fi era," the nonprofit Wi-Fi Alliance industry group launched the Wi-Fi Certified 6 program. The program aims to hold devices that use next-gen 802.11ax Wi-Fi radios to an established set of standards. Manufacturers that participate get to put a little certification badge on their packaging. That badge is important because it lets you know that the device supports Wi-Fi 6 (the consumer-friendly synonym for 802.11ax) and all of the speedy new bells and whistles that come with it.
California State Sen. Scott Wiener, net neutrality's ultimate champion, keeps on fighting (C|Net)
Submitted by benton on Thu, 09/12/2019 - 22:23YouTube promised to halt comments on kids videos already. It hasn't. (C|Net)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Mon, 09/09/2019 - 14:435G won't replace 4G: Debunking all the 5G myths (C|Net)
Submitted by Robbie McBeath on Thu, 08/29/2019 - 14:45Google Chrome proposes 'privacy sandbox' to reform advertising evils
Google's Chrome team proposed a "privacy sandbox" that's designed to give us the best of both worlds: ads that publishers can target toward our interests but that don't infringe our privacy. It's a major development in an area where Chrome, the dominant browser, has lagged competitors. Browsers already include security sandboxes, restrictions designed to confine malware and limit its possible damage.