The 5th U.S. Circuit Appeals Court agreed Thursday to hold in abeyance a legal challenge to an FCC ruling that lets schools and libraries use E-rate support for off-premises Wi-Fi hot spots and wireless internet services. The court's action came after the FCC reminded it that the agency's composition has changed since it adopted the school bus Wi-Fi ruling in 2023, and the current commission may no longer support the order (see 2507070012).
Trump Media and Technology Group's Truth+ streaming service is now available globally, it said Monday. Truth+ offers streaming channels and video on demand, as well as carrying the Newsmax cable news network, Trump Media said. The company -- which is majority owned by President Donald Trump -- also operates the social media platform Truth Social.
Paramount Global has agreed to a settlement in President Donald Trump’s lawsuit against CBS over its editing of a 60 Minutes interview last October with former Vice President Kamala Harris during the election, the company said.
President Donald Trump attacked AT&T on social media Monday after experiencing problems on a call with faith leaders. AT&T addressed the issue on X, saying, "We've reached out to the White House and are working to quickly understand and assess the situation."
In a 6-3 decision, the U.S. Supreme Court on Friday upheld a Texas law requiring age verification for access to porn sites (see 2506270015 and 2501130012). The majority in Free Speech Coalition v. Paxton sided with Texas Attorney General Ken Paxton (R) in support of HB-1181, which the adult industry trade association Free Speech Coalition said violates the First Amendment (see 2409170012).
The U.S. Supreme Court upheld the FCC’s USF contribution scheme in a 6-3 opinion Friday in Consumers’ Research v. FCC, but dissenting and concurring opinions from several conservative justices appeared to invite future challenges, attorneys told us.
President Donald Trump made repeated calls on social media this week for reporters from CNN and the New York Times to be fired over their reporting on the U.S. strikes against Iran’s nuclear program Sunday. “FAKE NEWS REPORTERS FROM CNN & THE NEW YORK TIMES SHOULD BE FIRED, IMMEDIATELY!!! BAD PEOPLE WITH EVIL INTENTIONS!!!” Trump said in a post on Truth Social.
Sen. Elissa Slotkin, D-Mich., called Thursday for the federal government to “ban cellphones in every K-12 classroom in America,” reflecting similar recent state-level pushes to bar students from using smartphones and other mobile devices in school (see 2501290066). Slotkin and Sen. Jim Banks, R-Ind., last week filed the Restoring Our Educational Focus on Children of U.S. Servicemembers at DOD Education Activity (DODEA) Act to bar students at K-12 schools on U.S. military bases from using cellphones during school hours.
An FTC probe into Media Matters for America is "aimed at silencing [it] and punishing it for its speech," the left-leaning journalism watchdog group told the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in a lawsuit filed Monday (docket 1:25-cv-01959) against the agency. It said that due to its reporting, "state governments and now a federal agency have employed sweeping governmental powers to attempt to silence and harass an organization for daring to speak the truth." The Texas and Missouri attorneys general previously launched investigations after unflattering reporting about social media platform X, but those probes have been dropped or halted by court injunction, so "the Trump Administration has picked up where the states left off." Media Matters asked the court to declare that the FTC's civil investigative demands are a retaliatory action in violation of the group's First Amendment rights and to enjoin the FTC from trying to enforce the demands or continue the investigation.
The Trump Organization announced Monday that later this year, it will launch Trump Mobile, a mobile virtual network operator, and a gold-colored smartphone, which it said will eventually be made in the U.S. The launch would create ethics concerns regardless, but even more so given the Trump administration's pressure for the FCC to answer directly to the White House, public interest groups said.