PinnedSenate GOP’s Call for Ideological Test In Hiring is DangerousBy: Chris Lewis, President and CEO of Public KnowledgeNov 23, 2020Nov 23, 2020
A New Section 5 Policy Statement Can Help the FTC Defend CompetitionBy: Steven C. Salop, Professor of Economics and Law, Georgetown University Law Center; and Charlotte Slaiman, Public Knowledge Competition…Jul 20, 2021Jul 20, 2021
In the Republican War on the Biden FCC, Wall Street May End Up the Biggest LoserBy: Harold Feld, Senior Vice President of Public KnowledgeDec 8, 2020Dec 8, 2020
Disconnected and Disenfranchised: The Double Digital divide for Vulnerable populations in Rural…By: Alisa Valentin, Communications Justice Fellow at Public Knowledge, and Daiquiri Ryan, Co-founder of Neta Collab, LLC.Jul 19, 2019Jul 19, 2019
Let Local Educators Close the Broadband “Homework Gap”By: Jane Lee, Policy Fellow at Public KnowledgeFeb 15, 2019Feb 15, 2019
Antitrust Alone Won’t Save Us From the “Curse of Bigness”By: Gene Kimmelman, President of Public Knowledge and former Chief Counsel in the Antitrust Division; and Charlotte Slaiman, Public…Nov 15, 2018Nov 15, 2018
The AT&T/Time Warner Merger Case: What Happened and What is NextBy: Steven C. Salop, Professor of Economics and Law, Georgetown University Law CenterJun 29, 2018Jun 29, 2018
AT&T’s Flawed Arbitration ProposalBy: Gene Kimmelman, CEO & President of Public Knowledge, and Steve Salop, Professor of Economics & Law at Georgetown University Law CenterApr 10, 2018Apr 10, 2018
Blocking the AT&T-Time Warner merger is good antitrust economics and lawBy: Steve Salop, Professor of Economics & Law at Georgetown University Law CenterNov 21, 2017Nov 21, 2017
Net Neutrality Win in the D.C. Circuit Court is a Win for the ArtsBy: Courtney Duffy, Robert W. Deutsch Arts & Technology Policy Fellow at Public KnowledgeJul 18, 20161Jul 18, 20161