New York requires $15 broadband for poor people, promptly gets sued by ISPs
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Internet service providers today sued New York to block a state law that requires ISPs to sell $15-per-month broadband plans to low-income households.
The lawsuit was filed by lobby groups including USTelecom and CTIA-The Wireless Association, both of which count Verizon and AT&T among their members. Lobby groups for many other ISPs also joined the lawsuit, with plaintiffs including NTCA-The Rural Broadband Association, the Satellite Broadcasting & Communications Association, and the New York State Telecommunications Association. The biggest cable lobby group, NCTA, did not join the lawsuit, but a cable lobby group representing small providers-America's Communications Association-is one of the plaintiffs suing New York.
New York enacted its cheap-broadband law two weeks ago and called it a "first-in-the-nation requirement for affordable Internet for qualifying low-income families."
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