View allAll Photos Tagged NetNeutrality
On Feb. 26, 2015 outside the FCC, Free Press and our allies gathered to make our voices heard one more time before the big vote at the agency. Just hours later the FCC passed strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
Mary hamming it up in front of my camera. Having been my most photographed model, she is the most comfortable and the most used to person in front of my camera. Is it obvious?
To see more of my work, please go to sollang.com
credit: Vanissa W. Chan/ACD Media
On Monday, Oct. 28 over 100 people gathered to speak out for the open Internet and against the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York City.
I don't think I've ever uploaded one of these.
This is the the notice you get in the UAE (there are others for other countries) when you visit a website that is blocked by the country's primary internet provider Etisalat.
This is not for porn or anything vulgar. I got this for trying to visit YouTube, Facebook, Flickr, and MySpace. Since 2006 some of the aforementioned sites have been allowed through various IP addresses in Dubai and Abu Dhabi
On Feb. 26, 2015 outside the FCC, Free Press and our allies gathered to make our voices heard one more time before the big vote at the agency. Just hours later the FCC passed strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
Hundreds of Internet cats rallied outside the FCC in support of Chairman Tom Wheeler’s hints that the agency will pass strong Net Neutrality rules.
On Feb. 26, 2015 outside the FCC, Free Press and our allies gathered to make our voices heard one more time before the big vote at the agency. Just hours later the FCC passed strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
Save our Net Ottawa Town Hall. He was talking about the Net Neutrality Bill he introduced in the House.
Nice to see this this photo used in this roots music blog.
Hundreds of Internet cats rallied outside the FCC in support of Chairman Tom Wheeler’s hints that the agency will pass strong Net Neutrality rules.
Save the Internet
New York FCC Office, 201 Varick St., Room 1151 (Map)
New York, NY 10014
Thursday, May 15th, 12:00 PM
***contact for permission to use***
"Message from Mary S.: The future of the Internet as we know it is at stake. The FCC is proposing rules that would kill the open Internet and create a fast lane for companies that can afford big fees and a slow dirt road for the rest of us. We're fighting back--and we're being heard. This Thursday, May 15, the FCC will meet in Washington, DC, to vote on whether or not to advance this proposal. We'll rally in DC, but we won't stop there: We'll gather at FCC offices in 24 cities to send shockwaves through the FCC bureaucracy until they restore real Net Neutrality and protect the Internet for all of us."
#SaveTheInternet
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai held a forum on Net Neutrality at Texas A&M University in College Station on Oct. 21., 2014. Net Neutrality advocates rallied outside before the event.
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai held a forum on Net Neutrality at Texas A&M University in College Station on Oct. 21., 2014. Net Neutrality advocates rallied outside before the event.
On Feb. 26, 2015 Net Neutrality activists and allies gathered to celebrate strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
A celebratory gathering in the Mile-End area of the Plateau in Montreal. This event was for the welcoming of the son of a Rabbi from New York. The crowd was huddled together with anticipation, banners and flags. The whole street was a buzz of excitement. I was fortunate to have been invited by a friend who lives near by to witness and record the event.
As I was watching this crowd, my mind traveled to the days of my own forefathers who were Jews living in Eastern Europe and although one hundred plus years ago, they looked and dressed very similarly to the Hassidim living here in Montreal today. But the feeling that stood out the most for me was the fact that although, as a Jew, we share a common heritage, I felt very disconnected and remote from these people. I could hear their chatter and even could understand the Yiddish they were speaking. Yet I found them as curious and as distant from me as any one of the individuals of other cultures in the neighborhood who stood by watching the festivities.
On Feb. 26, 2015 Net Neutrality activists and allies gathered to celebrate strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
On Feb. 26, 2015 outside the FCC, Free Press and our allies gathered to make our voices heard one more time before the big vote at the agency. Just hours later the FCC passed strong Net Neutrality rules under Title II of the Communications Act.
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai held a forum on Net Neutrality at Texas A&M University in College Station on Oct. 21., 2014. Net Neutrality advocates rallied outside before the event.
credit: Vanissa W. Chan/ACD Media
On Monday, Oct. 28 over 100 people gathered to speak out for the open Internet and against the Comcast-Time Warner Cable merger at the Brooklyn Public Library in New York City.
FCC Commissioner Ajit Pai held a forum on Net Neutrality at Texas A&M University in College Station on Oct. 21., 2014. Net Neutrality advocates rallied outside before the event.
Hundreds of Internet cats rallied outside the FCC in support of Chairman Tom Wheeler’s hints that the agency will pass strong Net Neutrality rules.
She survived the holocaust. Lost a husband and a son to it. She came to Israel with her surviving daughter, son-in-law and an infant grandson to rebuild a life with the optimism of the new state of Israel, where I, her second grandson, was born. But life in Israel was not what they had hoped for, especially for raising two sons. We came to Canada to try, yet again, to find peace and a better quality of life and here we are. Rose died in 1996 at age 92.
This photograph was on exhibit at the Saidye Bronfman Center for the Arts in Galerie Espace Deux, March, 2004
To see more of my work, please go to sollang.com
Protest against FCC chairman Ajit Pai's plan to repeal Net Neutrality protections, endangering the open internet for all. San Luis Obispo, CA.
Learn more:
On Jan. 29, 2015 outside the FCC, Free Press organized a a historic battle between two contenders who symbolized the fight over the fate of the Internet. On one side was Net Neutral-i-kitty, representing the millions of Internet users who had spoken out for Net Neutrality over the past year. On the other side was Cable Boss, hailing from the self-serving nation of Comcast.