freedom of information act

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  • WASHINGTON, DC - DECEMBER 14:  Federal Communications Commission Chairman Ajit Pai drinks from a big coffee cup during a commission meeting December 14, 2017 in Washington, DC. The FCC is scheduled to vote on a proposal to repeal net-neutrality.  (Photo by Alex Wong/Getty Images)

    FCC ordered to provide IP addresses tied to fake net neutrality comments

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    05.03.2020

    The FCC will have to hand over IP addresses connected to fake net neutrality comments despite claims of privacy violations.

  • David Paul Morris/Bloomberg via Getty Images

    California sues EPA, NHTSA over data used for car emissions rollback

    by 
    Jon Fingas
    Jon Fingas
    04.07.2019

    California has sued the EPA and NHTSA in a bid to get the data used to justify the Trump administration's rollback of vehicle emission standards. State Attorney General Xavier Becerra has accused the agencies of "willfully withholding" the data after they didn't respond to a Freedom of Information Act request for the material used to justify keeping 2020 emissions standards until the 2026 model year instead of raising them under former President Obama's plan.

  • FTC denies request for documents on Adobe complaint, confirms investigation of Apple's SDK rules?

    by 
    Tim Stevens
    Tim Stevens
    08.05.2010

    Sure, Apple and Adobe aren't the best of friends, but their disagreement goes a little further than mild distaste. Apple moved to ban iOS apps not written through its own developer framework (SDK), which more or less killed off Adobe's iPhone Flash developer tools. Adobe in turn issued a complaint to the FTC, a complaint that Wired requested a copy of under the Freedom of Information Act. The release of that complaint was denied on the grounds that "disclosure of that material could reasonably be expected to interfere with the conduct of the Commission's law enforcement activities." That is another strong indication that the FTC is currently investigating Apple and deciding whether the company is acting properly by preventing third-party access to its iOS devices. What's next? We likely won't hear anything until the FTC makes up its mind, and even then only if it decides Apple isn't playing as nice as it should be.

  • America's Army franchise cost $33 million to deploy over 10 years

    by 
    Ben Gilbert
    Ben Gilbert
    12.09.2009

    According to information obtained by GameSpot from the United States Army, the America's Army series has cost $32.8 million across the 10 years of the franchise's existence. Development costs have risen and fallen over the years – starting with a first year budget of $3.5 million and a 2009 budget of approximately $3.4 million – though we can't imagine that the America's Army program will be spending as much in 2010 considering the developers of America's Army 3 were summarily canned after completing the last game. Over the course of the 10 years that the franchise has existed, the US Army has never released any statistics on recruitment efficacy, profitability of the franchise, or results of the programs efforts, among other things. It has equally drawn support and contempt from critics, with some saying the "recruitment centers" target underage youth and others saying they offer insight into real war. One idea we think most Joystiq readers will agree on, regardless of politics: a gaggle of much better (though admittedly not free!) FPS games are out there right now, just waiting to be played.